Dismal England face heavy defeat

08 August 2009

England capitulated to 82-5 and still trail Australia by 261 runs after two days of the fourth Ashes Test in Leeds.
Australia resumed on 196-4 and Michael Clarke extended his stand with Marcus North to 152 before he fell to Graham Onions for 93 shortly before lunch.
North (110) hit a six to seal his third ton but was last out in a total of 445, Stuart Broad with a Test best 6-91.
England began with a deficit of 343 but after a calm opening stand of 58, five wickets fell for 20 in 40 minutes.
After fateful Friday, in which there were dawn fire alarms, the loss of Andrew Flintoff and a back spasm to Matt Prior during a game of football on the outfield, before the small matter of being skittled out for 102 and seeing Australia reach 196-4, England followers could be forgiven for thinking things could not get worse.
But it was perhaps even worse, 249 runs conceded in 57 overs and another total collapse with the bat.
Conditions were favourable for bowling at the start of the day, however, despite bright sunshine the ball was swinging and there was pace and bounce in the surface.
But England's bowlers could simply not take advantage.
James Anderson found some prodigious movement but was frustrated by having his radar a fraction out, and also appeared to be hampered by a hamstring injury.
The third ball of the day was clinically punched off the back foot for four by North who played in positive fashion throughout, with an expansive follow through.
Anderson bowled one absolute beauty to Clarke that swung away and was too good to edge, but the inswinger that was his surprise delivery began to be his stock delivery and Clarke was able to read them with ease, clipping the ball off his pads with consummate efficacy.
Steve Harmison's first ball was pitched halfway down the wicket and Clarke had ample time to paddle it away through wide mid-on for four.
The tall paceman was clearly told to keep bowling short, perhaps to test the abdominal injury that made Clarke an injury doubt in the build-up.
Men were deployed to the boundary on both sides of the wicket, presumably for the top-edge hook or cut, but their time was spent retrieving the ball from the fence.
If those tactics were surprising, the decision to ask Stuart Broad to bowl well wide of the stumps with seven fielders on the off-side in a desperate attempt to stem the flow of runs was even more baffling, and something of an insult to the paying public, who were reduced to a stunned silence.
A large crowd had arrived full of expectation for an England revival, but the only thing they had to cheer in the opening 90 minutes was the sight of Graeme Swann falling to the ground after his ankle gave way as he was about to throw the ball in from the deep.source: bbc.com

Posted by News Point at 11:08 PM  
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