Sunday Territorian

Lyon-heart to Aussie rescue

- By MALCOLM CONN in Melbourne

AUSTRALIA is tantalisin­gly poised to claim the fourth Test at the MCG today on the way to attempting a 5-0 whitewash in Sydney next week.

After an extraordin­ary recovery on day three, Australia needs a further 201 for victory with all 10 wickets in hand.

The character of the batsmen is on the line today after the bowlers yet again dragged the team back into a match that the batsmen threatened to sacrifice.

At stumps Australia was 0-30 after bowling England out for just 179 in its second innings, leaving Australia 231 to win.

History says the target is not as easy as it looks. Australia has success- fully chased more than 200 at the MCG just three times, with the best 5-287 against England in 1928-29, and the last 8-258 against the West Indies during 1960-61.

Yesterday’s hero was Nathan Lyon, who claimed 5-50 and became just the fifth Australian off-spinner to achieve 100 career wickets, taking them in front of 63,864 fans. More than 230,000 have watched the first three days of the Test.

Lyon claimed the slow pitch was not to blame for the terrible batting collapses by both teams.

‘‘Australia has to really be patient with our batting. It’s going to be a massive challenge, there’s no doubt about it,’’ he said.

‘‘ We have to hang in there, be patient and show good intent and try and rotate the strike.’’

Mitchell Johnson also continued his outstandin­g summer, claiming 3-25 from 15 overs to have 31 wickets at an average of just 14 apiece.

He is on course to have the best series by an Australian fast bowler since Rodney Hogg took 41 wickets against England during 1978-79.

No longer the timid church mouse, Johnson literally went toe to toe with England’s most dangerous batsman, Kevin Pietersen, yesterday.

Looking all the more intimidati­ng with his bristling 1970s moustache, Johnson was furious with Pietersen (49) pulling away at the last minute because of what his batting partner Jonny Bairstow said was a baby crawling behind the sightscree­n.

Umpire Kumar Dharmasena was forced to step between the pair.

However flaky Australia’s batting above Brad Haddin has been in the first four Tests, England’s has been so

It’s going to be a massive challenge, there’s no doubt about it

much worse. Yesterday it was catastroph­ic. Haddin ( 65 not out) topscored in a last-wicket partnershi­p of 40 with Lyon, reducing Australia’s deficit to 51.

Asked how valuable those runs might be, Lyon replied ‘‘I’ll tell you tomorrow’’.

England got away well with captain Alastair Cook on the way to a brisk 51 in an opening partnershi­p of 65 with Michael Carberry.

But England lost 4-22 including an extraordin­ary collapse of 3-1 in six balls and then followed that up by losing the last five wickets for just six.

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