Scottish Daily Mail

Finally, England get it right ahead of Ashes

- LAWRENCE BOOTH Wisden Editor at Lord’s

England can breathe again. This was a match they did not want to play, against opposition craving a place in history. and all the while the australian­s were praying for a pratfall ahead of Thursday’s first ashes Test.

But, by the most circuitous of routes, this game ended up as the rout many expected in the first place. Set 182 to complete one of the unlikelies­t Test wins after England’s no 11 Olly Stone had fallen to the first delivery of the third day, Ireland were blown away for 38 in 15.4 overs by Chris Woakes and Stuart Broad. Blood in their nostrils, they were damned if they were going to let go of the ball.

The upshot was the lowest Test total at lord’s and, frankly, a bit of an anticlimax after the nip and tuck of the first two days.

after the unpreceden­ted high of the World Cup, England were always going to treat this game as a means of readjustin­g to Test cricket’s main course, which starts at Edgbaston next week. But they also know how close they came to choking on the hors d’oeuvre.

Exhaustion didn’t help. Joe Root and Jonny Bairstow both played tired shots, and Moeen ali remains in a rut. The World Cup has taken its toll, physically and mentally.

and while it’s true that England raised their game when they had to, it is also true that if they show the same frailty against Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood, there could be some messy scorecards in the weeks ahead. a victory margin of 143 runs didn’t remotely tell the tale.

despite all that, and without wishing to patronise an Ireland team who pushed them hard for all but the last hour and a half of the match, there were enough awkward moments to have made the workout worthwhile.

Tim Murtagh skittled England for 85 on the first morning, and when the Irish reached 132 for two shortly after tea, humiliatio­n beckoned. It needed a once-in-alifetime 92 from nightwatch­man Jack leach to rescue them, followed by high-class swing and seam from Woakes and Broad in conditions they may still be daydreamin­g about when they are old and grey.

Woakes, mimicking the fuller length from the nursery End that had worked so well for Murtagh, finished with a career-best six for 17, while Broad exuded hostility, hitting Kevin O’Brien and Mark adair on the helmet on his way to four for 19 — figures he has bettered only once since January 2016. By 1.56 on the third afternoon, four minutes before the scheduled lunch break, it was all over.

Root described the lord’s surface as ‘substandar­d’, and there were times when you half-expected an ECB pitch inspector to wander on and call the whole thing off.

But England’s new-ball pair simply licked their lips and gobbled up one Irishman after another. The dismissals reflected their menace: Root held four catches at first slip as the outside edge was challenged repeatedly, and five batsmen were either bowled or lbw, defeated by swing or seam — sometimes both.

In total, Ireland lost all ten for 27 in 71 balls, with only opener James McCollum making double figures. as captain William Porterfiel­d put it, his side were ‘gutted’ — a descriptio­n of their state of mind, and possibly their hollowed-out scorecard, too.

The match was done and dusted in 165.3 overs, the equivalent of five-and-a-half sessions. On the first and third mornings, ten wickets fell before lunch. It was no advertisem­ent for Test cricket, let alone four-day Test cricket — not least because 98 overs a day looked like pie in the sky. The administra­tors have some thinking to do.

But there was relief in the England camp that this random game is over, and a sense that the adrenaline can now kick in properly as Root’s side look to complete a historic World Cup-ashes double. Concerns remained as the selectors met yesterday afternoon ahead of this morning’s squad announceme­nt.

Opener Rory Burns has chosen the wrong moment to mislay his confidence, but cannot be dropped one Test into the summer. The same goes for Joe denly, who may still be stewing over Root’s part in his second-innings run-out.

Perhaps the key developmen­t ahead of Edgbaston will be a top-order reshuffle, though that would require Root to move up to no 3 — a switch that would give head coach Trevor Bayliss more pleasure than the captain. Jason Roy, who looked vulnerable against the new ball on his Test debut, could then drop down to no 4, where he can more easily bat with the abandon that has made him a white-ball world-beater.

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