Cricket: Dynamic duo hurt England; THE ASHES: Aussies regain control after fightback by Flintoff's men.Byline: By Myles Hodgson in Perth AUSTRALIA powered into a healthy lead in the Third Ashes Test today despite England's lower order resistance. Resuming the second day at the WACA WACA World Affairs Councils of America WACA Walnut Canyon National Monument (US National Park Service) WACA Western Australia Cricket Association WACA World Airlines Clubs Association (Montreal, Canada) on a perilous 51 for two, still trailing by 193 runs, England's best chance of remaining competitive in the series appeared to lie in them passing Australia's modest total of 244. But despite a determined 40-run stand between Steve Harmison Stephen James Harmison MBE (born 23 October 1978, Ashington, Northumberland) is an England cricketer, and a leading Test match fast bowler. He plays county cricket for Durham. With his height (6'4") he can extract pace and bounce from most pitches. and Monty Panesar Monty Panesar (born Mudhsuden Singh Panesar, 25 April, 1982 in Luton, Bedfordshire), is an English cricketer. A left-arm spinner with a classical action, Panesar plays Test and ODI cricket for England, and county cricket for Northamptonshire. for the 10th wicket, England were still dismissed for 215 to hand Australia a
That advantage was extended to an impressive 148 runs after the home side reached 119 for one by the close. It was a disappointing finale for England to another enthralling en·thrall tr.v. en·thralled, en·thrall·ing, en·thralls 1. To hold spellbound; captivate: The magic show enthralled the audience. 2. To enslave. day, with opener Matthew Hayden scoring his first halfcentury of the series and sharing in an unbroken 119-run stand with captain Ricky Ponting after England had appeared to regain the initiative. England's hopes of claiming a lead was undermined with the 21st ball of the day with Paul Collingwood forcing Glenn McGrath to gully off the back foot. The turning point of England's innings was perhaps seven overs later with the dismissal of opener Andrew Strauss, who had progressed impressively to 42 only to be given caught behind by umpire Rudi Koertzen off seamer Stuart Clark when television replays were inconclusive. That exposed the middle order who once again failed to make much of an impression and this time became the unexpected victims of all-rounder Andrew Symonds. Brought into the side to replace Damien Martyn following his shock retirement, Symonds struck twice in three overs with his medium pace to remove England captain Andrew Flintoff and Geraint Jones to plunge the tourists firmly into trouble. Flintoff attempted to break the pressure built up by fast bowler Brett Lee by lunging at the first ball he faced from former Lancashire team-mate Symonds and edged low to Shane Warne at slip. Jones fell in similar fashion, only he drove low to gully to suffer the first duck of his Test career and extend a disappointing run of only two half-centuries in his last 26 Test innings. Symonds' spell of two for eight in four overs left Pietersen exposed with the tail - which performed heroically. CAPTION(S): MONTY'S MAGIC... England ace Monty Panesar defies the Australians today as the tail wagged to give Andrew Flintoff's men a glimmer of hope during the Third Test in Perth.' TAKE THAT... Kevin Pietersen plays a super shot today. |
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