Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

England battle to survive in first Ashes Test

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BRISBANE, Australia, Nov 23, 2013 (AFP) - England were fighting to save the opening Ashes Test after a demoralisi­ng third day dominated by Australia at the Gabba on Saturday.

Skipper Michael Clarke left the tourists toiling in the field chasing after the ball, before calling a halt with just over an hour left and setting England an improbable 561 runs to take a 1-0 lead in the five-Test series.

England will have to create Ashes history to win the Gabba Test, with their previous highest winning fourth innings score at 332 for seven in Melbourne in 1928.

The world record for the highest successful run chase is the West Indies' 418 for seven against Australia in Antigua in 2003, while the highest winning chase at the Gabba is Australia's 236 for seven against the West Indies in 1951.

England had a wretched start to their marathon salvage operation when Michael Carberry was bowled by Ryan Harris through his legs for a duck in the fifth over, and Jonathan Trott completed a sorry match when he pulled straight to Nathan Lyon at deep square leg for nine.

England went to stumps at 24 for two with Alastair Cook on 11 and Kevin Pietersen not out three.

Pietersen almost ran out his skipper when he took off for a quick single on his first ball faced and Cook just made his ground.

Clarke held on to his declaratio­n decision, seemingly to inflict maximum mental damage on Cook's team to set the tone for the rest of the Tests, after England's 3-0 series win three months ago for their third straight Ashes triumph.

Clarke and David Warner hit centuries as Australia accumulate­d an imposing 401 for seven, representi­ng an overall lead of 560 as the home side set out to protect their 25-year unbeaten run at the Gabba ground.

"We'll take the third wicket tomorrow morning and hopefully we take the rest after that," Warner confidentl­y predicted. "Our bowlers are bowling fast at the moment. England are on the back foot. It does look like they've got scared eyes at the moment."Dashing opener Warner scored his first Ashes Test century, and skipper Clarke raised his 25th Test ton and sixth against England as the Australian­s rammed home their 159-run innings lead to seize control.

Clarke bounced back strongly from his first innings failure when he was caught off a Stuart Broad lifter for one, and has now scored 1,029 runs at the Gabba at an average of 114.33.

Warner raised his fourth Test ton with three runs off part-time spinner Joe Root a half-hour after lunch but later became another victim of Broad when he was caught behind for 124 off 154 balls with 13 fours and a six.

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