Bermuda await inspection on national ground

Elvin James, the former Bermuda bowler and the country’s current sports minister, is confident Bermuda will be in a position to host Scotland for an Intercontinental Cup match in July, providing the pitch at the National Sports Centre receives the ICC seal of approval.The sub-standard pitch at the ground in Hamilton has long been a source of controversy. It hasn’t hosted an international in four years and Bermuda are the only side outside the six Associates not to have a ground that is accredited to host ODIs. In 2007 Andy Atkinson, the ICC’s pitch consultant, deemed the pitch suitable for club cricket but not for internationals owing to the loose, sandy soil. His suggestion that Bermuda should import foreign soil was lambasted as reckless by government ministers.”There is light at the end of the tunnel however, and the ICC are due to make an inspection in the next few months.”I was up at the NSC yesterday [Tuesday] and I think we have a tentative commitment based on an inspection that is going to take place in the next few months. And it will be ready for the four-day match,” James told the . “The experts haven’t given me their formula, but they told me that with the roller, sunshine, a little water and manpower they will have that wicket ready at a level that will make us proud.”Clifford Wade, the general manager of the NSC, shares James’s optimism. “We are going to produce the best wicket possible,” he declared. “We have consulted with local groundsman and right now we are just waiting for the weather to warm up.”If the pitch is approved, Bermuda could host its first international in four years when they take on Scotland, otherwise it will be held in Canada who own the only two international venues in the ICC Americas region.

Ahmed Amla to lead South Africa Emerging Players

Wayne Parnell, the South Africa Under-19 captain during the recent World Cup in Malaysia, will be in Australia for the Emerging Players Tournament © George Binoy
 

Ahmed Amla, the Dolphins captain and elder brother of Hashim Amla, will captain a 14-man South Africa Emerging Players squad for the 2008 Emerging Players Tournament in Australia.Vince van der Bijl, Cricket South Africa’s High Performance general manager, was confident his side would defend the title which they have won twice in succession. “We have won this competition in the last two years, beating Australia and New Zealand in the final. This is a tough competition and the experience gained by our players is invaluable for the later international tours”, Bijl said.At 28, Amla and Henry Davids, the Cape Cobras batsman are the oldest players in the squad, and Bijl said the focus was on giving exposure to younger players. “This year we are taking a younger side and have intentionally put in two old hands as it were, Ahmed Amla and Henry Davids, as we believe having a few old heads is worth great deal in developing the younger players on tour.”We have won the last two tournaments and players such as Johan Botha, Vernon Philander and JP Duminy have come out of this experience and done well [for South Africa].”The squad also includes Wayne Parnell, the captain of the South Africa Under-19 team which reached the final of the U-19 World Cup in Malaysia, as well was offspinner Thandi Tshabalala, who is the only player in the squad to have represented South Africa in ODIs.Squad
Ahmed Amla (capt), Yusuf Abdullah, Werner Coetzee, Henry Davids, CJ de Villiers, Dean Elgar, Imraan Khan, Rory Kleinveldt, Wayne Parnell, Daryn Smit (wk), Blake Snijman, Thandi Tshabalala, Lonwabo Tsotsobe, Vaughan van Jaarsveld.

McCullum's record 158 leads rout

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Brendon McCullum’s unbeaten 158 left the Bangalore Royal Challengers stunned (file photo) © Getty Images
 

