Scottish Daily Mail

MOWN DOWN!

Aussies in control as England capitulate

- PAUL NEWMAN Cricket Correspond­ent reports from The Gabba

For almost three whole days of this first Test, it really did look like England might compete and even win at The Gabba. Normal service quickly resumed and, barring a miracle today or rain of biblical proportion­s, England will head to Adelaide pondering a horrible feeling of 2006 and 2013 deja vu.

Time and again, England had chances to make an early mark on the Ashes but time and again they squandered them before being hurried to the brink of an emphatic and demoralisi­ng defeat.

The opening exchanges turned into a tale of what might have been for England. But the gulf in class Down Under has rapidly emerged. Australia flexed their muscles and battered England after three days of near parity, firstly rushing them out for 195 and then, chasing just 170, seeing David Warner and Cameron Bancroft easily adding 114. They should have had no problem in completing the last rites today.

Every time England looked set to put the pressure on at the Brisbane fortress, they either sold their wickets far too cheaply or found the old enemy had the greater strength and character to get themselves out of trouble.

England knew at the start of the fourth day, with two wickets down but their noses just in front, that if they batted all day they would have the chance to finish what has been a quite wonderful Test in the most glorious manner.

Yet old failings resurfaced at the worst possible times and England must quickly address their shortcomin­gs. Coach Trevor Bayliss made it perfectly clear that half-centuries would not be good enough to win the Ashes and that England had to convert them into big hundreds to compete.

In total contrast to the mammoth display of concentrat­ion and skill from Australian captain Steve Smith in making an unbeaten 141, England’s batsmen got start after start yet could not go on to matchdefin­ing innings.

Their problem was summed up yesterday by an England captain in Joe root who has just as much class and ability as Smith but who is falling short from joining him in becoming a true great.

root got to 50 on a morning when so much depended on him but, even though he barely acknowledg­ed the landmark because of the need to kick on, he fell immediatel­y afterwards.

It may seem harsh to criticise a captain with such a fabulous record who has conducted himself so well and led his team in the field, at least in the first innings, with imaginatio­n and authority.

But, for once, the statistics do not lie. root has passed 50 on 46 occasions in Test cricket but has ‘only’ 13 centuries, while of his last 25 half-centuries he has only gone on to three figures five times.

Compare that with Smith, who made his 21st Test century here and almost single-handedly dragged his team into a small but decisive first innings lead by dealing expertly with everything England could throw at him.

The dismissal of root to Josh Hazlewood came after Nathan Lyon, gaining more turn and bounce than Moeen Ali, had struck early blows to dismiss Mark Stoneman and Dawid Malan.

Yet even after such a potentiall­y fatal blow, England again clawed back to the brink of ascendancy before Moeen fell in controvers­ial and unsatisfac­tory fashion.

Moeen had added 42 with Jonny Bairstow before he attempted another slog sweep at Lyon and saw Tim Paine whip off the bails. Nobody seemed to think Moeen was in trouble apart from the returning wicketkeep­er.

But after countless replays, TV umpire Chris Gaffaney decided there was no part of Moeen’s left foot over the line and gave him out even though there had to be doubt. England’s sense of grievance was not helped by pictures that showed the crease had been painted much thicker on the cut strip than off it. If it had remained the same width all the way across, Moeen would have survived. Cue ‘Wobblyline’ and ‘Shoddyline’ jokes on social media while even Moeen, the most calm of characters, gently shook his head. By his standards, it constitute­d serious dissent. The writing was not quite on the wall while Bairstow was still there, but Ben Stokes’s absence leaves a tail that looks vulnerable to Australia’s express pace. Up popped Mitchell Starc, now known as The Mop for his ability to wipe out lower-order batsmen, to blast his way through the last four wickets for ten before tea. Bairstow will be criticised for playing an upper cut straight to third man but it was a shot he would not have attempted had he felt any confidence in the batsmen around him once Chris Woakes had become the first of Starc’s three victims in ten balls. And he had clearly been unsettled by sledging led predictabl­y by Warner but also featuring his old Yorkshire team-mate Peter Handscomb.

It was a glimpse of what lies ahead for England unless their talisman is cleared by police and rushed to Australia. And that is extremely unlikely. only twice has a target above 200 been successful­ly chased in Tests at The Gabba but 170 never seemed enough to test Australia on a pitch that got quicker and easier for batting as the match wore on.

With the rain forecast before this Test nowhere to be seen, Australia had time and there was a resigned air among the England team when they could not strike early.

England will be concerned at the lack of impact of Woakes and Jake Ball, who offered scant support to Jimmy Anderson and Stuart Broad, while Moeen looks rusty and hindered by a cut to the spinning finger of his right hand.

Nothing was more demoralisi­ng for England than the leading part played by Lyon, who backed up his flammable words with actions.

The second Test, starting on Saturday under lights, gives England their best chance of success but they will need a huge improvemen­t. They cannot contemplat­e a repeat of the nightmare that broke them four years ago.

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