Wednesday, 29 February 2012

V England India: Matt Prior claims bowlers will have to be at their best to victory

Four years ago in England are thwarted by rain, but also an innings of 76 by MS Dhoni as a window fell short of the victory of Michael Vaughan team. This is a result that England would be that street the India recovered their composure and won the series.

Top of the man page: Matt Prior has taken its place among the elite of the Test wicketkeeper-batsman

This England team is better equipped to liquidate the Test matches as an inexperienced attack four years ago, but a combination of the India intimidating batting line-up and the suspicions of the ball may not swing as much today left before are wary of having won too.


"We ourselves put in a position very strong and it would be extremely frustrating not save and spend with it, but we can't think too far," he said. "The important it is we come here as normal and we expect to win the first half hour and go from there." If you start to think "we win this Test match, he must take the wickets", you can start unnecessary pressure on the launchers.


"If we do what we have in two years - keep base, build the pressure in the area and keep the high - intensity I am sure that we will have a very good day." "We could go hours without taking a one-stop but then we would have one of these crazy hours when we take three or four."


Before found in the environment after one of these "crazy hours" yesterday when Ishant Sharma took three wickets in 16 deliveries. "I was expecting not to bat before lunch", he said. "I was looking for at the thought of menu, I will have the Lamb but it I took my child." The first thing was to build a partnership. »


Is home to the Lord, it was his third hundred in the field and is a different player when the India toured England four years.


Then he finished the series in his own words as "public enemy No 1" after injury involved in the incident of bean jelly to Trent Bridge - when Zaheer Khan was offended by candy are thrown on the ground, while the stick - and does not live up to its reputation with the bat and gloves.


"To be sitting here now, it is very pleasant, but we still have a long way to go in the series with a huge day tomorrow," he added.


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The ashes of 2010: Matt Prior century saves blushes England tour match against Victoria ends with a match zero

Prior assessment suggests that there was a turnaround by reflection group team of. Otherwise, losing means much for them why there were three statements invented to implement continuation of execution? Was much more likely the sudden realization that defeat, almost always acceptable in pursuit of true victory, would give the opportunity to avoid their gaze of Ricky Ponting team media Australian and no side to come in the ashes with three to play who want.

"You cannot take a good run for granted and you will sometimes need to dig further, stated before." There is no reason why we shouldn't go through together unbeaten tour especially if we continue with the mark of cricket, we played.

"You want to go undefeated on any visit that you play, but if we did here, it would be a fantastic feat and it is something that we're certainly."

Dropped on 61, before has played well for the most part time driving and pulling strongly Bushrangers attack has not succeeded to prey on weaknesses also effectively have made the Australia launchers. But part of its hundreds and the continuation of the undefeated team run, main ambitions in this match - replacement Stuart Broad take wickets and Eoin Morgan and Steve Davies to spend quality time in the fold - England were thwarted.

Replace the wide choice could prove crucial, choice as a victory for England in Perth see Strauss and his team of canned ash, a brace not often.

Proof of this match, which saw Tim Bresnan bat at six and take single window between 3 hopes, it is between him and Chris Tremlett. In addition, said before, the team is unwilling to look at.

"We were in a position very similar in 2009 at Headingley," said before. "We went in that test looks great for too much in advance as an opportunity to win the ashes and we come short after defeat." We have learned from this experience and make sure that it will happen.

Yes, it is possible and everyone is talking about. But as we are talking about it, it will be not important. We must focus on this first session. Win only and others follow and rest will take care of itself.

The blinders vision did not help before facing Herrick, monitors which struck a painful blow on the hip. With her shaved head, white head band and star tattoos encircling every bend, Herrick resembles a Mad Max movie extra, if his bowling was wild, despite him get captured Morgan behind.

It seemed y nothing malicious on jets full high number that it upside-down and before a later Herrick, whose beginnings of first class for the Bushrangers confirmed it was the case, apologized immediately.

But, sorry or not, there are the laws of cricket that high ball rubbish or more not already bounced brings a warning, while the second provides a ban of Bowling for the sleeves – something that he would do well to remember.

At the other end, Clint McKay was an antidote to Herrick erratic ways. Its stable of 17 overs, interrupted only by a few grains of rain, led 4-68, including ATM Alastair Cook for 10, overturned after cutting cutting spelling shot not quite wide enough for the stroke.

It also rejected Bresnan, making 19 to stick to six positions dried up for him, which means England wanted to make a prior knock in Perth.

If they think is the best player for them in the pursuit of the 20 wickets at the Waca, then his is a pretty fair selection. But if they are factoring in his stick as well, the mentality of circulation which suddenly off in this game will look like it took a more permanent dock.

Four things that England learned in Victoria

1. In the case of which bowler replaces Stuart Broad, not much. Chris Tremlett, Tim Bresnan and Ajmal Shahzad overturned fairly decent game, but none has shown a knack for working a window or two, you will need to be able to Australia when the Kookaburra ball goes soft, as it is fast enough.

2. That Melbourne cold, drizzle will not be anything like hot, dry Perth. Here, the tone was slow and lifeless, will be nothing like resembling Waca concrete surface, but can have been a deliberate policy as Australia any attempt in an attempt to level the series.

3. As a dull as might be just what they need to continue game at is grounded in what could be the pivot of test. As Matt Prior admitted his century: "without the large crowds test ashes you must do a little soul search in a game like this for yourself that as you can't rely on anything else." It is a challenge. »

4. Only wicketkeepers is not reliable for the simplest of chances without their gloves, as before, two trucks in the first round. Also learned England, although they are step admit it, that the only likely dismiss Kevin Pietersen for less than a hundred Australia is a speed COP.


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The ash live: Australia v England second test

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Australia's bowlers tried their best but, frankly, did not look to have the class needed to take wickets on a batsman's paradise. The very few chances that their fielders did have, they spurned. The Aussies trooped off looking absolutely done; it will take some effort for them to rouse themselves tomorrow. If there is a crumb of comfort for Ricky Ponting, it is that his part-timers at least kept it fairly quiet in the last hour or two and England's run rate is 3.56; impressive but not decisive. There is talk of rain on days four and five, so England need KP to accelerate tomorrow to post a daunting lead.


But that's for the future: today belongs to Alastair Cook, still only 25 and already with 15 Test tons to his name. He can have a well-earned rest tonight on 136*. Several Australians shook his hand on the way off; a nice gesture, becuase they must be truly sick of the sight of him.


That about wraps things up. Jonathan Liew will be back here at about 11pm to talk you through the build-up to day three, and then the action resumes at midnight GMT. I'm Alan Tyers, thanks for your emails and Tweets, have a good day.


 Nick Hoult via Twitter: England 834 for 3 in last two innings. Aussies look broken as they leave the field.


Opta Stats via Twitter: Alastair Cook has scored 432 runs in the first 7 days of this series so far .


OVER 89: ENG 317/2 Cook has now scored more runs between dismissals than any other England batsman, or so we learn from Sky. The previous record was held by Wally Hammond. Cook flicks to fine leg for two and then creams one through point for four, lovely stuff. He's then hit on the pads by Harris but that's going over the top and Ponting does not bother with a review. Seven off the over and that's stumps. Ponting was hoping to get another one in but the clock ticks round and I shouldn't be surprised if his team are not too devastated to be let off more toil.


OVER 88: 310/2 Bollinger too leg-side here; KP pulls him very fine for four and then, after a couple of better nuts, back on the leg stump and there's a couple of leg byes, which Cook and Pietersen run hard. Very impressive fitness, aside from anything else. Then another single off a leg-side delivery and this is very much not the good gear from Ruggy. 65 ahead.


OVER 87: ENG 302/2 They finally take the new ball and it's as Ricky feared: Harris is spraying it about the place. Pietersen plays a divine leg-side clip for four to bring up the 300. This! Is! Adelaide! But then Harris swings one back into the pads... but the appeal is strangled, that would have gone down leg by some way.


Twitter Nick Hoult via Twitter: Cook has batted for more than 20 hours in this series. Even Jack Bauer would be impressed


OVER 86: ENG 298/2 And Doug Bollinger is also back into the attack. He isn't getting a tune out of the old ball either, but you just never know with KP - he might do something dumb. And, yep, there she blows: they take a single into the covers, KP ambles and Michael Clarke's throw only just misses. Please, please, please don't get out tonight, Kevin. There's a ton for the taking, and we need you to up the tempo tomorrow...


OVER 85: ENG 297/2 Oh! Ryan Harris has an over, but with the old ball. His pace is down and it doesn't look like it's reversing. Couple of singles from the over.


OVER 84: ENG 295/2 North bowls. Single from Cook, watchful defence from Pietersen. If you are just waking up, morning! England are right on top of Australia here, after losing Strauss in the first over of the day. Since then, it's been all England, bar the loss of Trott for 78. Ricky Ponting has curled up into a ball and has shunned the new cherry, instead keeping North and Watson wheeling away, and they have kept it pretty tight in the last hour or so. KP 73* Cook 128*


OVER 83: ENG 294/2 Pietersen middles a few off Watson but all to the fielders. Hope KP doesn't lose patience. Maiden. You have to assume that Katich (limping) and Clarke (back) are not fit enough to turn their arms over.


OVER 82: ENG 294/2 Ponting has got North tossing it up, three men on the drive, hoping for a blunder. KP flicks through midwicket and that is a bit uppish, but it falls far short of Ricky himself. Anything tonight would be a huge bonus for the Aussies, but they look like they are just hanging on for the close of play, which will be in a half an hour. Only 20 off the last 10, so this plan is working fairly well for Ponting. Relatively speaking, likes. Obviously, in terms of the match, he is being totally pounded.


Twitter Simon Hughes via Twitter: KP had pads on for 10 hours. Well played to him for not getting out first ball. Cook 100 - outstanding. It's not how it's how many.


OVER 81: ENG 291/2 A quiet over from Watson and it looks like Australia are not going to take the new ball tonight. You can see the thinking: with the bowlers looking dog tired, Ponting cannot afford to waste his one remaining realistic hope of bowling England out. Still a pretty solemn indictment though, innit?


OVER 80: ENG 289/2 Couple off a North over and the new ball is available. BUT! They are not taking it... Watson is going to continue.


Twitter Steve James via Twitter: Bowlers and rugby union props. Can't find them anywhere in this country...


OVER 79: Eng 287/2 Cook turns Watson into the leg side and they go for one. Excellent fielding by Doherty and KP has to really hurry but the throw misses by a whisker. Think he would have been home anyway, but...


Email David Sutton from Manila with a superb if obviously made-up email: Rain coming! Heard from my mate in the Aussie air force that they are up seeding the clouds with a special chemical bought from the Chinese (left over from Beijing Olympics)


Email Jim via email: I have to say from an Australian point of view this is becoming increasingly painful. Rain of any significance seems very unlikely for Adelaide in December so no salvation there I fear. Interestingly if the Gabba Test had been on this week it would have been significantly rained out. North just spun it again!!!