The opening ceremony was a spectacular affair, but what followed was even more breathtaking, as Brendon McCullum destroyed the home team in the inaugural match of the IPL. In what was a brutal one-man assault on the Bangalore Royal Challengers, McCullum blasted an unbeaten 158 from a mere 73 deliveries, the highest score in a Twenty20 match, to propel Kolkata Knight Riders to an imposing 222 for 3. The punch-drunk Bangalore team was in no condition to fight back after that battering, and collapsed limply to 82 to lose by an embarrassing margin of 140 runs, the fourth-largest defeat in this sort of match.Chris Gayle was expected to be the aggressive opener for Kolkata, but McCullum’s stunning knock ensured Gayle’s absence wasn’t felt at all. In an innings which was reminiscent of Gayle’s blistering knock in the World Twenty20 opener – he had scored 117 from 57 – McCullum gave the Bangalore bowlers no chance. Pace and spin were both treated with equal contempt, and the crowd was treated to an innings of rare explosiveness.The start, though, was deceptive. Six balls into his innings, McCullum didn’t have a single run as Praveen Kumar bowled an excellent first over. Four deliveries later, McCullum had blazed to 18, flicking and pulling Zaheer Khan for four, and then miscuing a flick which, quite incredibly, soared over third man for the first six.Zaheer was quickly pulled out of the attack, but his replacement, Ashley Noffke, fared even worse. His first ball was so wayward that neither McCullum nor Mark Boucher, the wicketkeeper, had a chance of getting to it. When the ball landed within McCullum’s reach, the result was even more devastating: a pulled six over square leg and another over extra cover. Twenty-three in the over, and Noffke out of the attack as well.McCullum allowed himself a breather after that, going 17 deliveries without a boundary, before the floodgates opened again. Sunil Joshi was slog-swept twice – with the bottom hand coming off the bat once – for sixes, before he turned his attention to Cameron White and Jacques Kallis. Line, length, and pace mattered not a jot, as balls disappeared over the ground with ridiculous frequency. When Zaheer returned for another spell, McCullum manufactured the stroke of the evening, going down on one knee and scooping the ball over fine leg for six.

McCullum got off to a fabulous start, slowed down somewhat in the middle, and finished on a high, scoring at a strike rate of more than two runs per ball (Click here for a bigger image) © Cricinfo
 

Praveen, who bowled superbly in his first three overs, had escaped the McCullum onslaught for most of the evening, but he too suffered in the last over of the innings, as the first two balls vanished over midwicket, before McCullum put the final seal on his innings, depositing the last ball of the innings over long-on. That brought his sixes’ tally to 13, the most in a Twenty20 innings.Shahrukh Khan, the owner of the franchise, had danced through the McCullum innings, and he had even more reason to celebrate as his bowlers then got into the act with equal gusto. Rahul Dravid, under immense pressure facing an asking-rate of more than 11, lasted three balls, losing his middle stump while attempting a heave. The loss of the captain started the slide, and it went downhill quickly thereafter.Kallis mounted the briefest of challenges, lofting Ajit Agarkar over extra cover for a huge six, but fell next ball, pulling tamely to mid-on. The pitch offered some pace and bounce, and Ishant Sharma, especially, exploited it, getting the ball to zip at a fair pace. Agarkar also prised out White, who had held the record for the highest Twenty20 score till a few minutes before. Bangalore’s only chance was if he produced a similar stunner, but by the time he nicked one off Agarkar the contest was already over. The end came soon after, when Joshi fell to a miscued pull with 29 deliveries still left in the innings.The match may have been over long before the last ball was bowled, but McCullum’s stunner has given the IPL, and Kolkata, a dream start. With Ganguly’s team playing their next match at the Eden Gardens, this result should ensure that Sunday’s clash against the Deccan Chargers draws a full house, and more. The IPL extravaganza has well and truly begun.

Lord's could host neutral Tests and Twenty20 Champions League

MCC secretary and chief executive Keith Bradshaw, IPL commissioner Lalit Modi and MCC head of cricket John Stephenson announce the signing of the MCC Spirit of Cricket declaration last month © IPL
 

