All-round Mousley drives Bears into Blast quarter-finals

21-year-old adds four wickets to brisk half-century as Worcestershire fall to derby defeat

ECB Reporters Network23-Jun-2023

Dan Mousley celebrates one of his four wickets•Getty Images

Birmingham Bears secured a place in the Vitality Blast quarter-finals with a thumping 53-run victory over arch-rivals Worcestershire Rapids at Edgbaston.Put in, the Bears started strongly and never lost momentum as they totalled 228 for four thanks to half-centuries from Rob Yates and Dan Mousley and Glenn Maxwell’s 20-ball 44.Mousley then continued his brilliant Blast by adding 4 for 41 to his half-century as the Rapids totalled 175 for 9, Mitchell Santner top-scoring with 56 from No. 3.One more win from their last two games will secure Bears a home tie in the last eight while, though the defeat is a setback for Rapids, they remain in the thick of the qualification race.Related

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The Rapids chose to field but Bears openers Yates and Alex Davies put 50 on the board in 30 balls. England’s most recent debutant Josh Tongue suffered a tough first over with three successive wides, but hit back well in his second over, beating Yates with three successive balls without getting the edge.After a strong powerplay (66 without 0), the Bears lost Davies for 29, caught behind off Santner’s second ball but Yates galloped to his second Blast fifty in 24 hours before skying a return catch to Dillon Pennington.Maxwell’s departure, well-held by Pat Brown at long-off off Santner, brought together two of English cricket’s most vibrant young talents – Mousley and Chris Benjamin. They crashed 60 from 30 balls to leave the Rapids needing to score at 11.40 an over.Glenn Maxwell got into his groove•Getty Images

They received a perky start from Brett D’Oliveira and Jack Haynes before the former tried to swat Mousley’s first ball to leg and was bowled. Haynes then swung Danny Briggs over mid-wicket for six but drilled the next ball to Yates at extra cover.The Rapids had to go for broke and that pressure cost wickets. Briggs struck a big blow by luring former Bears team-mate, and fellow Ventnor product, Adam Hose to his doom, stumped by Davies. Kashif Ali smote Mousley far into the Hollies Stand but then dragged a swinging yorker from Hasan Ali on to his stumps in a superb over which cost three runs and sent the required rate into the stratosphere.Santner landed some clean blows in his fifth T20 half-century off 27 balls, but Mousley bowled Ben Cox and Usama Mir with successive balls to leave the Rapids needing 96 from five overs. When Mousley had Santner stumped to complete his four-for, the Bears were home, hosed and in the quarter-finals.

'That was AWFUL to watch!' – Leah Williamson reveals Lionesses practiced penalties 'science' ahead of England's stunning shootout win over Sweden at Euro 2025

Leah Williamson insists that England did practice penalties before facing Sweden, but admits their shootout was "awful to watch".

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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    An absorbing quarter-final contest at Euro 2025 went all the way to spot-kicks after 120 minutes of action failed to separate the two sides. Sweden led 2-0 at half-time, only to see the Lionesses come roaring back late on courtesy of Lucy Bronze and Michelle Agyemang.

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    A draining encounter took its toll as several players picked up knocks in extra-time – including Williamson and penalty-saving hero Hannah Hampton – and tired legs resulted in nine missed penalties before England eventually prevailed 3-2.

  • WHAT WILLIAMSON SAID

    Williamson, who was forced to watch on from the bench after damaging her ankle, told of a shootout that saw Lauren James, Beth Mead, Alex Greenwood and Grace Clinton fluff their lines as Hampton saved two efforts and Sweden missed the target with three more: "I just feel really, really proud. That was awful to watch at the end, but the girls, I just love that we don’t ever give up. We’ve said it before, we’re never done. We don’t believe that we’re ever done. The fightback, the quality to turn the game around and then stay in it mentally – just incredible."

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    Asked if the Lionesses had practised penalties, with some tame strikes being delivered by both teams: "Loads! I know there were a few more misses than normal but everybody does. It’s something you have to box off before a tournament. There’s so much science behind it nowadays. We know it. It’s the easiest and hardest thing in the world."