Drinks for them; gypsy's for me. Eng 285/2 Cook 121* KP 70*


OVER 78: ENG 285/2 KP has had enough of being polite to North and slog-sweeps him expertly for four.


OVER 77: ENG 281/2 Watson bowls a maiden to Cook. 37 from the last 10 overs, so at least Ponting can say that England haven't got away from his part-timers.


OVER 76: ENG 281/2 Ooh, that's a beaut from M North first ball of the over. Turn and bounce, Cook beaten outside off. Nicely bowled. Apparently he bats as well, on occasion, this North. Good to see a bit of turn there: something for Swanny to think about? Then just a single from the rest of the over.


OVER 75: ENG 280/2 To be fair to Watto, which I am obviously loath to be, he is bowling as well as could be expected here. But Cook could play this stuff in his sleep. Just a single from an untroubling over.


OVER 74: ENG 279/2 North keeps it tight for a bit, but the pressure is released when KP drives him for four through the covers and that's five from the over, as well as the 100 partnership. Excellent from both batsmen; complementary too: Cook serene, KP bustling. Cook 119* KP 66*


OVER 73: ENG 274/2 Good line and length from Watson and KP, although he's straining at the leash, can't get him away. Maiden. Good effort, Blondie. New ball not that far away now, but these look like a very tired and run-down outfit. Might they even save it for tomorrow?


OVER 72: ENG 274/2 Call off the RSPCA: Ponting has stopped flogging Poidersiddle. Dangerbowler M North will try his luck. And he's got one to spin! Marcus North has got one to spin! Xavier Doherty! Xavier Doherty! Are you watching, Xavier Doherty? That's how you do it. It doesn't matter, it was well wide of Cook's off pole, but at least it's something. Drive through the covers for three; plus a couple of singles makes five.


OVER 71: ENG 269/2 More modest fare from Watson, nothing wrong with it as such, but not going to trouble well-set batsmen on this dancefloor. Class cover drive from Cook for four. According to Nasser earlier, Botham was on about how it was going to be a wash-out on days four and five; the forecast though is for just showers. Meteorologists? How many Test wickets did they get? I tell you what, Clive, it blinking well better not rain.


OVER 70: ENG 265/2 More hard yakka for P Siddy. An over of short stuff, and this is taking it out of Peter, tough beggar that he is. Pace is down. But what else can Aussies do? Doherty isn't much use, Bolly doesn't look right: but my goodness they can't afford Siddle to break down for the rest of the series. Cook and KP swap pulled singles and survive without any alarm.


OVER 69: ENG 262/2 Watto bowlo. Four for KP through the covers, lovely. And then - excuse me while I cackle and spit liquid over the screen - another drive through the off by KP that not one but two Aussie fielders dive at and miss, giving the proud son of Pietermaritzburg another boundary. Ha, ha, ha. Oh man, Australia couldn't get arrested here. Unlike the 200-person police v yoofs argy-bargy in Victoria that held up my cab and nearly made me late to relieve Jonathan Liew earlier this evening.


OVER 68: ENG 253/2 I really do love watching Kevin Pietersen bat. Thumping straight drive for three, then that whipped drive again; it wasn't even leg-side and he has put that away through mid-on for four to bring up his 50. He is looking very, very good. Come on Kevin, make it a ton. Make these Aussies suffer for Adelaide last time. Nine off the over. KP 51* Ali Cook 108*


OVER 67: ENG 244/2 It's the popular Watson to bowl. He's floating it up, really, but it's decent line and length stuff. A measure of how deep is Australia's misery: Watson's probably been their most consistent bowler. Oof. Single from Cook.


Drinks England are 243/2 with Cook on 105* and KP on 44*


OVER 66: ENG 243/2 Siddle running in with plenty of heart; he really is in the 125 percent club this lad. But by God it looks like hard work; Cook leaves a good one, defends a straighter one, then takes a single off his pads. Sigh. Turn again, Poidersiddle. An interruption for some sightscreen / eyeline / divs in hospitality suites related problems upsets KP and we have to wait for a bit, before two defensive shots from KP and a leave-alone complete yet another fruitless over for the Aussies.


Twitter Benjamin Elks via Twitter: Fantastic performance from Cook so far


OVER 65: ENG 242/2 Another over from Doherty, not too bad in the main apart from one absolute pie: a leg-side full toss that KP crunches to the midwicket boundary. Ponting cannot trust this guy not to serve up freebies, and that is a big worry for Oz. Cook 104* Pietersen 44*


OVER 64: ENG 238/2 KP with one of his crazy ego shots: a sort of front foot slap back down the track and it goes about two feet over Peter Siddle's head. Risky and foolish? Or domineering and inventive? It all depends on your point of view. Actually, it all depends on if he gets out.


OVER 63: ENG 235/2 Doherty ain't getting any spin here and that, combined with the lack of dip or changes of pace, makes him an unthreatening proposition. Single for Cook, then a very nice drive from KP through the covers. And who is that fielder making a despairing and futile dive to cut it off? Why, it's 12th man Mitchell Johnson. Hasn't he suffered enough?


Email Lizzy via email: Good morning Alan. Exhaustion has been replaced by delirium chez Lizzy. Maybe KP should get out to Doherty just to keep him in the side?


OVER 62: ENG 229/2: Peter Siddle replaces Doug the Rug, and Ponting is rewarded with a maiden. That's not to say that KP did not play some shots; just that they all went to fielders.


Twitter Nick Hoult via Twitter: Cook has spent all but 11 overs of the series on the field of play. Great tribute to the team's fitness


OVER 61: ENG 229/2 KP smashes Doherty back over his head - he really is after Xavier here. He then takes a single down to long on, and that brings Alastair Cook onto strike. Doherty drops short and Cook cuts him for four to bring up his century! Well played. That's 103 off 173 balls - his 15th Test century; and he could well end up as England's leading run scorer before his career is over. Unless Australia come up with something soon, he might do it in this series. His concentration, not to mention his stamina, has been mighty impressive.


Email Jim via email: Sounds like Michael Vaughan is still wounded from tougher times against Australia to be enjoying this so much.


OVER 60: ENG 220/2 Cook and KP single, single, single from a mixed bag from Doug, who hasn't got his line, before KP hooks a short one for four. He then singles again, but Cook, on 99*, can't get the one he wants from the last ball of the over. Eight off it, and Ponting has one more problem to worry about: Bollinger.


OVER 59: ENG 212/2 A maiden from Doherty from Pietersen, who looks fully determined here. Patience, Kevin.


OVER 58: ENG 212/2 Cook takes a single off his pads from Bollinger. Pietersen plays that drive-whip of his, and it goes through straight midwicket but uppishly - you could see him getting caught in that position on this slightly spongy deck - and they run hard for three. Bolly then gets a bit straight and Cook turns that away for four with consummate ease. He looks in the F of his L here as he moves on to 97. Doug is a-gripin' and a-groanin', practising his action and generally looking unhappy with his game. Or maybe he's just pondering a tricky clue in his tea-break crossword. Four across: Animal that makes miaowing noise (3) C-something-T. Maybe that's why Australia took so long to emerge after the interval.


OVER 57: ENG 204/2 X Dogg bowling. Cook singles to bring up the 200 and give KP a chance to make Xavier Doherty his own / fall in a humiliating way. Ooh - nice shot. Four through midwicket for Kevin. All timing.


A single from OVER 56: ENG 199/2 Just one run off the over as the noted intellectual Doug Bollinger bowls to Cook, who clips one to square leg before KP defends five decent balls in a brisk, businesslike manner.


05.03 We are underway; and there should be 36 overs this evening. At this over-rate, we might be here for a while. Subplots to look out for: can Aussies catch? WIll KP over-ego the pudding and attack X Dogg too much? Will they ever get Cook out?


05.00 Australia are late getting onto the ground after tea. Eventually, they are shoved out of the dressing room with a broom and made to carry on bowling at England. This has taken up a good three minutes or so, I'd say. Perhaps it's Andrew Strauss' fault, eh, Ricky?


04.58 Morning everyone. Alan Tyers here to take you through until the close of play. Please email me your views, rants and such; or Tweet at me @alantyers, if that's your prefered method of communication.


04.54 Let's pay tribute to that mammoth Cook and Trott stand of over 500 runs. When they started batting:


- King George IV was on the throne;


- A pint of beer cost eightpence for mild, ninepence for stout;


- Adam Ant was number one in the singles charts with 'Look at Me! Look at Me! For God's Sake, Look At Me... My Liege';


- Ivor Gaffigan was prime minister of the United Kingdom, which in those days included Ireland and parts of northern France;


- Sharon Osbourne was born.


04.46 Pietersen looking quite good. There'll always be the odd rush of blood, but Pietersen without the odd rush of blood would be like a Tarantino film without the pretentious references to defunct film genres. It might be technically 'better', but you wouldn't like it quite as much. Cook sailing serenely to another century. It's really come to something when Ashes centuries by Alastair Cook become common currency.


TEA: ENGLAND 198/2 (47 behind) Cook 90* Pietersen 14*


OVER 55: ENG 198/2 North takes the last over before tea, and a Cook square drive for one, moving him on to 90, is the only activity from the over. Tea, and it's been another fine session for England. That session produced 108 runs from 28 overs, which will do very nicely indeed.


OVER 54: ENG 197/2 Less of the pyrotechnics from Doherty and Pietersen this time, but Pietersen does manage an all-run four down to deep mid-wicket. Despite the soporific tenor of this afternoon's cricket, England are still going at a pretty handy rate - nearer to four an over than three - and Australia are, despite that wicket, still in quite a bit of trouble.


OVER 53: ENG 193/2 Marcus North - the little rain that into every life must fall - returns just before tea, and Cook drives him down to deep cover for two. Cook tends to relax after taking runs early in an over, and he just sits in his crease and blocks the rest of the over.


OVER 52: ENG 191/2 Cook - who must be privately delighted that Doherty's back in his sights - works him down to fine leg for three. A single each to Pietersen and Cook, making five off the over, and the folly of picking a bowler to combat one batsman in the opposition line-up is being slowly exposed. It's akin to making Flintoff captain for the last Ashes series because he was Harmison's best mate. Why didn't they make Pietersen's best mate captain? Piers Morgan could hardly have done a worse job...