Lord’s could stage neutral Test matches and matches in the proposed Twenty20 Champions League to assist the MCC in fund raising as it plans to spend up to £200 million to redevelop the ground ahead of its bicentenary in 2014.A report it the Guardian today says that a number of proposals are being considered by Keith Bradshaw, the MCC’s secretary and chief executive, after a whistlestop visit to India over the weekend.Bradshaw met with Lalit Modi, the IPL’s commissioner, in Mohali and the possibility of bringing the Twenty20 Champions League to London was discussed. The main stumbling block appears to be the timing as the event can only be played after the ICC Champions Trophy which finishes in late September. “The MCC was positive about the idea and are eager to proceed, subject to ECB clearance,” an IPL official told Cricinfo.The Guardian also claimed that the possibility of Pakistan playing Australia at Lord’s had been raised earlier in the year after the Australians’ tour of Pakistan had been scrapped on security grounds.”It is our heartbeat to have major matches, so as well as our England Tests and ODIs we have to look at whether there is the potential to stage other sorts of cricket here such as neutral Test matches,” Bradshaw, who could face some tough questions at the MCC’s annual meeting later today, told the newspaper. “We would be very open to staging neutral Tests and, in terms of embracing what’s been mooted in terms of IPL, the Champions League or the English Premier League, why not? We have a very open mind.”While the ECB, who would need to be consulted before any other matches could be staged at Lord’s, might not object to the Twenty20 Champions League being held in London, it would probably take a dimmer view of neutral Tests for fear of the impact they might have on the traditional summer fixtures.However, Lord’s is under threat as a venue because of the ECB’s new strategy of allocating international matches which has seen traditional venues struggle to get high-profile fixtures with games being switched to new centres such as Cardiff and Southampton. That has led to speculation that Lord’s, which in recent years has hosted two Tests every summer, might only get one as more venues fight for the limited number of matches.”We would prefer to know exactly what our major matches are going to be for the next 10 years, given that we are spending £200m on the ground, but we have moved to a very commercial situation where our fellow grounds are no longer our family but our competitors in a bidding process,” Bradshaw said. “We bid a lot more for those matches than we ever have before. We will take account of what the ECB is trying to achieve and we are conscious of player fixtures and broadcasting contracts, but we have a very open mind and we would be very keen to host a Champions League event.”

Clinical South Africa look to close out series

Match facts

Sunday, July 12
Start time 3.00pm local (0900 GMT)1:31

Isam: Bangladesh need senior batsmen to step up

Big picture

Kagiso Rabada lit up a gloomy evening in Mirpur on Friday with a hat-trick in his six-wicket haul on debut. He now holds the record for best bowling figures on ODI debut, and the best ODI bowling figures for a South African. The visiting captain Hashim Amla, while not expecting Rabada to strike another six-for, will want the bowler as well as the rest of the young players to do enough to complete a series win on Sunday.South Africa completed their eight-wicket win through a strong, unbroken 99-run third wicket stand between Rilee Rossouw and Faf du Plessis. Amla later said the pair made a tough situation look easy. South Africa are brutal opponents for lower-ranked sides and Bangladesh are finding that out despite their own recent form.But the home side’s troubles seem more tactical in nature, although captain Mashrafe Mortaza has said that their strategy of using eight batsmen was a confidence issue. For the first time since December 2011, Bangladesh were bowled out for less than 200 when batting first in an ODI. Their batting form was not all that good even in the India series, but they managed to get the job done.South Africa did not give Bangladesh much of a chance to fight back after Rabada’s hat-trick and that is where the home side are behind. South Africa never give up, and in the second ODI, Bangladesh should be be prepared to put up a fight, something they have failed to do in the series so far.

Form guide

Bangladesh: LLWWWSouth Africa: WLWWL

Players to watch

With his team not doing well, much of the focus will be how Mashrafe Mortaza marshals his resources and inspires the group. He also has to bowl well and ensure South Africa do not get away to a quick start.A hat-trick and six-for on ODI debut has made Kagiso Rabada into an overnight sensation. He will be exciting to watch in the second ODI, particularly with the pace he generates off the slow pitches in Mirpur.