Dhananjaya, Kamindu centuries put Sri Lanka on top on 13-wicket opening day

Sri Lanka bounced back from 57 for 5 to end the first day 248 ahead; just one wicket fell to a spinner all day in Sylhet

Madushka Balasuriya22-Mar-2024Stumps A day that started with Sri Lanka’s top five being skittled for just 57 ended with Bangladesh three down and trailing by 248 runs. In between, there were centuries for Dhananjaya de Silva and Kamindu Mendis amid a 202-run sixth-wicket stand, as Sri Lanka fought back from a horror start to end day one of the first Test in Sylhet in control of proceedings.By stumps, Vishwa Fernando and Kasun Rajitha had accounted for three of Bangladesh’s top four, with Mahmudul Hasan Joy (9) and nightwatcher Taijul Islam (0) at the crease.It was a day that belonged to the fast bowlers, except for two notable exceptions, as Dhananjaya and Kamindu showcased just how easy batting could get once you got yourself in and the ball softened up. Having come together with the score on 57 for 5, the pair rode out the early movement being exploited by the seamers to see Sri Lanka through to lunch, before exploding after the interval to drag Sri Lanka back into the game.In a dominant post-lunch session, they struck 125 runs, going stretches at better than a run-a-ball, while the Bangladesh seamers, who had seemed so threatening in the morning, were left scratching their heads.Perhaps a little too eager in striving for wickets – this was after all Sri Lanka’s last recognised pair – the bowlers struggled to maintain consistent lines and lengths, something that they had had trouble with even in that morning session.Kamindu Mendis scored his maiden Test century•AFP/Getty ImagesFrom a Sri Lankan perspective, the highlight would have been the speed at which they seemed to put the pressure back on Bangladeshi. Having seen the game through to lunch without further damage, the pair came out all guns blazing after the break with an onslaught from both ends.Both Dhananjaya and Kamindu seemingly attacked in lockstep, reaching their half-centuries in the same overs, and their centuries in the same over too. Boundaries were never lacking, and indeed it was only when the spinners were in operation that the scoring rate began to reduce. But among the hallmarks of their stand was the lack of risk-taking; boundaries came almost exclusively against poor deliveries – aside from some sumptuous on-the-up drives – while singles were found with consummate ease.The ends of their respective innings were also more self-inflicted than anything else, with Kamindu poking at one outside off a delivery after reaching his maiden Test century, while Dhananjaya found the boundary rider at deep-backward square-leg with a hook.It could have been all so different for Bangladesh, though, had they capitalised fully on their early period of dominance. Having bundled Sri Lanka’s top order, Shoriful Islam had Kamindu edging to first slip first ball, only for it to be spilled by Mahmudul. At the time it didn’t seem like it would be too costly, but Bangladesh will definitely rue that missed opportunity.Prior to that, though, things had all gone as planned. Having put Sri Lanka in to bat on a rare green top in Sylhet, the seamers made full use of the movement on offer.Khaled Ahmed ran through Sri Lanka’s top order•AFP/Getty ImagesNishan Madushka was the first to fall, getting a thick edge through to third slip in the second over of the day, where Mehidy Hasan Miraz took a fine head-height catch. A period of stabilisation followed but that wouldn’t last long as Kusal Mendis was caught in two minds whether to play or leave a short one outside off, eventually guiding it to gully.Dimuth Karunaratne, who had been fairly solid up until that point, followed later that same over missing one that swung in sharply from around the wicket to find its way past his drive and into off stump. All the three wickets fell to Khaled Ahmed.Things got worse for Sri Lanka when Angelo Mathews was caught well short of his crease by a direct hit from Najmul Hossain Shanto going for a tight single. Dinesh Chandimal didn’t last much longer either, as he clipped Islam Shoriful to leg slip, who took a good low grab that was held up following an umpire referral.Khaled was the pick of the bunch during this morning session, while debutant Nahid Rana proved menacing, if sometimes erratic, with speeds regularly clocking in the mid-140s. He took some stick from both Dhananjaya and Kamindu, but got them both to end with three wickets in his debut Test innings.But with Sri Lanka’s seamers enjoying similar early fortunes, Bangladesh’s batters will need to withstand a similarly trialling morning session on day two if they’re to stay competitive in this Test.