OVER 51: ENG 186/2 Here's Harris, who's bowled very well to his plan, and he's going to persist with Bodyline 2010 to Pietersen. But having sat in the dressing room with his pads on for the best part of two years so far this series, Pietersen isn't going to chuck it away with a rash hook shot. You'd think. He doesn't take the bait this over, at any rate, but Kevin Pietersen's not the kind of player that likes to duck, because Kevin Pietersen likes to play the hook shot the way Kevin Pietersen likes to play it, and Kevin Pietersen likes to dominate bowlers, because that's the way Kevin Pietersen plays, and that's the way Kevin Pietersen likes it. Kevin Pietersen, Kevin Pietersen, Kevin Pietersen.


OVER 50: ENG 185/2 "Xavier! XAVIER! You can come back and bowl again. Pietersen's in. What do you mean, 'cheapens your art'?" So it is that Doherty returns to the attack, and Pietersen is down the wicket straight away! No runs there, but the next ball is dragged down and crashed through the off-side for four. Super manipulation of the bowler's length by Pietersen, who has a dodgy moment the next ball when he comes down the track again and gets a thick outside edge that loops just over cover for two. A forcing shot off the back foot earns him another two, and simply by dint of Pietersen replacing Trott at the wicket, we have eight runs from the over and superb afternoon entertainment. Never a dull moment with Pietersen.


OVER 49: ENG 177/2 Pietersen generally begins with a there-but-for-the-grace-of-God-go-I single, but this one's actually rather serene. A simple push into the off-side, and with the field still set back for Harris's bouncer strategy, it's an easy run to get off the mark.


Wicket WICKET! Trott c Clarke b Harris 78 ENG 176/2
At last! Australia have their breakthrough, and it's rather a soft end for Trott, who must have spied a third Ashes century in his third Ashes Test. Harris dug it in again - not all that short - but perhaps it stuck in the pitch a little, for Trott got it a little high on the bat as he tried to paddle it to leg. The ball looped up to mid-wicket, where Clarke dived low to take a good catch. After more than 500 unbroken runs, Australia finally break the Cook-Trott partnership. Of course, that just brings in Kevin Pietersen...


Twitter Michael Vaughan on Twitter: "Have to tell you all I am loving this... Aussies are now down to plan L"


OVER 48: ENG 176/1 It's not Clarke, it's Marcus Saqlain North to replace Doherty, and Cook flays a full toss through the covers for four more. North knuckles down and keeps Cook at that end for the rest of the over.


OVER 47: ENG 172/1 Clarke's got his cap off and looks ready to turn his arm over, but Ponting changes his mind and tosses the ball to Harris instead. Perhaps after that last, over he wants Clarke to replace Doherty rather than partner him. Harris continues to pursue the bouncer policy, and Trott is tempted into the hook! There's some kind of noise and a muffled appeal as Haddin tumbles to take it, but it was probably helmet rather than glove. That was definitely glove, though! And Haddin's dropped it! Trott hooked again, gloved, and although Haddin had both feet off the ground as he reached to his left, he did manage to get both hands to it. Comfortably, too. It's a catch he would probably take eight or nine times out of ten. Not today, though. Nothing is going for Australia today. It's telling that the only way they've been able to get a wicket is by a batsman leaving a straight ball.


OVER 46: ENG 170/1 Trott doesn't quite pierce the leg-side field this time, but he still starts Doherty's over with a single. Cook comes down the pitch, but Doherty sees him coming and spears the ball in quick and low. Cook reacts and defends it, before leaning back and cutting hard for four. And the same again! This time to the right of the man at backward point. And a third! Doherty's just lobbing pies outside off-stump, and Cook is tucking it heartily. Thirteen off the over, and I'd surmise that's the last we see of Doherty for a while. Cook on to 78, and England are just 75 behind.


OVER 45: ENG 157/1 Siddle's visibly wheezing as he trundles in for what is only his fourth over of the spell. Cook with a controlled hook for one, and Siddle's back round the wicket to Trott. His length to Trott is pretty good - not short enough to duck under, short enough to be uncomfortable. Siddle then tries to surprise Trott by slipping in the yorker, and Trott just jabs down on it and sends it down to long leg for a run.


OVER 44: ENG 155/1 Trott turns Doherty into the leg-side for two, before cutting for four to bring up the 150 partnership. Two more down to deep point round out the over. Good over for England, who are treating Xavier Doherty like a warm bubble bath filled with essential oils.


OVER 43: ENG 147/1 Cook given out gloving a hook to the keeper! But he calls for a review immediately! And on the replay, it doesn't look anywhere near either bat or glove. It probably flicked the upper sleeve or the shoulder on its way through to Haddin. And the decision is overturned! Ricky Ponting looks like a man who's realised he left £20 in the trousers he's just dropped off at the dry-cleaners. Cook, reprieved on 64, takes a single round the corner - that's the first run for 22 balls - before Trott is disturbed by a couple of short balls from round the wicket. He just weaves out of the way of the first, and tickles the second behind square for a single. Like this bouncer tactic from Australia. Like it a lot. And it's the kind of thing you wouldn't see in any other format of cricket. Perhaps it's time someone invented a type of cricket in which you had to bowl bouncers? Maybe by dangling the stumps from an eight-foot high beam? You know what, I reckon I might be on to something here...


OVER 42: ENG 145/1 That's right, James. Stick the boot in. Doherty bowls another maiden to Trott, who barely looks awake, let alone interested.


Twitter Steve James on Twitter: "Any chance of these blokes giving us a game?"


Drinks: England 145/1 (100 behind) Cook 64* Trott 65*


OVER 41: ENG 145/1 Siddle continues what I'm tentatively going to dub 'Bodyline 2010' to Cook. Cook's not playing ball, though, not with two men out in the deep. Clearly Bodyline doesn't put the batsman in quite the same state of fear as they did in the 1930s. Quite apart from the development of helmets and leg-side fielding regulations, padding is far more robust these days. Chest guards these days are made of steel-reinforced Kevlar and tested to destruction by ex-marines firing Uzis at them. In the 1930s, they were made of duck feathers and satin. Another leaden maiden, and that's drinks.


OVER 40: ENG 145/1 Cook may fancy a piece of Doherty, but Trott's quite happy to play him out, safe in the knowledge that he can comfortably out-bore anybody else in world cricket. Maiden.


OVER 39: ENG 145/1 Just a slip and a short mid-wicket for Siddle, the rest of the Australian fielders scattered like seed in order to stem the flow of singles. Trott manages to get the ball through, though, clipping again through mid-wicket for four. It's almost as if Trott's been told there's a pile of cash on the outfield just straight of mid-wicket, and if he hits it he wins it. Doesn't have to be a pile of cash, obviously. A British passport, perhaps. But it looks as though Siddle's had quite enough of looking round to his right to see the ball flyling through mid-wicket, and he's going to give Trott a peppering. Short-leg comes in as Siddle goes round the wicket, but Trott simply tucks off his ribs for one more. Siddle continues the bombardment to Cook, but Cook simply ducks. Five off the over, and England trail by exactly 100. Australia aren't even on the back foot. They're practically falling over their stumps and failing to get their legs over.


OVER 38: ENG 140/1 Cook tries to hump a Doherty delivery into the Indian Ocean, and ends up miscuing it to mid-on for a run. Trott retakes his guard - ah, home comforts - and pushes a single into the off-side. Doherty's not found a great deal of turn so far, but if Cook's intent on giving him some hammer, Ponting might be tempted to keep Doherty on and try to buy a wicket. Siddle to return now.


OVER 37: ENG 138/1 Still Harris - bowling his 13th over of the innings - and Trott cuts hard into the ground and over the fielder's head for two. England 107 behind now.


OVER 36: ENG 136/1 Here's Doherty, and Cook greets him by cutting for four. We're almost where we left off in Brisbane. Cook's looking to score heavily off the left-arm spinner, and yes, he will try and drive against the spin out of the rough if he wants to. He can't get it away, though, and four runs are all that come from the over.


OVER 35: ENG 132/1 The mercury's now pushing 36C at Adelaide. It'll be one of those days where the players will actually be looking forward to their ice bath this evening. "Fellas, your ice baths are ready. Unfortunately, you'll have to share it with Merv. We made the mistake of storing all the XXXX in them and he just dived in..." Cook cuts Harris behind square for four more, before driving for another three. Harris is running out of things to try, and he goes round the wicket to Trott for the last two balls of the over.


OVER 34: ENG 125/1 Bollinger strays too straight again, and Trott takes an easy two through the leg side. Perhaps we're being a little harsh on the Australian bowlers. Cook and Trott are judging the line so, so well. Anything outside off, they leave. Anything on middle stump or inside, and it's disappearing through mid-wicket. Anything overpitched is being driven mercilessly. Like that! Trott drives gloriously for four! England are now more than halfway to Australia's score, and there's still 57 overs left in the day. England could be 100 ahead by stumps if they get a hustle on.


OVER 33: ENG 119/1 Cook's overseas average is over 51, which is 10 runs more than it is at home. What can this mean? Does he love hotel rooms? Does he play better when his mum's not watching? Should we be playing calypso music and feeding him bhajis before he goes out to bat at Lords? Harris bowls a maiden to Cook, who just flips slightly with a wild, fresh-air heave outside off stump.


OVER 32: ENG 119/1 Cook clips Bollinger for three to reach what must be the least surprising fifty of his career. Honestly, he's just looked so serene. Didn't even get dropped this innings. And two balls later, Trott plays it through mid-wicket for four to complete his fifty too! All around the field, you can see Australian heads dropping. Ponting has his hands on his hips and slips. Haddin barely has the will to stand upright, let alone start a verbal scrap. Trott's fifty took 84 balls, Cook's took 102.


OVER 31: ENG 112/1 Harris continues, Cook fends one to where a short leg would have been, but it runs away for a single to move him on to 49. Harris epitomises the problem Australia's bowlers have had all day, though. They can't seem to get two consecutive balls in the same place. Harris drifts one into Trott's pads, and he picks up an easy two. Have a squiz of our live Hawkeye analysis. The wagon wheel will show you exactly where Trott's scored his runs, and the pitch map will show you how Australia have let him do it.


Twitter @chris_scott1530 on Twitter: "Commentator 'pretty sure the England middle order isn't up to much... because they haven't batted...'"


OVER 30: ENG 109/1 Trott pulls! It's straight up in the air! Who wants it? And would you believeit, it drops safe! That short ball from Bollinger really harassed Trott a lot sooner than he was expecting it to, and the pull skewed off the upper half of the bat and looped up in a high arc to mid-wicket. The closest man, though, was Siddle at mid-on, and the ball landed just a couple of yards away from him! Is there a hot-weather equivalent to the phrase 'when it rains, it pours'? Like: 'when it's hot, you also get migraines'? Might need a little work, that adage. Cook gets one with a pull out into the deep.


Twitter Nick Hoult on Twitter: "I think KP has now spent more than 8 hours with his pads on if you include the Gabba."