Team news

If Bangladesh stick to their eight-batsmen strategy, then there isn’t much need of a change. If they do revert back to five bowlers, either of Arafat Sunny or Rubel Hossain will likely be picked in the XI.Bangladesh (possible) 1 Tamim Iqbal, 2 Soumya Sarkar, 3 Litton Das, 4 Mahmudullah, 5 Mushfiqur Rahim, 6 Shakib Al Hasan, 7 Sabbir Rahman, 8 Nasir Hossain, 9 Mashrafe Mortaza 10 Jubair Hossain, 11 Mustafizur RahmanAfter their eight-wicket win, South Africa will look to continue in the same vein, which means changes in the XI are unlikely.South Africa (possible): 1 Hashim Amla (capt), 2 Quinton de Kock (wk), 3 Faf du Plessis, 4 Rilee Rossouw, 5 David Miller, 6 JP Duminy 7 Farhaan Behardien, 8 Chris Morris, 9 Kyle Abbott, 10 Kagiso Rabada, 11 Imran Tahir

Pitch and conditions

Rabada said the first ODI wicket looked to have a bit more grass than the T20s. The second ODI wicket too is unlikely have turn and will continue to be a dull surface. Rain has again been forecast, but not in the evening.

Stats and trivia

  • Kagiso Rabada became the second bowler after Taijul Islam to take a hat-trick on debut. They both did it at the Shere Bangla National Stadium and both from the same end.
  • Shakib Al Hasan is the first batsman to score more than 2,000 runs at the Shere Bangla National Stadium. He reached the mark when he was on 14 in the first ODI.

Quotes

“Against India and Pakistan we played unbelievably well. If we can play like that we can win against South Africa as well. But we haven’t even been within touching distance of those performances or of South Africa. We hope to do much better in the second game.””They are not going to go down without a fight. We know they are going to be up for a good scrap tomorrow [Sunday].”

Mosehle blitz guides Titans to Ram Slam title

ScorecardFile photo – Henry Davids anchored the chase with a 38-ball 35•BCCI

A spectacular innings from Mangaliso Mosehle took Titans to the Ram Slam T20 title after a seven-wicket win against Dolphins in Centurion. Mosehle smashed 87 off just 39 balls, with six fours and seven sixes as Titans overcame a target of 160 with 19 balls to spare.Dolphins were given a solid start, after being inserted to bat, as openers Jonathan Vandiar and Morne van Wyk put on 47 in the Powerplay. However, the momentum swung Titans’ way as their bowlers conceded only 30 in the next six overs to keep the score to 77 for 3.David Miller (33 off 25) and Dwayne Bravo (53 off 30), then, stitched an 83-run stand as Dolphins posted a total of 159. Both fell off successive balls – the last two of the innings- but not before plundering 65 off the last six overs to give Dolphins a competitive score in the final.The competition’s top-scorer, Quinton de Kock was dismissed for 12 in the fourth over after lobbing a leading edge to cover off the bowling of Andile Phehlukwayo. However, Henry Davids and Mosehle first stabilised the innings and then got stuck into their work. Seventy runs were still required off nine overs before Mosehle clobbered Imran Tahir for three sixes and a four off successive deliveries as the game turned decisively in Titans’ favour.A partnership of 123 off 67 balls was broken in the 15th over by Kyle Abbott who held onto a return chance to dismiss Mosehle. Davids, too, was caught behind off the next ball but with 12 required off five overs, it was too late for Dolphins.

Ryder, Worker star in Central Districts' win

Jesse Ryder’s third successive half-century of the tournament capped off a dominating batting performance by Central Districts as they beat Wellington by 55 runs via the Duckworth-Lewis method in North Palmerston. Their third win in five matches put them behind table-toppers Canterbury on the points table.Ryder’s 74-ball 83 was one of three half-centuries for Central Districts as they posted 324 for 7 after being sent in to bat. That he had a platform set when he came out to bat at No. 3 was courtesy George Worker (64) and Ben Smith (57), who put on 112. The next highest stand of the innings was 74 for the third wicket between Ryder and Will Young, who made 34 to pave the way for a strong finish.Michael Pollard and Michael Papps, the Wellington openers, started slowly by adding 61 in 13.5 overs, but the loss of three quick wickets further slowed their progress. Wellington had moved on to 141 for 4 in 29.1 overs when rain forced an end to proceedings, with Central Districts well ahead by the D/L method.Neil Broom’s unbeaten 124 was the standout in a low-scoring thriller, which Otago won by three runs in Whangarei to register their first victory in the competition. Otago’s 298 for 6 nearly didn’t prove enough as Anton Devcich and BJ Watling led Northern Districts‘ fightback with 81 and 56 respectively. When Devcich was dismissed, Northern Districts still needed 96 off 62 balls.Watling and Daryl Mitchell (31) kept them in a hunt with a 55-run stand off just 38 balls, but their dismissal in the space of 13 deliveries pulled the plug on their chase. With four losses in five matches, Northern Districts are currently at the bottom in the league standings.

