Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Bell, Woakes stonewall Australia’s attempt to win fifth Ashes Test

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AUSTRALIA chiselled out four key England wickets to take control of the fifth and final Ashes Test on an absorbing third day at The Oval yesterday.

The hosts, replying to Australia’s 492/ 9 declared, lost Alastair Cook for 25, Joe Root (68), Jonathan Trott (40) and Kevin Pietersen (50) on the way to 247/4.

Although rain is forecast for today, Australia are in a strong position to claim a consolatio­n victory and English hopes of winning a home series 4-0 for the first time look to be over.

Ian Bell was unbeaten on 29 and Chris Woakes on 15 at the close with England still trailing the touring side by 245 runs and needing another 46 to avoid the follow-on.

Cook and Root, resuming on 32/0 batted cautiously through the first hour under clear blue skies against tidy but largely unthreaten­ing fast bowling.

Root produced two neat wristy flicks to the mid-wicket boundary and Cook drove Ryan Harris square for four but runs were generally hard to come by.

The pair had taken their opening partnershi­p to 68, England’s best of the series, when Cook nibbled at a wide ball from Harris just after the drinks break and keeper Brad Haddin took a diving catch.

The 22-year-old Root failed to score a run off 19 balls in a row but he pulled Peter Siddle for a single just before lunch to reach his half-century, made from 145 deliveries.

It was a welcome return to form for Root, who has struggled with the bat since making 180 at Lord’s, and England took lunch on 97/1.

Root hit two fours in James Faulkner’s first over of the day but with a century firmly in his sights he swept at a full-length ball from Nathan Lyon and topedged a simple catch to Shane Watson at short fine-leg.

Pietersen got off the mark by driving Mitchell Starc for four but the normally dynamic right-hander also struggled to find his touch.

Trott’s first boundary came off the 78th delivery he faced and Pietersen’s frustratio­n was evident when, on 11, he attempted a suicidal quick single and was well short of safety when David Warner’s throw narrowly missed the stumps.

Australia took the second new ball just before tea and Starc trapped Trott lbw with his first delivery, the batsman failing to get the decision overturned on review.

Pietersen and Bell continued to play risk-free cricket in murky conditions and the former flicked Faulkner to the fine-leg boundary for his fourth four to reach his fifty.

But he fell with the total on 217, tempted by a wide fulllength delivery from Starc and edging a straightfo­rward catch to Watson at first slip.

Bell continued the sublime form which has brought him three centuries in the series, unleashing a couple of drives through the covers in fading light before shutting up shop again in the closing overs of the day. – Sapa-AFP

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? STEADY: Joe Root of England has been one of England’s stars during the Ashes series. Root made 68 in England’s first innings at The Oval yesterday.
GETTY IMAGES STEADY: Joe Root of England has been one of England’s stars during the Ashes series. Root made 68 in England’s first innings at The Oval yesterday.

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