OVER 29: ENG 107/1 That is just a sumptuous shot by Trott. Harris pitched it up on off stump, probably thinking that at worst Trott would have to try and pierce the off-side ring with his drive. Instead, he steps across his stumps and flicks it through the on-side for four of the loveliest runs you'll see. That brings up the 100 partnership for these two, and Ricky Ponting must be so sick of the sight of Cook and Trott by now you'd almost forgive him for taking out a contract on them. But the next ball Trott almost inside edges onto his stumps! It flies down to fine leg, and Trott picks up a streaky single. A big LBW shout off Cook, but it was almost certainly missing the off-stump. And, look, Cook got an edge on it.


OVER 28: ENG 102/1 Bollinger to begin, and Cook opens the face and guides his second ball between the two gullies for four. That's a deceptively excellent shot by Cook, who then glides the ball through the leg side for four more as Bollinger strays in line after lunch. And four more! Cut away behind square! Already Cook has bludgeoned as many runs this session than England managed in the half-hour before lunch. It moves him on to 47, within nurdling distance of a half-century.


02.40 Here come Cook and Trott. There's a kind of certitude about these two at the moment. They may get a magic delivery or fall to a phenomenal piece of fielding, but there's a feeling that neither of these two will throw it away. I remember during the last Ashes series the accompanying press pack got very excited for about two or three days about something Andrew Strauss said about Australia losing their aura. Well, if losing the Ashes in England costs you an aura, goodness knows what you forfeit in getting tonked for 517/1 at your home fortress. Your underwear, probably.


Twitter Shane Warne on Twitter: "Australia will fight back today! No other choice..." [rest of tweet inaudible amid munching of chicken burger]


02.18 AUSTRALIA ARE PANTS! THE ANALYST SAID SO! I DIDN'T SAY SO! IT WAS THE ANALYST! THE SAGE! THE ORACLE OF EALING!


Twitter The Analyst on Twitter: "First session to England. Aussies' bowling and fielding not a patch on England's. Whisper it quietly but Australia are Not Very Good."


Email 02.16 Lots of kiddies in yellow and green kit playing games of Kwik Cricket on the outfield. When did Test grounds stop letting spectators perambulate around the outfield at intervals? One idiot with a spade, a knife and a realisation that they haven't bought a birthday present for their nephew is all it takes, isn't it? "What a turnaround," writes P Meissner. (Just an initial. LIKE THAT'S OKAY.) "England are normally playing catch-up and making errors, drops, bowling inconsistently, and now the Aussies are doing it. For the first time since I've been following the Ashes I feel as confident as our team do."


02.10 Good, reassuring recovery by England after the early loss of Strauss. Cook and Trott have been resolute and skilful, and if they push on this afternoon it could be a fairly long, thankless day for Australia. The character of this England side is not in doubt. The unknown quantities are Pietersen and Collingwood - the next men in, and somewhat short of runs this tour, which hasn't been entirely their fault. If Australia can break this partnership, they might fancy their chances of driving stakes through the England middle order. Still, England's session.


Twitter @elksy91 on Twitter: "Cook and Trott partnership going strong. Come on England!"


LUNCH: ENGLAND 90/1 (155 behind) Cook 35* Trott 39*


OVER 27: ENG 90/1 Harris begins the last over before lunch. The Australian fans are unsuccessfully trying to incite a Mexican wave. I never realised how these things started, until I found myself seated right smack in front of the perpetrators at a Trent Bridge Test match a few years back. Never. Again. I sat there for around eight hours, and during the day they tried to start roughly 750 Mexican waves, about four of them successful. I'll be honest with you, the first 500 times it was funny. After a while, though, you did want to shove your plastic radio into one of their tender places. Their persistence and zeal was remarkable, although you wonder whether they wouldn't be better applying it to fighting against child poverty or working with recovering heroin addicts, rather than attempting to cajole 25,000 drunk cricket fans into voluntary spasm. Harris finishes the session with a bouncer - and it's given as a wide. Rather sums up Australia's morning.


OVER 26: ENG 89/1 Seven minutes to lunch, and we're finally going to see some spin. Doherty comes in to Cook, and he's managed to find a little turn. More than Swann did in his first over, at any rate. Cook's not going to hang around to see how far Doherty can tweak it, though, he's down on one knee and spanking it out to deep square leg for one. Another single to Trott, and that's a nice tidy start for Doherty. Whether he'll continue after lunch is another matter, of course.


OVER 25: ENG 87/1 Back comes Harris, and things should start to get a little more interesting now. Marginally - Trott tucks it off his legs for one, before Cook does the same. England now just 158 runs behind, and Australia really need a breakthrough here. Two untroubled runs off the over. Shot of Stuart Broad on the England balcony, reading a book about former AFL player Ben Cousins. "Not often you see a fast bowler reading a book," chunters Mike Atherton. Well, not all of us went to CAMBRIDGE, Atherton. Some of us didn't have books when we were growing up. (I did. Ironically, my favourite was by Mike Atherton.)


OVER 24: ENG 85/1 Well, Ponting's at least succeeded in getting the run rate down. Oh, hang on. Watson spears it - well, more sort of wafts it - in the direction of Cook's pads and Cook flicks it well in front of square this time, beating the man on the deep square leg fence and running away for four.


OVER 23: ENG 81/1 Oh, for heaven's sake, Ricky Ponting. This is stultifying. I know we asked for a nice, quiet day, but this is something else. Aha! Better from Cook, seizing on Siddle's leg-stump line and tucking it away for three to move to 29. Siddle compensates by pushing the next ball even further outside off stump than usual. How on earth do Australia reckon they're going to get rid of these two like this? Not through a heart attack, I'll tell you that for nowt.


OVER 22: ENG 78/1 Trott with a gorgeous drive for no runs as Watson continues. This little mise en scene, with Watson floating it up outside off stump with a ring of fielders saving one, is what's sometimes known as cat-and-mouse. I've never been entirely comfortable with the analogy. Essentially, a cat can catch and kill a mouse. A mouse has very little similar recourse to the cat. All it can do is run away and hope it doesn't get caught and killed next time. In order to improve the analogy, we need to introduce some jeopardy into the cat's existence. Eg: this little schtick between Watson and Trott is real cat-and-mouse-with-pellet-gun stuff.


OVER 21: ENG 78/1 "Catch!" goes the cry as Cook tries to put some lead in his pencil by cutting a wide ball from Siddle. By the time anyone can react, though, it's whistled through point for four. That, though, is a very good reply from Siddle, slanting it across Cook and beating his defensive stroke. Might be Doherty time soon...


OVER 20: ENG 74/1 Watson strays in line, firing it in at Cook's leg stump, but gets away with it as Cook's clip finds the sweeper on the boundary. Cook and Trott have now put on 400 runs without their partnership being broken. This is a very definite lull, so I'd appreciate a little flurry of emails to shank the tedium.


OVER 19: ENG 73/1 Cook gets the first run for 14 balls with a little push into the off side. Siddle then finds a beautiful outswinger - think Phil Newport on a greentop at Worcester in about 1992 - to whistle past Trott's outside edge. A good stat courtesy of Australia's Channel Nine: Trott's current Test average of 61.6 is the highest of any England batsman with more than 1000 runs. There we are. Proof. Proof that Jonathan Trott is better than Hobbs, Hutton, Hammond, Gower, Boycott, Compton, May and Afzaal.


OVER 18: ENG 72/1 The ball's still fairly new, there's still a little something in the pitch, and already Australia are doing the cricketing equivalent of cowering in the corner and whimpering 'please don't hurt us'. Watson's spraying it well outside the off stump, and Trott can just leave the entire over alone. This, unfortunately, is also Test cricket. Still, if your attack looks as toothless as Ricky Ponting's has this morning, what else do you do?


Email OVER 17: ENG 72/1 Here's Mitchell Johnson! Like the uncle who manages to squeeze himself into every wedding photo, Mitchell just can't stay away. He's only fielding - he's been dropped, remember - as a substitute for Doherty. Siddle switches ends and bowls a tighter over to Cook, a maiden. Ponting's given him an extra slip and told him to keep the ball on one side of the wicket. Sensibly, Siddle's chosen the off-side. John Sutherington, one of yesterday's correspondents, has shuffled back for more: "Tuned car radio in to LW198 at about 12.50am after a night of karaoke at the local pub, from Chris Farlowe's 'Out of Time' to Bobby Darin's 'Mack the Knife'." How perfectly pleasant. I note, though, that you either drove home while under the influence of alcohol, or performed karaoke while not under the influence of alcohol. Both are equally indefensible.


OVER 16: ENG 72/1 Shane Watson enters the attack. A little early for declaration bowling, no? Siddle only got three expensive overs before being hauled out of active service; if England get after Doherty too, Ricky Ponting's options will begin to look about as thin as Shane Warne's hair. Trott pushes it though mid-wicket for a single - there we are, leg side again. Cook mistimes a cut for two and then gets a leg bye. An Australian bowler then strays onto Trott's pads for roughly the 260th time today and Trott beats the man at deep square leg, working it in front of square for four more. The last three overs have cost 27 runs. Declaration bowling? Don't laugh, now...


OVER 15: ENG 64/1 Bollinger resumes by giving Cook the bouncer treatment. Haddin just about manages to gather the first, but can get but a fingertip to the second, and it runs away for five wides. Cook thick edges low through around fifth slip for four more, before Bollinger finds a better length and gets Cook feeling for it outside off stump. Cook may be in terrific form at the moment, but you sense it's a fragile purple patch. One ugly prod and you fear all the awkward memories will come flooding back, like that character in The Fast Show who goes postal at the very mention of the word 'black'. Nine off the over.


Twitter Nick Hoult on Twitter: "England four an over when the ball is supposed to be at its most responsive for the bowlers."


Drinks: England 55/1 (190 behind) Cook 14* Trott 32*


OVER 14: ENG 55/1 Trott edges down to third man for four. It kept low, but Siddle just managed to find a little bite in the surface. That's less clever from Siddle, though, feeding Trott's favourite stroke through mid-wicket. Trott makes no mistake, flicking it away for four to bring up the England fifty, and the 50 partnership. And far too straight again to Trott, who can glance it away fine for two more. All of a sudden, England are getting over their suicidal start and rattling along at a fair lick. That's drinks.


OVER 13: ENG 45/1 Bollinger replaces Harris. Cook pushes through backward square leg for one, Trott gets two leg byes in the same general area before taking another single down to fine leg. That's three synonyms for 'behind square on the leg side' in 25 words. Not an easy gig, this live blogging shenanigans.


Twitter @ofarrimond on Twitter: "Credit to England for holding steady after early shock. Touch wood."