Khawaja, Burns left out of ODI squad

Usman Khawaja and Joe Burns will enter Australia’s tilt for the No.1 Test ranking without a single warm-up innings on New Zealand soil, after the national selectors resisted temptation to significantly alter the ODI squad.The only concession to the two Tests in Wellington and Christchurch was the omission of Nathan Lyon after his indifferent displays against India at home, opening up room for the legspinner Adam Zampa to make his international debut while the panel deliberate on his possible inclusion in the World Twenty20 squad.Lyon will instead play in the Sheffield Shield match being played between New South Wales and Western Australia at New Zealand Cricket headquarters in Lincoln near Christchurch. However, Khawaja and Burns will be expected to make the Trans-Tasman adjustments from home, playing for Queensland.

Australia ODI squad for NZ tour

Steve Smith (capt), David Warner, George Bailey, Scott Boland, James Faulkner, Aaron Finch, John Hastings, Josh Hazlewood, Mitchell Marsh, Shaun Marsh, Glenn Maxwell, Kane Richardson, Matthew Wade (wk), Adam Zampa

Despite his stunning run of form in the Big Bash League following on from a breakout Test summer, Khawaja remained surplus to a settled ODI batting line-up, as the captain Steven Smith had predicted. The likes of Aaron Finch and George Bailey are a long way from Test calculation, but have done nothing to deserve omission from the 50-over team.The selection chairman Rod Marsh acknowledged that coping with foreign conditions was the greatest blind spot of the Australian side, something shown in 2015 during the Ashes but also in their lone loss of the World Cup, against New Zealand at a raucous Eden Park.”We know one of the biggest challenges we will face in New Zealand is adapting to the change in conditions,” he said. “It has been well documented that this is something we have struggled with in recent times and a major focus for this squad will be to reverse that trend.”The New Zealand side will be very tough to beat in their home conditions. We know we will need to be at the top of our game if we want to be competitive.”Marsh said the panel’s preference was for Lyon to get some time bowling in a first-class environment before the Test matches, while also deliberating on the value of Zampa, who again bowled well for the Melbourne Stars in the BBL final on Sunday night.”We have selected Adam Zampa as the spinning option for this tour in place of Nathan Lyon,” Marsh said. “We want Nathan to use the NSW versus West Australia Sheffield Shield match in New Zealand as preparation for the Test Series and this will give us a chance to have a good look at Adam ahead of the ICC World T20.”Adam has certainly put forward a strong case for selection through good performances in the Big Bash as well as the Matador Cup earlier in the season and we think he has thoroughly earned this opportunity.”The captain Smith and his deputy David Warner will be leaving Australia on Saturday in order to prepare in advance for New Zealand, having been rested from the latter two T20 internationals against India that follow Tuesday’s opening match on Australia Day in Adelaide.

