The Ashes: Australia vs England third Test - Day 1 cricket live scores, updates

By Suneer Chowdhary / Roar Guru

Australia have every chance of wrapping up the series and regaining the urn for the first time in seven years when they take on England in the third Ashes Test match at the WACA in Perth. Join us for live scores and commentary from 1.30pm AEDT.

Life for England has been difficult on this tour.

They were crushed in Brisbane, they lost one of their most experienced batsmen to a stress-related illness, then went down in the second game again and have had a matter of facing up to the opposition’s on-field verbals and off-field barbs.

And now they enter the third Test match at a venue where they have been poor all their lives, a ground where they can expect more of the same reason they went down in the first couple of Tests – pace and a lot of bounce.

First things first and both teams have a few things to decide around their selections.

Until about a day earlier, Australia looked good to go unchanged into the game. Now, there has been a bit of a talk of Ryan Harris having woken up sore on the eve of the game, which is why captain Michael Clarke delayed naming the Australian XI.

What adds bit of mystery to the selection is James Faulkner was hit on his hand by a net bowler, suffering a broken thumb.

So if Harris does not wake up fit and with Faulkner’s injury preventing him from adding to his one Test cap, we could well be looking at one of Doug Bollinger or Nathan Coulter-Nile getting a surprise call-up.

The rest of the Australian side should remain the same, with the high temperatures in Perth pushing them towards playing Nathan Lyon as their spinner, instead of a four-pronged pace bowling line-up alongside Shane Watson.

England have decisions to be made of their own. They had gone in with two spinners in Adelaide and now they may not even have one.

It will be a drastic move to enter the Test with four pace bowlers and one fraught with risk.

What happens if the WACA pitch does not play as it looks like it might – making and reading pitches isn’t an exact science anyway and we have had tracks which are predicted to play one way ending up doing quite the opposite.

What happens if, after the initial help for the pace bowlers, the pitch flattens out into a beautiful batting track?

What if the cracks come into the picture on the fourth and the fifth day and assist some form of spin bowling?

England might also want to ask questions, once they have decided whether or not to play a spinner, of their bowling attack.

With James Anderson struggling for form and Graeme Swann having not done the job that was expected out of him, will it make more sense to play Monty Panesar, keep Ben Stokes and add one of Tim Bresnan, Steven Finn or Boyd Rankin?

Or will Swann’s experience come through and allow the selectors to keep faith in his abilities?

And who will that third seamer be? Bresnan, if fit, could be the most likely option but there has been a talk in a few quarters of Rankin breaking into the line-up as well.

What about Stokes? Does he retain his place in the line-up or do the selectors pitchfork Gary Ballance in a bid to strengthen their batting instead?

The selection of Ballance and either Bresnan or Rankin would mean it would be their third successive change in their third seam bowling option and the number six batsman.

England’s selection issues are only a tip of the iceberg. How they bat against a rampaging Mitchell Johnson and co. will be a solution they would do well to find out and quickly at that.

WACA has been Johnson’s adopted home and his performance at this venue si almost second to none, having picked up 36 wickets at 19.66.

The steep bounce from good length added to his high speeds will make life difficult for the English batsmen but, as was on display in the second dig in Adelaide, it’s odds on England to fight fire with fire by going for the pull, hook and the cut.

Except they do not want to do what Alastair Cook and Stuart Broad did in the second innings. It was very early in the day for the both to attempt the shots they did and they paid the ultimate price for it.

While aggression will be the only way out for the tourists, getting the eye in will be of grave importance before they can start attacking. So England will be choosy about their shots.

It’s difficult to see how England can make a comeback from the situation they find themselves in but if they do get their selection and shot-making right, it could make for a perfect Test match for the neutral.

Join us for the opening day on Friday and you can follow the live score of this third Ashes Test between Australia and England from 1.30pm AEST and post your comments below.