'What could I have done?' – Mason Mount explains how Man Utd's Europa League final loss to Tottenham disrupted his summer golf holiday

Mason Mount has opened up on how Manchester United’s Europa League final defeat to Tottenham stayed with him long after the final whistle. The midfielder admitted he carried the pain of that loss into his summer break, even while on a golf course in Spain. The former Chelsea midfielder is now focused on bouncing back with a stronger season with the Red Devils.

Mount reflects on Europa League final heartbreakUnited missed out on Europe after poor seasonMidfielder uses defeat as motivation for comebackFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Manchester United suffered a heartbreaking loss to Tottenham in the Europa League final, with Brennan Johnson’s deflected goal sealing the win. Mount, who started the game, reflected on his performance and questioned the decisions he made during the match. The result capped off a miserable season for United, who also missed out on European qualification.

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In an interview with The Athletic, Mount recalled ruefully when asked how long it took for the emotion to fade: "Quite a long time,. Yes, it takes some time, for sure.

"Because as a player, you're just thinking about little things in the game. I started the game, so it was like 'what could I have done in that situation?' Or 'could I have made that pass better?' Any little thing that happens in the game it's like a bigger impact, especially in a final.

"You don't look too much into it because you would drive yourself crazy, looking into loads of detail. But it hurts and the whole season hurt.

"I've had quite a few losses in finals, so it's not easy. It never gets any easier, for sure. Finals are never easy to take when you lose. But when you're in that next one, you remember that feeling."

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Manchester United’s 15th-placed Premier League finish marked their worst league campaign since 1973/74. Missing out on Europe has intensified pressure on both players and staff, with Mount determined to help the team recover. The 26-year-old is keen to use the frustration from last season as fuel heading into the new campaign.

He added: "This is a new slate now. We're looking forward and really using this pre-season to work on a lot of things that maybe we didn't get enough time to last season. With the schedule, with the games, and obviously with the gaffer coming in halfway through, this period is so vital for us to work on things."

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR MOUNT?

The 26-year-old is back in pre-season training and aiming for a fresh start with Manchester United. The club will be hoping for a major turnaround after last season’s failures. With renewed determination, Mount will look to play a bigger role in getting United back to the top.

Nepal's Airee makes history by smashing six sixes in an over

Big-hitting finisher joins Yuvraj Singh and Kieron Pollard in T20I cricket’s elite list

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Apr-2024

Dipendra Singh Airee: third man in T20Is and fifth in all internationals to achieve the feat•ICC

Dipendra Singh Airee, Nepal’s big-hitting finisher, entered the record books as the third man to hit six sixes in an over in an international T20 game, achieving the feat in the last over against Qatar in their ACC Men’s Premier Cup match in Al Amerat on Saturday.Starting the final over on 28 off 15 balls and Nepal on 174 for 7, Airee smashed medium pacer Kamran Khan for six sixes to end on 64 from 21. Nepal’s 210 for 7 then proved too much for Qatar as they went down by 32 runs. Airee also took two wickets in the chase.

That put his name on a list which only had Yuvraj Singh (off Stuart Broad in Durban in the 2007 T20 World Cup) and Kieron Pollard (off Akila Dananjaya in Coolidge in 2021) so far. In ODI cricket, the feat has been achieved by Herschelle Gibbs and USA’s Jaskaran Malhotra.Airee, the 24-year-old playing his 60th T20I to go with 55 ODIs, is no stranger to the feat though. He had achieved it once previously, though the six consecutive sixes on that occasion were spread across two overs.That was during the Asian Games in Hangzhou in September 2023, against Mongolia. It was made even more spectacular because those sixes came off the first six legal deliveries he had faced. The first five came in one over off Mungun Altankhuyag, and Airee completed the set off the first ball he faced next over from Luvsanzundui Erdenebulgan.Airee had scored 52 not out in ten balls that day as Nepal put up a mammoth 314 for 3 and then bowled Mongolia out for 41. It was the first 300-plus team total in a T20I match, and the nine balls Airee took to get the fastest-ever T20I fifty in history, topping the mark of 12 held by Yuvraj, Chris Gayle and Hazratullah Zazai.