All-round Stevens helps Jersey sail past Germany

Semi-final scenarios

All teams have an off day on Tuesday before the final day of round-robin play on Wednesday. Guernsey play Qatar in what is effectively a quarter-final match in Group B with the winner joining Italy as the second semi-finalist from their half of the draw while Italy play Cayman Islands for a chance to claim the top spot in the group.
In Group A, Jersey play Ghana for a chance to go to 3-0 and seal a semi-final spot while Germany play Vanuatu in the other match. Should Jersey beat Ghana and Vanuatu beat Germany, it would create a three-way tie for second place in the group with the second semi-finalist determined by net run rate. Germany currently have the best net run rate of the three.
Germany can clinch a semi-final spot with a win and a Ghana loss while Ghana can likewise take the spot with a win plus a Germany loss to Vanuatu. The possibility also exists of a three-way tie for first place should Jersey lose to Ghana and Germany beat Vanuatu but Jersey currently have a +0.939 net-run-rate advantage over Germany. Jersey will automatically clinch a semi-final slot in spite of a loss if Vanuatu beat Germany.

Group B

Ghana played their second nailbiter in a row on Monday but this time came out victorious with a two-wicket win over Vanuatu. New-ball strikes were key once again for Ghana as Vincent Ateak removed day-one top-scorer Jonathan Dunn for 12 while Obed Agbomadzie took three wickets for the second day in a row including the key scalps of Patrick Matautaava and Nalin Nipiko to set Vanuatu back at 41 for 4 in the 14th over. Captain Andrew Mansale top-scored with a battling 26 before his side was bowled out for 124 in 47.2 overs.The 16 unused deliveries proved vital as Ghana’s attempts to drive home a net-run-rate advantage nearly backfired spectacularly with victory in sight. Ghana were 116 for 3 when captain Peter Ananya was dismissed for 50 by Matautaava at the start of the 31st over. Subsequent attempts by the middle order to score quick runs to kill off the match were foiled by a pair of run-outs before Nipiko claimed wickets off back-to-back balls in the 34th over to put himself on a hat-trick with Ghana eight down with two runs still needed for victory. But 18-year-old Godfred Bakiweyem pinched a two off the hat-trick ball after entering at No. 10 to clinch a tense win.Jersey moved a shade closer to a semi-final berth with a five-wicket win over Germany in Benoni. Medium pacers Charles Perchard and Ben Kynman and left-arm-spinning allrounder Ben Stevens took two wickets each in a collective bowling effort to restrict Germany to 248. Germany captain Rishi Pillai top-scored for his side with 46 before they were bowled out in the final over.Stevens followed up his five-for from day one with his first fifty of the tournament, striking 53 off 65 balls while teaming with Peter Gough and Jonty Jenner for a pair of half-century partnerships. Sussex batsman Jenner then saw Jersey across the line, finishing with an unbeaten 68 off 65 balls including eight fours and a six as victory was sealed with 32 balls remaining.

Group A

Italy moved to 2-0 and clinched a spot in the semi-finals with a six-wicket win over Qatar. Captain Gayashan Munasinghe took 3 for 52 opening the bowling before Hasnat Ahmed ripped through the tail to claim 4 for 37 as Qatar were dismissed for 209 in 46.3 overs.Openers Gian Meade (51 off 84 balls) and Rakibul Hasan (62 off 67 balls) got the chase off to an emphatic start with a 123-run stand. Damian Crowley fell four short of his second fifty in a row but by the time he was dismissed Italy needed just 23 to win. Peter Petricola took Italy over the line with an unbeaten 21 to secure victory with 49 balls to spare.Guernsey bounced back from their opening-day loss to Italy with a six-wicket win over Cayman Islands. Opener Sacha de Alwis had taken Cayman to a strong position near the halfway point of the innings by top-scoring with 60 after they chose to bat first but things turned south when he was second out to fall with the score at 115. Medium pacer David Hooper put the brakes on the middle order by taking 5 for 36 as Cayman managed just 99 runs off the final 28 overs to finish on 214 for 9.Josh Butler (93 off 87 balls) dominated a 97-run opening stand with Matthew Stokes in reply while Oliver Newey produced a half-century for the second day in a row, making a brisk 54 off 38 balls. Guernsey eventually reached the target with 13.3 overs to spare, putting themselves back in the hunt for the other semi-final spot from Group B while Cayman Islands have been eliminated from semi-final contention.

