Sunday Dec 29, 2024
Thursday, 28 December 2017 00:27 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
Melbourne (Reuters): The Ashes series may be reduced to dead rubbers, but Alastair Cook and Stuart Broad proved their England careers remain very much alive on Wednesday as they helped Joe Root’s team dominate Australia on day two at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
Coming into the fourth test with only 83 runs for the series, opening batsman Cook strode off at stumps unbeaten on 104, having driven England to a position of strength at 192 for two.
Veteran paceman Broad earlier finished with 4-51 in another welcome return to form, hastening Australia’s first innings dismissal for 327 shortly after lunch.
The pair’s revival came too late for England, with the urn surrendered meekly after the third test in Perth.
But it was a case of better late than never for Root’s rebuilding team, who need them performing to avoid the trauma of a second successive whitewash in Australia.
There was also satisfaction for the seasoned duo in responding to their critics, some of whom demanded they be axed midway through the series.
Former England captain Michael Vaughan was among them and said Broad should have been dropped for Melbourne after he went wicketless for 142 runs in Perth, his worst ever test figures.
Not that Broad noticed as he bunkered down in the leadup, searching for the killer instinct that had deserted him for much of the series.
“It was only two weeks ago that I was on holiday with (Vaughan), so I don’t know what he’s been saying,” Broad told reporters with a smile.
“To be honest I’ve had one of those weeks where you get your tin hat on and duck down and don’t really see much, so I’ve been very unaware about things being written and things being said.
“You’ve got to say your opinion, you’ve got to be critical at times and I deserve criticism after the Perth test defeat for sure.
“I am not going to hold any grudges or get too disappointed if people slag me off because at the end of the day in 15 years’ time I might be doing the same. Not six months.”
Former captain Cook was already under the microscope before arriving Down Under, with doubts swirling about his motivation to carry on for the long haul.
He struggled through 10 innings without a half-century before his breakthrough on Wednesday, his highest test score in Australia since a knock of 189 in the final match of the 2010-11 series in Sydney.
A stroke of luck helped him on his way, with Australia captain Steve Smith dropping him on 66 when he nicked all-rounder Mitchell Marsh to slip.
Two days after Cook’s 33rd birthday on Christmas Day, Smith then gift-wrapped the opener’s century by bowling a profligate final over before stumps.
Cook smashed him for 11 runs, pulling his 15th four to the fence to bring up his 32nd test ton, leaving his team mates jumping in joy in the dressing room.
Cook, who moved past Allan Border to ninth in the all-time test runs list during his innings, raised his bat in an understated celebration.
“He’s not someone who gets particularly fazed or down,” Broad said of his team mate’s form slump.
“He went through so much stuff with his captaincy I don’t think a bit of stick about scoring runs is going to bother him too much.”
AFP: England will be unlikely to stage a day-night Ashes Test match when Australia tour in 2019, England and Wales Cricket Board chief executive Tom Harrison said on Wednesday.
Harrison said England did not need a pink-ball Test in their home Ashes schedule, although Australia has already staged four day-night Tests in recent years.
The two countries played the first day-night Test against each other in the second match of the current series at Adelaide Oval earlier this month.
A further two day-night Tests - against India and Sri Lanka - are likely to be staged in the 2018-2019 season.
“It’s to be decided, but it’s unlikely, to be honest,” Harrison told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation during the fourth Ashes Test in Melbourne.
“I think we’ve got a format that works brilliantly well for us in Ashes cricket in the UK.
“Right time, right place, right conditions are the rules for day-night Test cricket. I think we’ll wait and see, but it’s unlikely I would say.” Cricket Australia counterpart James Sutherland said he was comfortable with the ECB’s decision, if it materialised. “We’re obviously great advocates of it, we’ve seen the success of it here but Tom knows his conditions better,” Sutherland said.