Warner has landed: Helicopter touches down at SCG ahead of BBL clash

He flew in from his brother’s wedding north of Sydney to play the local derby against Sixers

Andrew McGlashan11-Jan-2024David Warner touched down at the SCG in a helicopter ahead of Sydney Thunder’s BBL clash against Sydney Sixers on Friday.Warner flew in from his brother’s wedding in the Hunter Valley and arrived at the ground just before 5pm. He landed on the outfield close to where the “Thanks Dave” logo was painted during his farewell Test.The fixture, which will feature Steven Smith for Sydney Sixers, is a sellout.Related

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“I’ve done my utmost best to get down here and hopefully put some runs on the board,” Warner told . “I might look like a bit of a goose if I don’t get any runs but it’s my contribution to not just the BBL but Australian cricket. I want to be out here. I want to entertain. I want to try and help our team win the next three games.””He’s going to a lot of effort to come and play for us,” Thunder quick Gurinder Sandhu said. “We love having him here. Last year he was awesome for us, maybe didn’t score as many runs as he would have liked but around the group and passing on knowledge was awesome to have him around. He’s one of the better team men. All the fans get to enjoy him playing cricket.”Sean Abbott of Sixers joked the day before: “He is a bit Hollywood, isn’t he, that’s very Davey. I got the Lime bike in today and I’ll be doing the same tomorrow night and riding out the gate as Davey lands. “I’m glad they are making it happen because think everyone in the country who is a fan of cricket wants to see David Warner in the BBL and I’m really looking forward to coming up against him. One of the best players in the world and has been for a long time.”Ahead of last season, Warner signed a big-money two-year deal with Thunder as Cricket Australia made a huge push to get international stars back into the tournament. He has indicated his desire to return next season although will fit appearances around his commentary work on the India Test series.The game against Sixers is set to be one of three appearances Warner will make for Thunder this season following his Test retirement. The club only have a slim chance of reaching the knockouts but Warner would have been unavailable for those as he will head to the ILT20 in the UAE.However, he is now expected to return from that tournament to be part of the T20I series against West Indies having remained available in that format ahead of a final international retirement after the T20 World Cup in June.

Wolvaardt's maiden T20I hundred sets up thumping South Africa win

Laura Wolvaardt struck her first T20I century as South Africa racked up their second-highest total in the format to start their series against Sri Lanka in emphatic fashion. They won the opening fixture of the three-match series by 79 runs, after posting 198 for 5 and bowling Sri Lanka out for 119 in the first meeting between these two sides since the last T20 World Cup.On that occasion, South Africa lost to Sri Lanka in the tournament opener but went on to reach the final, and since then, the teams have faced contrasting fortunes. South Africa have played ten completed T20Is and lost seven; Sri Lanka have played 12 matches and won seven. But, recent form counted for nothing when Sri Lanka sent South Africa in to bat on a flat Benoni pitch.Tazmin Brits was dismissed in the third over and Marizanne Kapp sent in to No.3, and made the most of the opportunity for more time in the middle. Wolvaardt and Kapp shared a second-wicket stand of 116.Kapp recorded her fourth half-century in the format in an innings laced with cut shots but it was Wolvaardt who took centre stage, with 12 fours and three sixes, including a gorgeous hit over extra cover. She reached fifty off 39 balls and a hundred off 61 to finish with a strike rate of 161.90 – well above her career strike rate of just over 111.18.The only real disappointment from the South African innings was the run-out of Sune Luus, who was playing in her 115th T20I – the most by any South African – but had an outing to forget. Luus left the field in the second over of Sri Lanka’s innings after she dug her knee into the turf while chasing a ball to the boundary. She returned in the fifth over.Sri Lanka used six bowlers, all expensive, and Achini Kulasuriya was the most successful. Her 2 for 39 included the wickets of Wolvaardt and Kapp, consolation for a poor fielding effort. Both Wolvaardt and Kapp were dropped in their innings – Wolvaardt in the 60s and Kapp in the 20s, and they made Sri Lanka pay.Sri Lanka have never scored above 182 in a T20I, let alone chase that much and they suffered a massive early setback as they began their task. Kapp had Chamari Athapaththu caught behind off the final ball of the opening over, with a delivery that shaped away and took the edge. Kapp bowled only two overs as Wolvaardt shared the workload around either side of a rain break.Sri Lanka’s innings was interrupted after seven overs, with their score on 48 for 2, but no overs were lost. On resumption, they needed 151 runs in 13 overs and only Harshita Samarawickrama and Hasini Perera, who scored 38 and 30 respectively, and put on 44 runs for the third wicket gave them any chance. Sri Lanka were bowled out inside 19 overs to give South Africa a series lead.