Carey century keeps Australia afloat as Ashes refuses to find slower gear

Australia 326 for 8 (Carey 106, Khawaja 82, Archer 3-29) vs EnglandAstonishingly, this Ashes series is just seven days old, but it remains in no mood to slow down and take stock of its surroundings. This opening day at Adelaide Oval was, in its own way, every bit as chaotic as the six that had gone before it. By its close, a cricket-record crowd of 56,298 was none the wiser as to whether England were in the process of clawing themselves back from the brink in this series, or whether Alex Carey’s brilliant maiden Ashes hundred had already pitched them most of the way through the exit.Arguably, the day’s only moment of stillness came in the minutes before the first ball was bowled, when the teams and crowd united in a pitch-perfect tribute to the victims of the Bondi terror atrocity. Either side of that serene moment, it was turmoil – starting with Steven Smith’s shock withdrawal, 45 minutes before the toss, due to vertigo, a moment which, in turn, granted Usman Khawaja a reprieve, not only for this contest, but arguably his Test career.Related

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The madness continued through an opening gambit in which England’s bowlers threatened to lose the plot on a sweltering morning in the field – only for Australia to hand it straight back to them with a run of five culpable dismissals in a row, and six out of eight all told. The most damning of these were the two wickets in three balls, immediately after the lunch break, with which Jofra Archer ignited England’s revival as part of a very personal response to the criticism he had attracted in the wake of the Brisbane loss.As if that was not sufficient, there was also space in the narrative for Khawaja’s career prospects to turn on a dime, thanks to a drop at slip from Harry Brook on 5 that persuaded him to shed the reticence and feast on numerous freebies from a toiling but deeply flawed attack. And in the final session, another DRS drama also reared its head, with Carey’s reprieve for a caught-behind on 72 subsequently declared by Simon Taufel, the former ICC umpire, to be another failure of “technology calibration”. Carey himself conceded at the close that he thought he’d heard a nick, and soon after the close the operators accepted they had been at fault.The upshot was another Ashes day conducted at warp speed. That Australia’s run-rate ended up shy of 4 an over was due entirely to the hard-lined discipline, and intermittent raw speed, of Archer, whose 3 for 29 in 16 overs made him as much of a lone wolf in England’s attack as Mitchell Starc had been for Australia in each of his first innings at Perth and Brisbane.And in the same way that Starc’s superiority had drawn nervy errors from England’s batters in those games, so Australia were the team that frittered away a chance for a choke-hold on this contest, and potentially the series.Only once this century had the hosts scored less than 439 after winning the toss and batting first at Adelaide – and that innings of 245 had come in England’s epochal victory on their triumphant tour in 2010-11. With that nemesis Starc still in situ at the close on 29 not out, it’s not out of the question that he’ll be able to marshal the tail on the second morning, as he did so effectively at the Gabba. But against a three-over-old ball, and against an England team who are in the process of showing their “dog”, flawed and feral though it may be, it ought to be over to England’s batters soon enough, to show if they’ve heeded any lessons from their frivolity to date.Jofra Archer was England’s stand-out bowler on the opening day•Getty Images