The Crowd Says:

2013-12-14T02:50:22+00:00

David

Guest


Listening to Warnie about the English team having a slow over rate. This seems to be a common practise with England. Why are the umpires not doing their job and maintain the integrity of the game. Who needs to talk to the umpires about this, surely this can be raised with the umpires. I remember when Australia got find for a slow over rate. Come on guys

2013-12-13T14:14:31+00:00

ChrisB

Guest


Yep, how dare people fail or make a mistakes. Surely 350 is beyong these jokers. Why you'd think people weed stupid enough to believe they'd be 2 nil up

2013-12-13T14:02:38+00:00

ChrisB

Guest


Good point. 2 thirds of the team doing well, yet still many are super critical. How dare it not be perfect. Great to see Smith prosper and prove the stupidity of the many knobs on here who denied a young player could improve Ditto Warner and Johnson.

2013-12-13T13:52:38+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Sorry guys sent it through just waiting

2013-12-13T13:41:08+00:00

Johnno

Guest


I know been waiting for it too.

2013-12-13T13:35:37+00:00

Nudge

Guest


Where the bloody heck is Ronans wrap

2013-12-13T13:22:26+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Ronan your article clearly is casting a shadow over this England team. Anderson today bowled 17 mainly lifeless overs 0/44 of 17 overs. Very pedestrian, the fastest I think he got up to was 138 clicks a few times, hardly searing pace.

2013-12-13T13:20:33+00:00

Johnno

Guest


HOW ENGLAND HAS STRUGGLED IN TESTS AT THE WACA GROUND IN PERTH Tests played: 12. Australia eight wins. England one win. Three draws. England's last WACA Test win was in 1978. Australia has won the last six WACA Ashes Tests by massive margins. 2010: Australia won by 267 runs 2006: Australia won by 206 runs 2002: Australia won by innings and 48 runs 1998: Australia won by seven wickets 1995: Australia won by 329 runs 1991: Australia won by nine wickets 1986: Draw 1982: Draw 1979: Australia won by 138 runs 1978: England won by 166 runs 1974: Australia won by nine wickets 1970: Draw

2013-12-13T13:16:48+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


...and Harris, Siddle and Lyon.

2013-12-13T12:50:38+00:00

Daws

Guest


...and Johnson

2013-12-13T12:06:50+00:00

expathack

Guest


Exactly. Well almost exactly. Actually not really. Without Haddin, Clarke, Smith and Warner we'd definitely be looking like chumps.

2013-12-13T11:40:16+00:00

TheTruth

Guest


too true on all of the above :)

2013-12-13T11:37:07+00:00

Praveen

Guest


Smith has silence all doubters, well Done young man

2013-12-13T11:35:34+00:00

expathack

Guest


Except when you're playing Zimbabwe

2013-12-13T11:33:00+00:00

Sandy

Guest


Yes Broad was a bit tetchy but let's see...a very hot day in Perth, 5/143, 6/326, I think I'd be a bit tetchy as well. Nothing better than a frustrated Broad :)

2013-12-13T11:08:04+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Pedro the average first innings score at the WACA in the past decade is 308. The only pitch in the world where you could claim 450 might maybe be a par score is SSC Colombo or the (old) Adelaide Oval.

2013-12-13T11:00:59+00:00

Pedro the Maroon

Guest


Thanks Suneer. Well done 2, 5, 7 and 8. So it is a 450+ pitch after all. To those who scoffed at me ...

2013-12-13T10:56:35+00:00

Jb

Guest


Smith was enormous today, looked more comfortable than I have ever seen him, Haddin has got real backbone, Anderson looks defeated. A good 1st session tomorrow from the Aussies can shut this test down it's been brutal. Johnson's confidence at an all time high good to see

2013-12-13T10:31:41+00:00

Pom in Oz

Roar Guru


England throw away another good chance, similar to Brissy. Makes me laugh at all the Haddin haters pre-series. Without him you'd be looking like chumps!

2013-12-13T10:30:01+00:00

Existentialist

Guest


Thanks Suneer Nice composure from our younger heads: Warner - typically swashbuckling but would have been so much more dangerous if ably supported, Smith - brilliant century given all the flak and supposed lack of WACA nous. Brad Haddin delivered a vice captains knock and MJ cool head in an almost night watchmen role. Older heads: shame, shame, shame. No thought, no responsibility, no composure. Maybe Watto will respect his wicket more at 6 (we need his bowling this series)? Bring in Hughes if we win this test and see ya Bailey. He needs to stick to the white ball format and his "captains head" was sorely missing. Phew!

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