
England breathed new life into the first Ashes Test, shrugging off their dismal form of the first day to dominate the second on Friday.
In an amazing turnaround, England fought their way back into the match as mistakes began creeping into the Australians’ game, the touring side ending on 158 for one in reply to the home team’s first-innings 492.
England’s bowlers led the unexpected recovery when they ripped through the Australian batting order, mopping up the last eight wickets for 114 runs just after lunch. Left-arm spinner Ashley Giles captured four wickets and fast bowler Andy Caddick three after Australia resumed on 364 for two.
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SCOREBOARD (DAY 2)
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Australia (1st innings): (Overnight 364/2) J Langer c Stewart b Jones 32, M Hayden c Stewart b Caddick 197, R Ponting b Giles 123, D Martyn c Trescothick b White 26, S Waugh c Crawley b Caddick 7, D Lehmann c Butcher b Giles 30, A Gilchrist c Giles b White 0, S Warne c Butcher b Caddick 57, A Bichel lbw Giles 0, J Gillespie not out 0, G McGrath lbw Giles 0; Extras (b-1, lb-11, nb-7, w-1): 20 |
England’s batsmen followed up the excellent work of their bowlers by making a flying start to their reply, still 334 runs behind at the close but in a far healthier position than at the start of the day.
Marcus Trescothick and Mark Butcher both made half-centuries after getting let-offs from the Australians who suffered a rare bout of the fumbles. Trescothick, despite several miscued shots, finished the day unbeaten on 63 after he was given a life on two when dropped by Damien Martyn at third slip.
Butcher had two lucky escapes before he brought up his 50 just before the close. The Surrey left-hander was dropped in the gully on 14 by Matthew Hayden then Adam Gilchrist missed a regulation stumping off Shane Warne when he was on 30.
Despite needing a little luck, the two Englishmen both batted strongly, hitting boundaries to all parts of the ground in an unbroken partnership of 109 runs. They came together just after tea when opener Michael Vaughan was dismissed for 33, getting the faintest of inside edges to a steeply rising delivery from Glenn McGrath.
England’s hopes of salvaging something from the match after a disastrous first day got an immediate lift when Caddick removed Hayden in the first half an hour. (Reuters)