Despite all the apparent hard talk since Brisbane, the opening exchanges gave the impression that certain members of England’s attack were still living it up in their beach bar in Noosa. Brydon Carse, promoted to the new ball in the absence of Gus Atkinson, started with real purpose … for all of five balls, before sacrificing his threatening seam and swing for a diet of half-trackers that Jake Weatherald in particular was delighted to cash in on.It took a barely acknowledged moment of brilliance to blast England their opening. Archer – conspicuously missing his trademark gold chain after the ad hominem attacks he had received for wearing it – ground his way through his gears to draw Weatherald onto the front foot before scorching a 147kph bouncer into his splice. Jamie Smith gathered the top edge with barely a flicker – conscious perhaps of his culpable drop of Travis Head at a similar moment in the second Test. At 33 for 1, England were in the mix.Moments later, they were surging at 33 for 2, courtesy of a stunning one-hander from Zak Crawley, as Head slammed a hard-handed drive low to his left at short cover, to give Carse’s tempestuous day a kick-start.Out came Khawaja, still blinking at the absurdity of his circumstances. However, as he ground out five runs from his first 27 balls, it initially seemed that obsolescence would have been the kinder fate for a player who is due to turn 39 midway through this contest. But then, he lashed into a drive as Josh Tongue fired in a full length, and Brook at second slip made a meal of a tough but takeable chance, away to his left.It was the pardon that freed Khawaja of his reticence. His very next ball was pinged off the pads through square leg for four – the first of five boundaries in that region, and eight behind square all told – and as he romped along to an 81-ball fifty, England’s basic lack of discipline was being laid all too bare.But then, so too was Australia’s. Honours were broadly even when the teams went to lunch on 94 for 2, but what followed would have beggared belief, had it not been for England’s own batting opting for similar self-immolation all series long. Archer’s first ball after the break was little more than a loosener, but Marnus Labuschagne met it with a floppy, half-formed pull that Carse at midwicket could not have dropped if he’d tried – and seeing as he’d missed a similar sitter off Josh Inglis at Brisbane, he did have previous in that regard.As if that wasn’t enough of a gift, out came Australia’s golden child, Cameron Green, fresh from his whopping Aus$4 million deal with Kolkata Knight Riders. The only mercy for Green was that the IPL auction had taken place the previous evening. His second ball produced a nondescript push off the pads to midwicket, where Carse clung on again, rather more fortuitously this time, as the ball clanged off his right palm and into his left as he dived across to his right.Carey, at least, remained in the zone that he has graced throughout a superb series. Right from the outset of his innings, it was clear that his timing was exquisite, even on the shots that thumped into England’s ring of cover fielders. As he and Khawaja built into a fifth-wicket stand of 91, normal service for a first innings at Adelaide was being restored – not least when England’s spinner Will Jacks entered the attack for some of the leakiest, most optimistic offspin ever to be described as a frontline option.Usman Khawaja fell to Will Jacks as England struck before tea•Getty Images

Though he found some purchase, which Nathan Lyon will doubtless have observed with interest, Jacks was scarcely able to land two balls in a row on the same length as his initial overs were milked at more than an run a ball. And yet, no sooner had he served up his best ball of the day, a dipping ripper that turned sharply past Khawaja’s edge, than he had delivered the afternoon’s key breakthrough. Khawaja climbed into a slog-sweep to re-establish his dominance, and picked out Tongue at deep midwicket who held on well to a fast, flat chance.Inglis kept the runs coming, with judicious use of the reverse sweep, as he and Carey built into the evening session. But Tongue burst through his defences for 32 for arguably the day’s first dismissal that was not predominantly batter-error, before Carse claimed his second, courtesy of a lifter into Pat Cummins’ ribs that Ollie Pope collected at short leg.That decision was upheld by DRS, unlike Carey’s earlier in the afternoon – an under-edged pull off Tongue on 72, that Ahsan Raza decreed had missed the bat, and which Snicko could not confirm despite England’s adamance, and Carey’s own apparent guilt. It was a continuation of one of the subplots of the series, though the life did enable one of the most poignant moments of the day – Carey’s century and subsequent tribute to his father Gordon, who died of leukaemia in September. The tears in his own eyes were nothing compared to those of his wife in the crowd.Much like his team-mates, however, Carey couldn’t make the good going last for as long as he might have done. After a fine 143-ball innings, he found an unworthy way for it to end – an ugly slog-sweep off Jacks that spiralled high into the leg-side for Smith to complete his second simple take of the day.Though Starc and Lyon endured to the close, the sense of Australia’s dominance of the contest could not. And yet, forewarned is forearmed where this series, and this England team is concerned. For the third Test running, they’ve closed the first day in a position of apparent competitiveness. It’s only when their fickle batters get going on this far from fickle surface, that we’ll know the true size of the dog in this fight. And the pulse in their campaign.

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