OVER 12: ENG 41/1 Cook glances down to long leg; Trott does the same; Cook pushes one to mid-off, where Bollinger pulls off a good tumbling stop. Siddle's just bowling a little too straight to both batsmen, but the ball is nibbling a little out there. Trott plays and misses at one that beats his inside edge.


OVER 11: ENG 38/1 An advertising billboard at one end of the ground is displaying a giant picture of Shane Warne, face obscured by a giant McDonald's chicken burger. Say what you like about Shane Warne, but he's a man who likes to say yes. Chicken burgers? "Yes!" Hair replacement? "Yes!" Poker? "Yes! Yes! Yes!" Trott gets four for a bottom-handed whip through the leg side, but not quite the way he intended. He gets two for the stroke out to deep square leg, but the throw hits the stumps and bounces clear, and the batsmen steal two more as Clarke hares down to the boundary in pursuit. A short leg comes in, but the batsmen exchange singles before Trott flicks through mid-wicket for four more. A delicious, 10-run over. More delicious than a McDonald's chicken burger, at any rate.


Twitter Ian Chadband on Twitter: "Siddle, in conversation with his captain, suddenly and mysteriously wipes something from Ponting's chin. Very caring, very odd"


OVER 10: ENG 28/1 Siddle replaces Bollinger, and Cook will need to be wary of the change of pace. Siddle's a good 6-7mph slower than either of the new ball pair, and a good deal less accurate too, if this over is anything to go by. His second ball is a wild full toss outside off-stump that so startles Cook he barely attempts a stroke at it. That's a more familiar Cook shot, though, check-driving through mid-off as Siddle overpitches. That's his first four of the match.


OVER 9: ENG 24/1 Harris steams in for another. Cook tries to get him away with a cross-batted slap off the front foot but mistimes, and takes a single off the last ball of the over. Just get the shine off that new ball, Cook and Trott will be telling themselves. Just stick it out. "Harris doesn't look the right shape for bowling long spells on a flat pitch in the heat," types Tim Fox. "Hope we can grind him down today and blunt him for the rest of the Test."


OVER 8: ENG 23/1 Trott is dropped badly in the gully! He drove at a wide one from Bollinger, thick edged it, and it went straight to Hussey at around shin height. He's a fairily reliable pair of hands, Hussey, but this one doesn't just go through his hands but through his legs too. Huge let-off for Trott, and the reaction of the Australian fielders shows how crestfallen they are. Trott already on his third life after that missed run-out earlier.


OVER 7: ENG 21/1 Two slips and two gullies as Harris charges in to Cook. Will his right knee last the day - or two days? He flew home from the series against Pakistan in England this summer with the injury, and despite playing a good deal of one-day cricket, it's not really been tested much over five days. Good over from him, though. A maiden to Cook, who nonetheless plays it fairly comfortably and is getting well behind the ball.


OVER 6: ENG 21/1 Cook tucks it away for a single, before Trott plays the shot of the morning. The shot of most mornings, probably. Bollinger pitched it up outside off and Trott just stroked it away for an effortless four. All balance, that. Balance and timing. All balance and timing. And placement. All balance, timing, placement, ruthless efficiency and an almost fanatical devotion to the Pope.


OVER 5: ENG 16/1 Trott drives outside off stump and misses! Phwoar, this is real Test cricket. Australia are trying to bowl very straight to Trott and trap him LBW. Trott gets an inside edge into the leg side, and he's in real trouble as he wants a run and is sent back by Cook! Doherty misses with the throw! Trott was gone by miles! He'd given up trying to make his ground. Almost identical to Katich's dismissal this time yesterday, but while Trott threw the stumps down Doherty missed by about three feet. Not having the best series in the field, is Xavier.


OVER 4: ENG 16/1 Bollinger's really bustling in here, grunting and puffing and hitting the pitch hard. Just want you want to see as a captain. An Australian captain, that is. He empties a bouncer on Cook, who ducks under it and watches it sail over the head of Haddin for four byes. Cook then clips to the leg side for two, before Bollinger produces a beauty that seams away from Cook and leaves him groping for it like the proverbial blind man in the proverbial Spearmint Rhino.


Twitter Ian Chadband on Twitter: "Strauss shoulders arms to a straight one from Ruggy Dougie, third ball. Is this the maddest Test series ever?"


@pad87d on Twitter: "Regretting catching the first over this time..."


OVER 3: ENG 10/1 By the way, the scoreboard's up and running after yesterday's malfunctions.Here's Ryan Harris, and this is some pretty quick stuff. He's already up to 91mph, but Cook stands up to him and pushes off the front foot for a quick single. Trott then jabs a bat down on a straight delivery and gets two through square leg. Oh well, at least it's not two for three.


OVER 2: ENG 7/1 All of a sudden, Australia are utterly buoyant. There's nothing like prize wickets to keep you cool on a hot day. Bollinger pitches his first ball up and Trott - pressure, what pressure? - steers it through backward point for four. Bollinger replies well, beating the outside edge and then firing in a quick bouncer to Trott and following it up with a choice word or two. Nobody sticks in an Australian craw like Trott, who responds by serenely marking out his guard for the fourth time today.


Wicket WICKET! Strauss b Bollinger 1 ENG 3/1
Shocker! Well, we were never going to get a nice quiet start, were we? By any standards, though, that is a shocking miscalculation from Strauss. A single to each batsman, but then Strauss played no shot to a ball that was on middle stump and ended up hitting the top of that stump. Clearly Strauss left it on length. Shouldn't have done that.


ENGLAND RESUME ON 1/0 (244 behind)


23.59 Just to put that in a slightly nerdy statistical perspective, you have to go back to 1992 to find a team who scored as few as 245 in their first dig and avoided defeat. In 1992 Australia were skittled for 145 on day one, bowled India out for 225 and ended up turning it round and winning narrowly. The players are out - Australia first, then England at a safe distance. You can see the heat. Everything shimmers. We're going to see a lot of bare torsos today. Most of them, I would estimate, male. And most of those, I would further posit, aged between 40 and 80. Bollinger to take the new ball. Strauss to face.


23.50 They say you have to wait until both teams have batted on a pitch before you can judge how good it is. It's a fairly decent bet, however, that when England got back to their dressing room yesterday evening they were not gripped by an overwhelming sense of uncertainty. This is Adelaide, and the Adelaide wicket is so utterly akin to a road that it actually doubles for one in safety videos. You'd say 400 is an absolute minimum for a first innings score, so 245 was a pretty paltry effort.


Twitter Rob Key on Twitter: "England big chance of 500 again here"


23.40 Now, as the players walked off the field yesterday evening, there was a bit of handbags between Ricky Ponting, Brad Haddin and Andrew Strauss. "It means Australia are getting increasingly more irate," reckons Nasser Hussain. Anybody want to hazard a guess as to which one of those instigated it? The general consensus appears to be that it was something to do with Strauss walking off the field before the umpires had called time. Or something. Alan Tyers, however, can exclusively reveal what was said with the use of lip-reading technology (also known as lip-reading).


Twitter Michael Vaughan on Twitter, never knowingly unpatrioted: "Pitch looks very good... Boiling hot... Will Ponting be cool or not? Aussies are looking like they know it's going to be a long day. Good"


23.30 Given that this is the Ashes, this may seem a futile aspiration, but we'd all like a nice, quiet day today. No calamitous run-outs, no hat-tricks, no Jim Lakers, no Balls of the Century; just staid, unremarkable runs. Having grabbed this Test match by the throat on day one, England have a marvellous chance to shove it up against the wall and nick its iPhone. And beautiful batting wicket or no beautiful batting wicket, to do that they'll need to bat very well indeed. Anything less than 400 in their first innings, and the game is on again, guaranteeing the people of two nations a weekend of nervous butt-clenching. One thing, however, is most definitely in England's favour. It is absolutely roasting in Adelaide today. Thirty-five degrees C - more, perhaps - and a long day of toil in the field could well finish the Aussies off in this Test match. Play starts in half an hour, so if you want to make yourself a cup of tea or some trifle, you'd better get cracking. If however, you have nothing to do but sit and wait for the men in white coats to take the field, then why not get emailing, tweeting, or... no, that's it. Just emails and tweets. We're not the BBC. Yet.


-----


What might happen next: Alastair Cook breaks another of Bradman's cherished records by scoring 310 in a day as England ease into a commanding lead.


...and what probably will: It rains. Groundsman/curator Damien Hough then refuses to cover the pitch. "It may be against the Laws of Cricket, but annoying Kevin Pietersen is one of the laws of life," he explains. On the kind of sticky wicket not seen since the 1940s, England declare at 11 for nine in the hope of bowling Australia out cheaply. It then rains again, but this time the pitch is covered with heated, scented hover-covers before Ricky Ponting's men resume.


View the original article here

Monday, 27 February 2012

V England India: first Test live

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OVER 24: IND 70/1 Swann gets one to rag quite sharply to VVS but Laxman sees it off. We're seeing on the internets that Gambhir may have just bruising rather than a break. That would be a huge relief for India.

OVER 23: IND 69/1 Stirring stuff for the Indian fans! Three fours in a row from VVS off CT. A short-arm jab through leg; a sweet glide with lovely timing through cover; then a flashing drive that goes backward of square through the offside, which I thought was perhaps a touch risky. Tremlett keeps the next three safely away, wide outside off.

OVER 22: IND 57/1 Was there a suggestion of a hint of a puff of something when that ball from Swann landed? Tiny bit of crumbling? Or perhaps just a bit of dust. Swann finds an inside edge as Dravid pokes uneasily, but the ball lands way short of mid on. But then Swann drops short, not a massive amount, but you can't give this cat anything. Dravid's onto that for a neat two through cover.

OVER 21: IND 55/1 Chris Tremlett returns, replacing StuBo. Dravid gets off strike with a single. VVS is able to play out five balls without alarm; there's no bounce and no nip off the pitch. Even from that horrifying height.

OVER 20: IND 54/1 Interesting. First ball from Swann to Laxman and VVS aims a very un-Laxmanish slog to cow-corner for four. Perhaps they fancy attack might be the best form of defence against the spinner - who has 23 wickets in six matches at this ground (average 21). That's a bloody good effort at this spinners' graveyard.

OVER 19: IND 48/1 Another fine over from Broad. He tries going a little wider on the crease to VVS. Just one off it, when he strays legside.

OVER 18: IND 47/1 It's Swann. Good stuff. Oh, but the first ball is a long-hop loosener and Dravid cuts that away for four. Next ball, Dravid stretches to drive through cover for two. Strauss responds by putting silly point back on the boundary. Come on, Andrew! Courage! India need 411.

