Western Mail

Rain halts England’s progress following early breakthrou­ghs

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JOFRA Archer’s first Test wicket provided the catalyst as England’s bowlers enjoyed a profitable third morning against Australia at Lord’s, but heavy rain ruined their hopes of capitalisi­ng as the remainder of the third day was washed out.

Showers forced the teams off just before the lunch break with the tourists 80 for four in response to the home side’s 258 and the weather refused to relent, meaning the second Ashes Test has now lost five full sessions and could already be meandering to a draw.

England’s best hopes of avenging their defeat in the series opener at Edgbaston probably involved them skittling Australia cheaply in their first innings, but they must be mindful of balancing risk and reward in the next two days.

A sold-out crowd would have been frustrated not to see more than 24.1 overs, with many hanging around until the curtain finally came down at 5.20pm, and a partial refund will prove scant consolatio­n for the missed opportunit­y of seeing England’s buoyant seam attack continue doing battling with Steve Smith.

Archer, Chris Woakes and Stuart Broad took a wicket apiece in a half-hour period that saw Australia lose three for 11 but the familiar sight of Smith at the crease – an infuriatin­g blend of tics, flourishes and precise decision-making – meant they could not yet claim to have the upper hand.

When play resumes on day four Smith will begin again on 13, yet to betray any further signs of weakness since his match-winning pair of centuries in Birmingham.

Play resumed under dark skies and with the floodlight­s on, the kind of conditions seamers relish. And yet for eight overs Usman Khawaja and Bancroft made light of the overheads, doubling their overnight score of 30 for one with relative ease.

Broad’s initial burst was generally too wide, while Archer also allowed too many leaves – a problem he corrected to emphatic effect in his fifth over.

Tightening his line and coaxing some sharp inward movement off the pitch, the 24-year-old thumped Bancroft just under the thigh pad and persuaded umpire Aleem Dar to award the lbw.

He celebrated his watershed moment not once but twice, a passionate outburst when the finger went up and a group hug with his team-mates when a DRS referral showed the ball to be trimming the bails.

That brought Smith to the crease and Archer’s first ball to the limpet-like number four topped 93mph, albeit sailing harmlessly a yard outside off stump.

England capitalise­d on the breakthrou­gh three balls later, Woakes taking Usman Khawaja’s edge on 36, finding just enough movement off the seam to hand Jonny Bairstow a regulation catch.

The next 24 deliveries yielded just a single run as England’s grip tightened and, while Smith was happy to soak up the pressure, it was no surprise to see Travis Head buckle.

He was locked to the crease when the returning Broad pinned him on the front leg with a full delivery. The ball was destined for middle stump and Dar’s baffling not-out call was quickly overturned.

A third lbw of the day was awarded to Ben Stokes, then struck off by batsman Matthew Wade’s requesdt for a review, before rain ended the session a couple of minutes early.

By then Smith had soaked up 40 balls, treating England to his full repertoire of routines at the crease and an increasing­ly extravagan­t selection of leaves. Only one caused him genuine concern, a tester that kicked sharply and beat the bat from his Rajasthan Royals colleague Stokes.

■ Due to an early deadline, we are unable to bring you a report of last night’s Vitality Blast T20 clash between Essex and Glamorgan.

 ??  ?? > A delighted Jofra Archer celebrates his first Test wicket after trapping Cameron Bancroft lbw
> A delighted Jofra Archer celebrates his first Test wicket after trapping Cameron Bancroft lbw

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