Heatwave impacts school cricket in Bangladesh

The BCB has said the matches will be reduced to 20-over games from 50-overs a side

Mohammad Isam29-Apr-2024The BCB’s school cricket matches will be shortened from 50-over contests to 20-over games owing to the heatwave in Bangladesh. Temperatures have consistently been above 40 degree celsius for most of April and meteorologists are calling it the longest heatwave in the country’s history.”In consideration of the ongoing heatwave that has impacted the country, the age-group tournament committee of BCB has decided that starting from today (April 29), all remaining divisional round matches of the Prime Bank National School Cricket tournament will be played in Twenty20 format,” the BCB said in a statement.According to BCB’s game development manager AEM Kawsar, 64 district teams are taking part in the competition being held at 14 venues across Bangladesh.”We have instructed all match officials to complete the matches by 12.30 pm,” Kawsar told ESPNcricinfo. “We have even advised them to start the matches at 8.30 am if the teams agree. The usual start time is 9.00am. There will also be a drinks break every 40 minutes. We are providing enough ice, lemon juice and of course water. In some places where possible, we are providing ice-bath facilities. One good thing is that every venue has proper cooling facilities in the dressing rooms.”There will be a total of 57 matches, with the initial rounds being knockouts followed by a group stage for the qualifiers before the semi-finals and final. It is the BCB’s biggest cricket competition and one that began in the early 1980s.The Dhaka Premier League, however, continues in this oppressive heat. The one-day tournament’s Super League phase is ongoing, with the remaining matches likely to end in early May. These are the only domestic tournaments currently being played, mainly due to Ramadan falling during the cricket season in March.The country’s education ministry had ordered schools, colleges and universities to remain closed from April 21 to 25. The closure continues till May 2. The temperature went up to 45 degrees celsius in parts of the country including the capital Dhaka. There have been more than 30 heat-related deaths so far and hundreds have been hospitalised.

Scattered stumps and hexed batsmen

Andrew Miller picks out the finest bowling in Anglo-Australian history

Andrew Miller29-Jul-2005The first Test of the 2005 Ashes was sealed by magnificent bowling from Glenn McGrath and Shane Warne. Andrew Miller trawls through the annals to pick out the finest performances in Anglo-Australian history