OVER 17: IND 41/1 StuBo tries the bouncer but it's not quite throaty enough: VVS is onto it very quickly and pulls for four. But New Improved Stuart Broad doesn't try to knock his block off with another bouncer (or call him a swear). He gets back to his mark and the remainder of the over is full and straight. Ball four is a beaut and seams back up the slope. Too good even for a man of VVS's brilliance. This hs been an excellent spell of Test cricket: especially when Broad has been bowling.

OVER 16: IND 37/1 Too wide from Jim: Rahul cuts that away for four. The rest all in the channel: Rahul leaves or blocks. And that, in a nutshell, is how to score 12,000 Test runs.

Twitter TMSscorer tweets: "Tendulkar can't bat til 2.13 tomorrow or 5 wickets down. Just time for match saving or even winning 100?"

OVER 15: IND 33/1 Broad continues his interrogation of VVS; who is keeping his cards very close to his chest. Tell you an advert I really hate. That opticians one with the shouting kids. Shut up shut up shut up.

OVER 14: IND 33/1 Jimmy has a go from the Pavilion End but he's not quite at his best. It takes a heroic stop from Ian Bell in the covers to save four after Rahul forces him off the back foot. But even Warwickshire's finest cannot save Jim when he throws in a very wide one; Rahul doing well to reach it, and guiding it through cover for a boundary.

OVER 13: IND 29/1 Quality leg glance from Rahul brings him four off Broad; then a single to keep the strike.

DRINKS India 24/1 (Dravid 6* Laxman 5*) "chasing" 434. Back in a sec.

OVER 12: IND 24/1 Good battle between VVS and Tremlett. Chris does him on the outside edge, but VVS is able to hang back to a few deliveries before he gets one that is short enough to pull away for four.

OVER 11: IND 20/1 I've not been his biggest fan on many occasions, but this is total class from Broad. He beats Rahul Dravid on the outside edge with a perfect leg-cutter. Next ball he slices him in half with the ball that jags back in off the seam and beats the inside edge. Next ball keeps a bit low and Rahul uneasily jabs it out. The whole over is out of the top drawer. Maiden.

OVER 10: IND 20/1 More good stuff from Tremlett at the Pavilion End. He brings one back down the slope and hits VVS in front; but that's thigh-pad and as such is too high to be given against a tall batsman from a tall bowler. The umpiring in this match has been top class. CT then baffles VVS outside off and he's lucky not to get an edge. Another excellent over.

OVER 9: IND 20/1 VVS Laxman comes the wicket at number three to face a buzzing Stuart Broad. He gets off the mark with a single and Dravid then survives an lbw appeal against a ball that nipped back. Doing too much; and it was too high. Very good over.

Wicket WICKET! Mukund b Broad 12 What a match Stuart Broad is having. His third ball of the day, Mukund wafts cross-battedly at a ball outside off, no foot movement, it swings a bit and he drags it onto his stumps. Mukund's second played-on of the match and he looks as sick as a pike. IND 19/1

OVER 8: IND 18/0 Another impressive over from Tremlett; he has Mukund fishing a couple of times, and Dravid comes down at the end of the over to tell the younger man to cool his jets. Broad is going to have a bowl in place of Jimmy A.

OVER 7: IND 18/0 Jimmy doesn't look especially happy. He seems to be kicking at the foothholes at the Nursery End, and he has nothing to worry Mukund in that over. Just 440 needed to win now.

OVER 6: IND 17/0 Good over from Big Chris, England's most promising yet. He gets some bounce from short of a length, Dravid plays a couple of balls down into the slips, not totally convincingly. The last ball rears from a length and Rahul is relieved to see it travel downwards off his edge.

OVER 5: IND 17/0 A couple for Mukund off Jimmy, but no serious threat.

E-mail Says Peter: "So the two players whose places were most threatened have produced two of the best performances for England in the match to date. Well done, great stuff from both of them. But one of the enigmas of cricket today with Prior when you see him perform well in Tests you would think his game would naturally adapt well to ODI form cricket - so why doesn't it?" Peculiar, isn't it? Lack of wristiness? Bad luck? Not had settled position in the order?

OVER 4: IND 15/0 Tremlett to Dravid. Good news: he beats the bat, the first time this has happened in the innings. Bad news: it was a no ball. To go with the 10 he bowled in the first innings.

OVER 3: IND 14/0 First ball of the Anderson over is a pie, short and wide. Dravid = four. Rest is better, fuller.

OVER 2: IND 9/0 Tremlett will take the new ball from the Pavilion End. HIs first ball is onto Mukund's hip and the yougn opener turns that away for four. Chris manages to extract some bounce, but only by giving the ball a fearful bang into the pitch halfway down. This pitch may not have died; but it's in the ICU.

E-mail Here's an excellent email from V A Krishnan: "I come from same place as Mukund and have watched him practice and play from close quarters. He is one of the best against fast bowling, specially bouncing deliveries. He would have difficulties with Swann’s round-the-wicket off-spinners (though, may not get him lbw, he can be tested with short-leg close-in and Swann bowls in bouncy spinners; take it). No charges for suggesting this to Andys Flower and Strauss."

While Andrew McNeilis says: "Stuck in the desert 44 degrees - thank you Prior and Broad for stopping me get even more hot under the collar!"

OVER 1: IND 5/0 Here's Jimmy Anderson. Initial impression is that there is not much nip off that pitch, and only a very small suggestion of swing. Mukund works the inswingers away to the leg for two twos.

16.55 India require 458 to win That unbroken 162-run stand has given England a huge total to bowl at, and the bruised and battered Indian line-up will have to use all their vast experience, skill and heart to avoid defeat here. Their first task is to survive until close of play: 30 overs, it should be. Rahul Dravid will be opening with Abhinav Mukund.

OVER 71: ENG 269/6 Broad edges past Dravid and they run two. Prior wanted three, but it wasn't to be. In lieu of getting his mate on the strike with all the field now up for the single, Broad bashes two fours. Brutal. He then manages to get a single. Prior can't get ball five away... but off the last ball of the over he laces one through the covers and that's his century! A very impressive 103* off 120 balls; England were in all sorts when he came to the crease. He apes the KP & Dravid kneel-punch, while Andrew Strauss joins the rest of Lord's in giving Matt Prior a very warm ovation; and then calls his batsmen in. England declare on 269/6 (Prior 103* Broad 74*)

OVER 70: ENG 254/6 Prior scampers for two, twice. Prior's on 99* but he can't get the vital one. There's four byes in the Dhoni over; and the 250 is up. Surely as soon as Prior gets it, that will be that? Still, nobody could begrudge him the chance to get his sixth Test ton.

OVER 69: ENG 246/6 Prior's going for it; he swings Raina into the midwicket stand for a six. A pair of hard-run twos and a couple of singles and he's suddenly on to 95*. The lead is 434. That's 67 in the ten overs since tea and you can't say fairer than that.

OVER 68: ENG 233/6 More slogging, this time off Dhoni. Prior top edges one into the air but it lands safely clear of the leg-side sweeper. Broad outside edges for four; then Prior gets four to fine leg and there's fully 11 off that over. Lead is 421. Prior 83* - are we waiting to see if he can get a ton? This is England's highest seventh wicket stand v this oppo.

OVER 67: ENG 221/6 The Indian fielders have scattered; Prior and Broad are throwing the bat at everything. Prior gets four to cow. Indian injury news: Raina, as I suspected and indeed may have said prematurely, is off to hospital for an x-ray. Sachin was off for 4 hours 20 mins. Dhoni swaps the pads with Dravid. This all eats up a bit of time. He is seriously going to get an over-rate ban, isn't he?

OVER 66: ENG 213/6 Naughty from the England pair: both Stuart and Matt are running right up the wicket. Five off that over from Sharma; and the lead is 401. England have sent a message via the 12th man. Come on Straussy, pull the cord. SB 54* MP 71*

OVER 65: ENG 208/6 Stuart Broad brings up 50 to add to a very impressive four-fer in the Indian first innings. And 50 valuable runs as well; England were in a pickle when he came to the crease. Six runs from the over. Re tickets: I beg your pardon, I was wrong Under 16's are free; over 65's a tenner. You'll need proof of your age either way, or it's twenty pounds if you are 16-64. Damn good value, I'd say. The lead is 396

OVER 64: ENG 202/6 Six off that over, including a Like A Boss pull from StuBo that rattles away for four. Prior 65* Broad 49*

Twitter Aggerscricket can reveal: "20,000 tickets go on sale at 0830 at North and East Gates. Cash only. Get there early!" I understand that they are 20 quid for adults and a ten-spot for the under-16s.

OVER 63: ENG 196/6 Who'd be a bowler, eh? Prior tries the big straight shot against Harbie but skies it high in the air... surely... must be... but it lands safely, pretty much exactly between various onrushing fielders. They run two, then a single, then Broad tries the same lofted straight shot. But he gets it spot-on and that thumps into the boundary. Oh, Bhaji. Seven off the over. Lead is 384.

OVER 62: ENG 189/6 Ooh, Ishant nearly does StuBo with the Chris Cairns/CA Walsh special. Very slow ball, very full from the Nursery End, and Broad totally loses that. He turns away and is lucky to see it wobble by. The lead is 377.

E-mail Pete mails: "Go on Matty - smash a few windows from the middle! No on will tell you off this time!"

OVER 61: ENG 184/6 Fancy a bit of DRS, Indian chums? Broad is struck bang in front by Bhaji, and that looks very out indeed. Not to Asad Rauf though, and him say "naaaah". Would have been out on review, looking at Hawkeye. Oh well. I guess I should say that he was a good way down the deck, but that just looked plumb.

OVER 60: ENG 180/6 Ishant Sharma resumes but doesn't look like he fancies it much. Not sure I can blame him, especially after a stupid overthrow turns one leg-bye into four. Pretty floaty stuff from Ishant. Six off the over. In other news, Sachin is back on.

15.59 Right then. We're ready. Should be a fun slog for five or ten overs, I hope.

TEA England 174/6 (Broad 36* Prior 55*) lead by 362 That session was England's by a long way. Dhoni set a disappointing tone by opening with Suresh Raina rather than Ishant Sharma and, the wicket of Morgan to a poor shot aside, there was only one side in it. India's injury woes got even worse when Gambhir was smacked on the elbow at short leg and take to hospital. The visitors were staggering by the end. Expect some big shots after tea, and then we will see if the wounded Indian batting can see out three and a half or three and threequarter sessions for a draw.

OVER 59: ENG 174/6 Broad blocks out Raina's over and that's tea.

OVER 58: ENG 174/6 The lead extends to 362 as Prior works the leg side fielders with a two and a three. Praveen Kumar has an lbw shout against Broad, but Billy B says that he got an inside edge. Flower and Strauss are in conference on the balcony. I'd guess that they will bat after tea...

