Scottish Daily Mail

Aussies crushed by Anderson masterclas­s

Aussies crumble to masterful Anderson

- by PAUL NEWMAN

They promised they would take the attack to Australia after their Lord’s horror show and england delivered yesterday on a compelling opening day of the third Test that stands comparison even with the Ashes classic of 2005.

It was 10 years ago here at this atmospheri­c edgbaston ground that Glenn McGrath trod on a ball and ruled himself out, Ricky Ponting put england into bat and they responded with 407 runs.

Well, if anything, this was even more dramatic as masterful bowling from Jimmy Anderson saw Australia crash to 136 all out before Ian Bell launched a sublime, turbo- charged reply — only to throw it away within sight of the close.

There may have only been 269 runs on a rain-interrupte­d opening to this pivotal game, but 13 wickets tumbled i n 65.4 overs and there was no shortage of incident as bite returned to the Ashes after two apparently mild-mannered Tests.

When the elements had the final say, england were just three runs behind Australia’s sub-standard total after rattling along at 4.58 an over and, with three wickets down, stand poised to move into a commanding position.

Not that anything can be taken for granted in this topsy-turvey contest.

If only Bell, under desperate pressure on his home ground, had been able to see the day through, england really would have been in a fantastic position. But they will still be satisfied with the way they put Lord’s behind them. No one more so than Anderson, who reminded us all after his rare wicketless display at Lord’s that he remains indisputab­ly the leader of this england attack with the best Ashes bowling performanc­e of his long career.

‘I was happy with the way I bowled,’ he said. ‘ Six f or against Australia in a crucial game will rank highly for me on a personal level, but I feel we can bowl better.

‘We were all disappoint­ed with the way we performed at Lord’s, but having a week away did us the world of good. We were all refreshed and we wanted to prove to people we were better than that.’

england wanted to feel the green, green grass of home and it was provided here by groundsman Gary Barwell, who prepared a surface that at last resembled an english pitch rather than a lifeless ‘corporate’ one.

Not that this was in any way a terror track and Alastair Cook would have made the same decision as Michael Clarke and batted had he won the toss.

It i s sometimes unfairly claimed that Anderson needs something in the pitch or atmosphere to excel but it is indisputab­le that he is a master craftsman whenever there is swing in the air or, in this case, seam in the surface.

Australia were complicit in their own downfall as they prodded and poked nervously at balls they could have left or perished trying to leave deliveries they really should have offered a defence to.

yet nothing can be taken away from Anderson, who r i pped t he heart out of Australia with a post-lunch spell of four for seven off 19 balls to take six for 47 in all, and the returning Steven Finn, who struck two early blows.

england had wanted to test Steve Smith early on against the moving ball and now Finn, in his first Test for more than two years, was able to do so after Anderson had trapped David Warner palpably in front. This day must have seemed a long way away for Finn during the last miserable 18 months since he was deemed ‘unselectab­le’ towards the end of an Ashes tour where his bowling action simply fell apart.

Yet he was given his chance here ahead of Mark Wood and responded by forcing Smith to edge to slip with his sixth ball and then followed it by bowling Clarke with another skilful full-pitched delivery.

Chris Rogers was the only Australian to stand firm, contributi­ng 52 runs after his very participat­ion had been in doubt following dizziness caused by a blow to his helmet at Lord’s.

England warmed to their task and Bell made a great start to his return to No 3 — where he scored the only double century of his career — by taking three classy fours off successive balls from Josh hazlewood and three in an over from Mitchell Starc. But after moving to a high-quality 53 and looking destined to become the first Warwickshi­re batsman to ever score a Test hundred at edgbaston, Bell maddeningl­y, infuriatin­gly, holed out off Nathan Lyon.

Bell had made an earlier entrance than england would have liked because Adam Lyth had again fallen to a ball he could have l ef t outside off- stump, this time a poor one from hazlewood that the yorkshirem­an attempted to drive.

Where Lyth and Bell were careless, Cook was desperatel­y unlucky, having pulled Lyon’s second ball hard but straight at short leg where Adam Voges somehow caught the ball virtually in his jumper without even looking at it.

Throughout there was an edge to t he action t hat was not visible at neither Cardiff nor Lord’s. Anderson exchanged words with his old bete noire Clarke, every slip in the field by Mitchell Johnson was greeted wit h l oud barracking by the fervent crowd while the charmless Warner screamed i n ugly fashion at Bell as he left the field.

It was Ben Stokes who told Sportsmail at the weekend that ‘the way Australia let us know they were on top at Lord’s didn’t sit too well as a player. There will be a bit more Ashes spice next time’.

Clearly s omething has happened between these teams that will l eave the officials needing to keep a close eye on the rest of this Investec series. But for now the drama is no lesser for that. The next instalment today cannot be missed.

 ??  ?? Magical moment: Jimmy Anderson celebrates claiming the wicket of David Warner, which began the quick downfall of the Australian­s and put England in total control
Magical moment: Jimmy Anderson celebrates claiming the wicket of David Warner, which began the quick downfall of the Australian­s and put England in total control
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