Glenn McGrath claims another wicket at Lord’s © Getty Images
Fred Spofforth, The Oval 1882
Until Fred Spofforth took The Oval by storm in 1882, English cricket audiences had only heard the legend of “The Demon” via hearsay. He missed the first Test of all, in March 1877, because he objected to Australia’s choice of wicketkeeper, and he was absent through injury during England’s five-wicket win in 1880, the first Test on English soil. But two years later he was back with a vengeance, and spurred on by some derogatory remarks in the pavilion, he took 14 wickets for 90 in the match to secure an ill-tempered seven-run victory – and launch the legend of The Ashes.Hedley Verity, Lord’s 1934
Since the start of the 20th Century, England have mustered one measly victory in 24 attempts in Ashes Tests at Lord’s, and ominously, for those who believe a turnaround in fortunes could occur before the next moon-landing, they owed that win to one of the greatest bowling feats in history. Yorkshire’s left-arm spinner, Hedley Verity, had beguiled Australia’s batsmen in the final Test of the 1932-33 series Down Under, and now, 18 months later on a rain-affected pitch, he snaffled 15 wickets in the match, including Don Bradman in both innings. It wasn’t enough to win the series, but by the time he had died of his wounds as a prisoner of war in northern Italy in 1943, it had secured him immortality.Frank Tyson, 1954-55
Never mess with a fast bowler. South Africa discovered that at The Oval in 1994 when Devon Malcolm was hit on the helmet and retaliated with 9 for 57. But the original “I wish I’d never done that …” moment came 40 years earlier at Sydney, when Ray Lindwall bowled his series-altering bouncer to Frank Tyson. Knocked cold and carried from the field, Tyson was a man transformed when he returned to the fray, as he shortened his run and focused his menace. Four wickets in the first dig limited Australia’s lead; six more in the second routed them for 184, as England drew level in stunning fashion. He followed up with nine in the next Test, including a career-best 7 for 27, before the Typhoon blew out as quickly as it had arrived.Jim Laker, Old Trafford 1956
Two innings, two spells: 16.4-4-37-9 and 51.2-23-53-10. The figures say everything about the most remarkable bowling feat in cricket’s history. Like Don Bradman’s final Test average of 99.94, there is something fittingly tantalising about Jim Laker’s 19-wicket haul at Old Trafford. One boundary and one wicket short of perfection respectively, and yet it is safe to suggest that their feats will never be surpassed. Remarkably, the second-innings effort was Laker’s second maximum of the season against the Australians – he took 10 for 88 for Surrey during their tour match in May, again eclipsing his England team-mate, Tony Lock. How Lock finished with just the one wicket from his 69 overs is one of the wonders of the game.Richie Benaud, Old Trafford 1961
Richie Benaud had been an unfulfilled bystander during Laker’s great onslaught in ’56, scrambling 18 runs and two wickets on his maiden appearance at Old Trafford. Five years later, and saddled with the captaincy to boot, he returned to Manchester with the most masterful performance of his career to steal a match that England scarcely believed they could lose. A first-innings lead of 177 had heightened England’s cause for optimism, but when Davidson and McKenzie added 98 for Australia’s last wicket, the stage was set for a legspin masterclass. Bowling round the wicket and attacking the rough, Benaud took 6 for 70 to secure a series-levelling 54-run win, and Australia went on to retain the Ashes.Bob Massie, Lord’s 1972
Australia’s hegemony at Lord’s was never better exemplified than in 1972, when Bob Massie, a 25-year-old debutant from Western Australia, swung his way to the astounding match figures of 16 for 137. All English eyes had been fixed on the ferocious Dennis Lillee, and well though he bowled for his four wickets in the match, it was Massie’s sharp, late swing from around the wicket that did for England. No-one had a clue how to combat him, least of all in the second innings, when the Poms folded for a meek 116. It seemed a star had been born, but sadly Massie burnt out just as quickly – he mustered fewer wickets in his five subsequent Tests than he had managed in 60 glorious overs on debut, and within 18 months he had been released by Western Australia.Jeff Thomson, Brisbane 1974-75
Wild, woolly, laid-back and lethal, Jeff Thomsonwas the hard-living, hard-drinking pace sensation who set the 1974-75 Ashes ablaze. Billed in hindsight as revenge for the 1932-33 Bodyline series, England were mugged in a succession of thrilling displays as Thomson and Dennis Lillee bounced Australia to a crushing 4-1 victory (the “1” came when both men were absent at the end of the series). First impressions live the longest though, and Thomson’s 6 for 46 in the opening Test at Brisbane was a performance of savage genius. “I just shuffle up and go ‘whang’,” was how Thomson described his deadly slingy action that accounted for 33 wickets in the series – and a host of broken bones.Bob Willis, Headingley 1981
Arguably the greatest Ashes Test of all time was completed by one of the greatest spells of fast bowling ever seen, as Bob Willis – seemingly in a trance – flapped down the hill from the Kirkstall Lane End to scatter the Australians for 111. A doubt before the game as his creaking knees gave the selectors cause to fear the worst, Willis banished all notions that his 60th Test would be his last with 8 for 43. By mid-afternoon on the fourth day, the opportunity for his onslaught had not even been created, as England trailed by 92 with just three second-innings wickets in hand. Ian Botham turned all that on its head to set a modest target of 130, but without Willis’s inspired response, Botham’s contribution might have been another Randall-esque footnote.Shane Warne, Old Trafford 1993
In bowling terms, a magic spell tends to refer to a succession of impressive deliveries. In Shane Warne’s case, it refers to the hex he cast over England’s batsmen, following his epoch-making entry into Ashes cricket. One delivery was all it took to ensure an unbroken era of Australian dominance. A casual amble to the crease, a floaty, drifty ball on leg stump, and a savage twist as it bit the turf, spat across Mike Gatting’s bows, and clipped the top of off stump. Gatting was stunned, the England team was transfixed, and the series was won and lost. Warne finished with eight for the match, but his impact could not be measured by wickets alone.Glenn McGrath, Lord’s 2005
By tea on the first day of the series, all the hype had been justified. After 16 years of thumping defeats, England had fronted up to Australia, drawn blood on their captain and rolled them over for 190 with a thrilling, full-on pace assault. The momentum of the series had temporarily been snatched from the world champions, who in turn, threw the ball to their own champion. Glenn McGrath had been Man of the Match in each of his previous two Tests at Lord’s, but at the third time of asking, and at the age of 35, he produced his greatest performance of all. No bowler on earth could have used the Lord’s slope to better effect, as he zipped his offcutters through a succession of bewildered defences. Five wickets for two runs in 31 balls, and the match had been snatched in the most perfunctory fashion.