OVER 57: ENG 168/6 Dhoni and his boys are on the ropes, trying to cover up. Suresh Raina is on for a bowl, the field is spread and they're just hanging on now and hoping for the declaration. Come on England, shove it down their throats with a quick slog and then let's get into that injured batting line-up. Matt Prior brings up his 50 (78 balls) - a very important one that has steadied England and allowed them to get right back on top. Only two fours in it, and lots of hard running. Prior 50* Broad 35*

OVER 56: ENG 165/6 Stuart Broad is going after Praveen Kumar now. Firm smack to point for one, Prior then hustles for two to long leg, pressure on the tired fielders. India looking rough. Prior takes a single and then Broad unfurls a splendid drive for four. Shot! Eight off the over, the lead is now over 350 and India are reeling.

OVER 55: ENG 157/6 Oh blimey, that is a sickener. Poor Gautam Gambhir is at short leg and Matt Prior pulls one, full contact, hit like a rocket right into his elbow. He's off the ground right away and straight to the hospital for an x-ray. It has already swollen up massively; they're saying on the TV that the ball was travelling at 72mph when it left the bat. And he was - what? - eight feet away. Yuk. That's a maiden. India have three sub fielders on now (Sachin, Zaheer, Gautam all in the sick bay with matron for various reasons).

OVER 54: ENG 157/6 Nice stuff from Praveen, full and swingy but Broad is seeing the ball now. He has a big arcing drive at the third ball and sends it majestically to the mid on boundary. But Praveen is right back at him with one that is aimed at leg but moves away a mile. Far too good for Stuart, and he's lucky to miss it.

OVER 53: ENG 153/6 Four singles from the Harbhajan over.

OVER 52: ENG 149/6 Chance! More iffy keeping from Dhoni in this match. Kumar finds the edge of Broad's bat as the blond drives loosely. Dravid is very, very wide at first grabber, but Dhoni just stands there like a statue as the ball flies through the gap. Nearer the keeper, and that is not Test class glovesmanship. Six off that over; and I make that 29 off the last five.

OVER 51: ENG 143/6 Chance! (Kinda) Harbhajan totally does Stuart Broad with a quicker one, but the edge flies so quickly at Dhoni that it would be harsh to blame him for not gathering. Would have been a wonder catch. Single. To add further pain, Prior then strokes Harbhajan away for four through cover. Sachin needs to get back on that field: he can't bat for the length of time he was off. That's already 3 hours 45 mins. Or he could come in at number seven.

OVER 50: ENG 136/6 StuBo is hanging on the back foot v Ishant. He makes a mess of a pull and is lucky that is plops away safely. But then he gets hold of the same shot perfectly and cracks it for four. Then a nice middled shot, but only for one, to deep cover. Oooh, but steady on, Mat Prior! He works to square leg and calls for a very tight two. Broad is running to the bowlers end and he's well short - but the throw is weak. Risky two, that. Nine off that over.

Twitter Aggerscricket tweets: "Very sad to see Morgan not walk for that catch. And also that Bowden did not make the decision on the field. It was 10 yards away max."

OVER 49: ENG 129/6 A single each for the batsmen off Harbhajan. Sachin is back in the ground.

OVER 48: ENG 127/6 Ishant resumes. Broad drives him on the up, off the back foot, through cover for three. Slightly dicey steer to slips from Prior, and then more pathetic fielding from India: Mukund lets the ball through his legs and two becomes three for the England keeper-batsman. England lead by 317 and, if by no means totally safe, are definitely heading in the right direction.

OVER 47: ENG 120/6 Another impressive over from Harbie; trying to get Prior driving outside off. Sloppy from India: they let him nick the strike off ball six.

Drinks England 118/6 (Prior 30* Broad 6*) lead by 306 One wicket for 46 runs in that hour; and I'm giving that round to England on points 10-9.

OVER 46: ENG 118/6 Matt Prior proves, once again, that he is superb square of the wicket on the off side. Width from Ishant and a sweet four through point. The lead is now over 300. A single to leg as the young bowler over-corrects. It's lanky young pacer on lanky young pacer action as he tucks Broad up with a short one, but then fair play to the Notts man: he gets up to his full height to force away on the back foot through extra cover for three. Well played. That's drinks.

E-mail "Utter filth that from Morgan," says Dan Lucas. "He's a great one-day batsman, but has consistently got a start and got out in Test cricket. England aren't going to run through this Indian line-up twice and cheaply with four bowlers unless one of them is Curtly Ambrose quality. Prior's good enough for 6, Morgan isn't, so we need a fifth bowler I reckon."

OVER 45: ENG 110/6 Broad gets a couple through square leg; but this is a testing over from Harbhajan. Turn, bounce, flight... and he does well to hang on.

OVER 44: ENG 108/6 That man Ishant has done the biz for his skipper and he now has four wickets. I wish we would just get rid of those replays for low catches. It always makes them look much more iffy than they are. Let's go back to the honour system. Broad survives the king pair and then races a nervy single. Praveen Kumar fields, dives and hits the stump, but the boy Broad was in by a long way. Sharma then beats Prior with a snorter that fizzes past off. Oh crikey - Kumar has called for the physio and looks to be hurting in the shoulder.

Wicket WICKET! Morgan c Gambhir b Sharma 19 Short ball from Ishant surprises Morgan, who pulls. Far too close to the body for that shot, Eoin. It loops off the splice and Gambhir runs in from midwicket to dive forward and catch very low. Looks out for all money - but Morgan stands his ground. Bit of camera tomfoolery with the third umpire - and, once again, the more you look at it, the more some doubts creep in... But ultimately, that is out and it is given thus. Yeah, I'd say that definitely carried.

OVER 43: ENG 107/5 Bit of a frustrating over for Harbhajan: a loose shot from Prior leading-edges airily to no-man's land. Then Prior is able to turn one into two as Kumar at point has a long way to run.

OVER 42: ENG 105/5 Ah, here hell Ishant. Can he wrest back the initiative after 10 overs went for an unalarmed 32 after lunch? Not in this over. One for Prior; cautious defence from Morgan. Nice bit of analysis on Sky points out that Ishant has delivered the ball from nearer the stumps in this innings (as opposed to a wide release in the first); and the results speak for themselves. Morgan 19* Prior 23*

OVER 41: ENG 104/5 Five easy singles from the Harbhajan over as this pair start to look quite comfortable. Where hell Ishant?

Twitter Cricketer_John tweets: "Sachin indisposition good news for MCC money men. Almost guaranteed not to bat today. might be one or two queuing at the gates tomorrow"

OVER 40: ENG 99/5 Prior is able to single easily to deep point, and then Morgan is hawkish in defence to the rest of the Kumar over. Whisper it, but England are guiding themselves back into a commanding position. 289 is the lead.

E-mail "Culinary incantations from Guy Perry to Peter in Colombia: “Senor Pedro, despaireth ye not. What with my consumption of sacred rice pudding in Kerala, and your consumption of sacred mate tea, we can invoke cricketing gods on two mighty continents...and get the Indian cricket team running scared....”

OVER 39: ENG 98/5 Quality over from Harbhajan. He gets one to turn back from the rough into Prior, who tries to run that away off the blade on his back foot. Risky shot that, and he’s lucky to miss it. Prior sweeps for one; again a somewhat brave shot given the bounce and overspin this bowler can find. Morgan on strike, and Bhaji nearly slides the ball through his defence, the delivery that slides on. Well bowled.

OVER 38: ENG 97/5 Sympathies for Praveen Kumar here. He's obviously figured out/been told not to give Prior width, but that means he keeps getting a bit straight. A couple and then a single turned to leg with no worries. Not easy, this bowling caper.

OVER 37: ENG 94/5 Prior has a mow and is struck on the pad - but Harbie's lbw appeal is rightly turned down because that hit him outside the line of off. Morgan cuts through the gully/slips, bit of an odd shot, but he gets four. The lead's 282 and this partnership has crept to 32 very welcome runs.

OVER 36: ENG 89/5 Kumar checks the scoring rate with a maiden, although that's partly because three balls were very wide of Morgan's off pole.

OVER 35: ENG 89/5 Morgan sweeps Bhaji for three, Prior likewise sweeps for a single, and then a misfield at deep extra turns Morgan's one into three. India have been absolutely pants since lunch and England are fighting back.

E-mail "Like Guy, have just seen the score because it's early morning here in Colombia - would you adam and eve that scoreline? Have the rooks left the tower - what's going on?" asks Peter Rowntree. Meanwhile, Guy writes: "I don’t want to build up a nation’s hopes. There could be more to us winning the first Test it than my eating sacred rice pudding in Kerala, and praying. But, Lordy, it’s tasty, very tasty."

OVER 34: ENG 81/5 Praveen Kumar on to bowl. So Raina’s over was just for an end-change. Okay. I guess. Not sure why Ishant isn’t on, mind you. Full from Praveen to Prior, and there’s a swing and a miss outside off. Then a misfield from Yuvi at midwicket: three runs. Cheers. Sachin, we hear, is on his way to the ground.

OVER 33: ENG 78/5 Harbhajan continues - and he tempts Morgan into a leading edge that loops up, but lands safely between mid off and extra cover. Lucky Morgs!

OVER 32: ENG 76/5 Okay, that was a really odd bowling change. Suresh Raina's modest off-spin wasn't really on target, it certainly wasn't threatening, and Prior was able to help himself to a two and a one, while Morgan also had a single into a well spread field. Just the sort of gentle first over after lunch that England would have wanted.

13.39 The Indians are back out, and they look like keen. Suresh Raina, oddly enough, is having a bowl from the Nursery End. Prior and Morgan need to counter-attack here.

E-mail Guy Perry has a solution: "Just read of our collapse. It’s lunchtime in England, and teatime for me in Kerala. I will eat sacred rice pudding (palpayasam), do some cricket-sort-of-chanting with the dogs (they’re a bit disinterested, mind you) and pray for a miracle. Do you think this will work?" If dog-assisted rice pudding can't do the trick, what can? GO ON GUY.

Twitter Tweets scyldberry: "Ishant Sharma and Duncan Fletcher targeted England achilles heels: early bouncer to Pietersen, Bell opening the face, jagging back to Trott."

13.20 This parade is pretty funny. Athers, Nasser and Sourav are sharing a golf cart. Cor, look at the size of Farokh Engineer. Pity that poor buggy.

13.15 While we mull over Cheetan's question, I am going to get something to eat. 67 runs for five wickets in that 26-over session. If India bowl England by tea, I reckon they'll have 350 to chase in four sessions. I personally would fancy India in that scenario; although I guess it would be nice to know how poorly Mr Sachin is feeling... back in a sec

E-mail "Just like to ask one question," writes Cheetan Malhotra. Ask away, my friend. Ask away. "Why does English media become so cocky so quickly? They dismissed India so quickly in their morning reaction to the 3rd day on skysports and on TMS. Maybe a little lesson there."

LUNCH England 72/5 Prior 5* Morgan 5* The lead is 260; but that morning belongs to India. A rather quiet first hour, with just the lost of Cook. And then things suddenly came alive with a great spell from Ishant. Andrew Strauss opened the door with a brainless slog-sweep off Harbhajan; Sharma kicked it in with three wickets for one run - KP with a snorting lifter, Bell with a full ball that nibbled away, and Trott driving at one that nipped back. Superb bowling. Lest we forget, England are still 260 ahead, but they will need a partnership of substance from Prior and Morgan.

During the lunchbreak at Lord's, there will be a parade of former England and India skippers. In golf carts. Jolly good.

OVER 31: ENG 72/5 My man Praveen Kumar replaces Harbhajan. He's right on the money with his off-stump line; Prior gets a thick outside edge through the slips, and Yuvraj Singh (on the field for virus-stricken Sachin) makes a game stop on the boundary to keep it to three. Praveen doesn't quite find the line to the leftie right away and Morgan is able to clip for two. Morgs, who looks like he means business, sees out the rest of the over and we will have our lunch.

OVER 30: ENG 67/5 Prior, not unwisely, gets off the strike with a single from the first ball, leaving Morgan to face five balls from Ishant. He guides past point for a couple and survives the over; leaving the ball with impressive control.

OVER 29: ENG 64/5 Eoin Morgan shows good judgment to leave the turning ball from Harbhajan outside his off-stump. He and Prior both get singles in the over to get off their marks.

OVER 28: ENG 62/5 A wicket maiden from Ishant and England are in serious trouble. As I type, India are 11-2 to win this game and I would say that's not a bad bet.

Wicket WICKET! Trott b Ishant 22 More brilliance from Ishant. Full-ish, it nips back off the seam and Jonathan Trott is driving, loosely, at thin air. Bowled all over the shop as the ball zips through between bat and pad. This young man is bowling his team into a winning position here. ENG 62/5 and Ishant has three wickets for one run.

OVER 27: ENG 62/4 Finally a bit of respite for England. Harbie bowls a wide one - it's turning, Harbie, but not that much - and Trott is able to slap that away through point with ease for four.

OVER 26: ENG 57/4 Another hostile over from Ishant; good pace and getting some lift off a length. There's just one off it, as Trott manages to work one away to leg.

E-mail Writes Nimish Varadkar: "There is a belief in Indian culture, Alan, that if something good happens with someone's arrival, then the person that has arrived has lucky feet. So I guess you are the man for us today, Alan. Not Ishant, not Praveen, but you." Nimish, if what you say is true, then I shall buy a lottery ticket on the way home and fill it in by gripping the pen with my toes. It's all India right now.

OVER 25: ENG 56/4 Harbhajan keeps the pressure on with another fine over; he's finding some turn and rips one back into Trott. It would have slid past leg; good decision - but India are all over the hosts at the moment.

OVER 24: ENG 55/4 What an over from Ishant! A double wicket maiden. Never mind about setting a target, England now need to survive for a bit; after three wickets in ten balls. Morgan 0* Trott 15* Lead 244

Wicket WICKET! Bell c Dhoni b Sharma 0 Ishant Sharma is bringing it to England. Superb bowling! Another really excellent ball, it pitches and leaves Bell, he nibbles at it and is caught at the wicket.

Wicket WICKET! Pietersen c Dhoni b Sharma 1 Bring back Giles Mole! That's another one and India are electric at the moment. Ishant to KP and Kevin's confidence runs away with him. He gets onto the front foot, but that ball is short of a length and the bounce surprises him, flicking the shoulder of the bat for a regulation caught-behind. That is poor batting really; a bit of arrogance you might argue. Simply not possible to get on the front foot to a tall bowler banging it in short at 86mph. Bell comes in.

OVER 23: ENG 55/2 That's a really good over from Bhaji. He's getting turn and bounce. KP comes to the crease and edges his first ball towards slip, albeit into the ground. Harbie looks a different bowler today.

Wicket WICKET! Strauss lbw Harbhajan 32 Blimey, sorry everyone. Alan Tyers here and I'm afraid my very first duty is to tell you about the wicket of Andrew Strauss. You were much better off with Giles. A good over from H Singh, he bustles one past Strauss' edge, perhaps unsettling the skipper. Next ball, Strauss aims a rather wild slog-sweep and totally misses the ball which bounces and holds it line. He's struck on the pad and there's no question about that one. LBW.

OVER 22: Eng 54/1 Sharma back into the attack but still no joy for the lanky seamer. One off the over and England lead by 242 runs with nine wickets remaining. I am now handing over to Mr Alan Tyers

OVER 21: Eng 53/1 Kumar continues and he's starting to get some swing out there. Trott doesn't look content with leaving the ball alone and the odd shuffle of the feet is showing his impatience. Maiden over.

OVER 20: Eng 53/1 Strauss so very nearly bottom-edges onto his own stumps off Harbhajan, looking to drag the ball from outside off and fortunately seeing it bounce over the wickets. England now lead by 241.

OVER 19: Eng 50/1 Poor fielding from Sharma at point allows a cut by Strauss to go right through him and reach the boundary. Kumar looks displeased to say the least, as does India's fielding coach Trevor Penney. However, a bad bit of fielding is followed by a very good one from Suresh Raina who sweeps in from cover and hurls at the sumps, claiming a direct hit. This will be close. Trott, judging by the replays, is just in. And I mean just. And he's not out! Time for drinks.

OVER 18: Eng 44/1 Graeme Swann will be watching Harbhajan's overs very carefully and he's certainly getting some turn.

OVER 17: Eng 42/1 Englands batsmen are rotating the strike well and three runs off the face of Trott's bat towards wide long-on do no harm at all. England now lead by 230 and Harbhajan Singh comes into the attack.

OVER 16: Eng 34/1 A lovely pull by Trott off a rare short ball from Sharma flies for four. Great instinctive shot. Dhoni is gesturing for the helmet, so he may well be coming up to the stumps in the next over. Sharma looks as though he is bowling much tighter to the stumps, something the ever-creative Duncan Fletcher has maybe asked him to do.

OVER 15: Eng 28/1 A couple of sliders down the leg side by Kumar suggest he's trying to get Trott moving across his stumps. And there's a loud appeal off the third delivery as England's No 3 is rapped on the pads in front, but umpire Rauf shakes his head, signalling too high. It was just missing, though, and only because he was standing outside his crease. Good tactics from both sides.

OVER 14: Eng 25/1 Sharma continues to steam in but without reward. The form he showed in West Indies hasn't been carried over to Lord's and its one off the over.

OVER 13: Eng 24/1 Kumar's tail is up and he's receiving plenty of encouragement from his team-mates, he even seems to have found a bit of extra zip. Unusually for Jonathan Trott he is standing outside his crease straight away and very nearly gets an edge. However, the reason he's standing so far forward is so he doesn't get pinned on the back foot by Kumar right in front of his stumps, as happened in the first innings.

OVER 12: Eng 23/1 Having just lost his opening partner, Strauss has become watchful and a bit of extra bounce from Sharma has the Indian fans in the crowd ooohing and arrrrhing. Maiden over. England's lead is 211.

OVER 11: Eng 23/1 Kumar may be bowling nice and straight but his lack of pace is giving the England batsmen an easy ride at the moment. He only seems effective when the ball is swinging and at the moment it just isn't. And just as I say that he bags the wicket of Cook who nicks a regulation edge behind to Dhoni. Bloggers curse.

Wicket WICKET! Cook ct Dhoni b Kumar 1
Fine delivery from Kumar - little bit of bounce, little bit of movement and comfortably caught by Dhoni behind the stumps

OVER 10: Eng 22/0 Cook misses out trying to pull a wide one down the leg side from Sharma... normally he disptaches those to the boundary. Lots of deliveries are carrying though really low to Dhoni, or not at all, and the longer this sun beats down on the pitch the more variable the bounce will become... and it will become variable! Maiden over.

OVER 9: Eng 22/0 Kumar is back over the wicket but his foot is getting remarkably close to the danger zone and there's always the risk that the umpires will warn him, and he could eventually be hauled off, just like what happened in West Indies. He's treading a fine line but England won't mind, the more he scuffs up the pitch the better for Swann and co. A boundary for Strauss off the final ball takes England to 22/0.

OVER 8: Eng 18/0 Good running from the England pair who look as though they are determined to set a good tempo to this innings. Solid cricket and thats two off the over.

OVER 7: Eng 16/0 An indication of Praveen Kumar's lack of pace can be seen from his first delivery, 72mph, which fails to carry through to Mahendra Singh Dhoni and raps the wickie on the shins. First boundary of the morning goes to the England captain as he helps the next ball down to the fine-leg boundary. And that's followed by a cracking pull for four to midwicket from a medium-paced dobber pitched half-way down the track. 10 off the over.

OVER 6: Eng 6/0 Ok, the stage is set and here we go. Yuvraj Singh and Wriddhiman Saha are on the field for India in place of the injured Zaheer Khan and sick Tendulkar. England will probably be looking to add another 250 to their overall total at least. Without Zaheer the India bowling attack is a bit thin and Ishant Sharma doesn't look threatening as he opens proceedings. One off the over.

Twitter @VaughanCricket - "Lots of Indian fans here at Lords.. Btw Dhoni is 7/2 to be the leading wicket taker in the 2nd innings!!!!"

10.40 News coming out of the India camp this morning is that Sachin Tendulkar has a viral infection and is resting under doctors orders. He may take the field later, though

10.35 Before play gets underway, let's have a quick recap to set the scene for today's action. England are currently 5-0 in their second innings having bowled India out for 286, meaning Strauss' men already have a 193-run advantage.

10.30 Good morning and welcome to a belter of a day at Lord's. The Sun is shining, Lord's looks a picture, this morning's papers are signing England's praises and I have just been handed a free cup of tea... could it get any better?

First things first, a quick weather report...

... and as you can see, we've got a fantastic Sunday and Monday so expect two full day's cricket, just don't forget your sun block.

The big question at the moment is how long do England bat for? Geoffrey Boycott has told Andrew Strauss to be positive this morning, build a mammoth total quickly and ensure plenty of time to dismiss India dangermen Dravid, Tendulkar, Dhoni et al. We might even get a tea time declaration, only time will tell.

While we wait for the players to take to the field, some required reading is in order so why not check out...

Simon Briggs on the English crowd's mixed feelings when Sachin Tendulkar fell cheaply.

Steve James congratulates Rahul Dravid on becoming the first of this India team's batsmen to have his name etched on the Lord's honours board.

Simon Hughes analyses why Stuart Broad went from almost being dropped to Saturday's bowling sensation.


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