An ominous precedent

For those English fans of a nervous disposition, there’s something eerily unpalatable about Australia’s current situation

Andrew Miller10-Sep-2005


Justin Langer: reprising his role of 2001
© Getty Images

For those English fans of a nervous disposition, there’s something eerily unpalatable about Australia’s current situation. At lunch, their score was 157 for 0, and the two Australian openers, Justin Langer and Matthew Hayden, were growing in confidence with every stroke. Sound familiar? It should do – this situation is a near replica of the Oval Test of 2001, and in that match, England ended up being stuffed by an innings and 25 runs.The similarities are more than just skin-deep as well. If, as has been widely speculated, this will be Hayden and Langer’s last Test as an opening pairing, then they are determined to make it as memorable as their first outing, four years ago to the match. Back in 2001, they added 158 for the first wicket – one more than their current tally – with Hayden again playing the second fiddle.Though the fall-guy of the Australian summer had been his old opening partner, Michael Slater, who was axed to make way for Langer’s return, Hayden had been in sketchy form throughout. Then as now, his innings of 68 was his first half-century of a summer in which he passed 30 on four previous occasions but was never able to go on, and then as now, his place had been spared largely because of his scoring feats in previous series – six months earlier, he had flogged 549 runs in three Tests against India.Langer, 91 not out at the break this time, made 102 in the corresponding fixture – his first century for 18 months – before being forced to retire hurt after being sconed by Andrew Caddick. Given Langer’s propensity to take eyewatering blows from Steve Harmison this summer, there remains the prospect of history repeating itself in more ways than one.On that occasion, Australia’s efforts came while batting first. Steve Waugh – torn calf muscle and all – famously limped his way to an unbeaten 157 as Australia converted their platform into a mighty 641 for 4 declared, and by the close of the second day, England were 80 for 1 in reply. Worryingly for their 2005 prospects, England mustered significantly more than their first-innings 373 as well. Thanks to Mark Ramprakash’s maiden home century, they were bowled out for 432 on the fourth morning.That left England five sessions to survive, and predictably enough they didn’t, folding for 184 in 69 overs, as – guess who? – Glenn McGrath (5 for 43) and Shane Warne (4 for 64) ripped out the resistance.There are two big differences between this match and that, however. Firstly, there was not a hint of rain to stymie Australia’s onslaught. Secondly, England were 3-1 down in the series and had done their pride-salvaging in the previous game at Headingley. This time, the Ashes are at stake, and the stage is set for a rearguard that could define an era.

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