Malan and Bairstow save England from catastrophe

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Australia’s bowling attack looked set to bulldoze the England batting once more yesterday before a wonderful rearguard stand from Dawid Malan and Jonny Bairstow hauled the tourists out of trouble.

On a WACA pitch which appears brimful of runs, Malan and Bairstow first withstood the charge of Australia’s in-form pacemen and then turned the pressure back on to the home side.

By stumps their unbroken stand had swollen to 174, with Malan registering his first Test ton and Bairstow cruising to 75 not out from 149 balls. In guiding their side to 4-305, that pair had put England in a commanding position, one which seemed almost unthinkable when they slumped to 4-131 earlier in the day.

At that stage, Australia’s fearsome pace bowlers had clicked at once for the first time this series, harassing and intimidating the English batsmen on a surprisingly fast Perth pitch.

In the hour after lunch the home attack was downright terrifying, led by Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins who got the ball to rear alarmingly at the throats of the English batsmen.

It was the most menacing spell produced by an Australian attack since Mitchell Johnson ran amok in South Africa in early 2014, carrying on from his destructive displays in the 2013-14 Ashes.

The first ball after the main break was a nigh-on half-volley from Hazlewood which English captain Joe Root drove square to the boundary. Root did well to make the most of that opportunity, as he would get precious few more chances to plant his front foot.

Hazlewood and Cummins let rip with some vicious short balls, the most withering of which zeroed in on Mark Stoneman’s helmet. His protective device was rattled by a searing Hazlewood bouncer.

(Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

The very next ball Stoneman was again fending at a lifting delivery, this time it caught the splice of his bat and lobbed towards gully, where Nathan Lyon dived full length but spilled a difficult chance.

By this stage Stoneman had, somehow, managed to make his way to 52. I say somehow because that was the sixth time a delivery had ballooned off his splice or glove near an Australian fieldsman as he struggled badly to counter Australia’s bouncers.

Stoneman also had just been dropped at first slip, with Mitch Marsh turfing the easiest of chances off Hazlewood’s bowling.

Through all this, Stoneman remained resolute. It was an impressively courageous performance from the inexperienced opener, who throughout the series has played with a level of gumption some of his teammates would do well to discover.

Soon after his two reprieves, Stoneman’s luck ended with a caught behind decision which prompted controversy. There was justified criticism of how quickly third umpire Aleem Dar overturned the decision, but subsequent replays and Snicko evidence made it clear a sharp bouncer from Mitchell Starc had indeed kissed Stoneman’s right glove.

Once the clouds of controversy cleared, what was most memorable about the dismissal was the incredible Starc bouncer which produced it and the brilliant catch by Tim Paine which completed it. Paine’s keeping was again outstanding.

Aside from a fairly difficult chance off Nathan Lyon in the first innings of the first Test, his glovework in this series has ranged from neat to sublime. Should Paine make a couple more batting contributions in this series like his first innings half century at Adelaide, he will sew up the position behind the stumps for some time to come.

His catch of Stoneman only increased in value as the last session progressed. While the WACA pitch offered generous pace and bounce, it was also predictable and so lovely for batting, as Malan and Bairstow demonstrated.

Both of these batsmen patently enjoy the ball coming on to the bat. The former was lucky to play in this Ashes having averaged just 24 in his first five Tests, during the English summer.

Like Stoneman, however, Malan has not looked out of his depth against quality bowling amid the heightened pressure of the highest-profile series in the Test format.

A naturally attacking batsman, Malan at times has seemed to doubt this approach. When he has trusted it, like he did yesterday, Malan has prospered. Repeatedly he punished the Australian quicks for overpitching as he drove down the ground and through the covers with authority.

Malan also coped well with a barrage of short deliveries, by turn either ducking, pulling or hooking them. Just as notable was the assured manner in which he tackled Nathan Lyon. The Australian spinner had tied England’s left handers in knots this series, continually trapping them on the crease.

England clearly planned to attack Lyon more often yesterday. James Vince skipped down the wicket at him, Stoneman swept him, and Malan and Bairstow both used their feet to Lyon nicely.

Malan was particularly slick with his footwork, regularly getting to the pitch of Lyon’s deliveries. While he was gifted two opportunities – an easy run out chance missed by David Warner and a regulation edge dropped by Cameron Bancroft – Malan’s knock was imposing.

Bairstow, meanwhile, was rightly elevated to number six in the order yesterday after being wasted at seven and eight across the first two Tests. As veteran opener Alastair Cook has been reduced to a mirage of his former self, Bairstow is now England’s second-best batsman after Root.

(Anthony Devlin/PA via AP)

It is worth England considering Ben Foakes as their wicketkeeper, freeing up Bairstow to become a dominant Test batsman, something he looks capable of achieving.

He and Malan have the opportunity today to bat England into a position from which they can’t lose. Winning won’t be easy, though. I find it hard to see how England’s one-dimensional bowling attack will take 20 wickets on this batting paradise, although the pressure of big runs on the board can do funny things to the mindset of the team batting second.

If England can reach 500 then that total, in itself, could exert as much pressure on the Australian batsmen as the visiting bowlers can.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2017-12-15T13:11:18+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Cheers Spruce and rock. I read that Daily Mail piece, too, and wished I didn't!

2017-12-15T04:44:21+00:00

Mickey of Mo$man

Guest


hahahah yes ill challenge it you loser

2017-12-15T04:41:56+00:00

Mickey of Mo$man

Guest


curiously weird prediction.. very lame

2017-12-15T03:31:45+00:00

Linphoma

Guest


It's in stone: the paperwork has been signed and the WACA will be strictly domestic from next season.

2017-12-15T03:29:18+00:00

Linphoma

Guest


His arm has been gone for a while I believe. No power. His switch-hitting was spoken about in baseball terms a season or two ago but he'd have to play as a DH.

2017-12-15T02:14:53+00:00

Stephen

Guest


Will this be the final Test at the WACA Ground - with the new Perth Stadium due to host a ODI next month? I have tried to look up the answer - but nothing definitive.

2017-12-15T02:13:21+00:00

Ouch

Guest


Glad it was Malan who got the 100. Apart from him, Cook and Stoneman, the rest of the English batsmen are mouthy little men.

2017-12-15T02:12:15+00:00

Dave_S

Guest


:) yep they were poetry in motion.

2017-12-15T02:10:28+00:00

George

Guest


Marsh better than Woakes? Nah. Woakes is a first change and (at least home) has put in bowling performances Mitch hasn't matched anywhere. Batting is about equal I'd say though Mitch is more eye-catching with his propensity to go the biff (see also Test average of 21).

2017-12-15T02:10:21+00:00

Brian

Guest


I would have started the series with Bairstow at No 5. Crazy to have your 2nd best player batting at No 7. Vince is a bigger problem I would try Ballance, Jennings or Foakes instead. Also would like to see Wood bowling instead of Woakes is the series is alive or instead of Broad or Anderson if the series is over.

2017-12-15T02:09:17+00:00

Curious George

Guest


Bunney, Thats the thing man, Australia has NO anchor in their lineup. A big problem. Mitch MArsh is not an achor, good for 10-20 runs then out each time. Expecting Broad to bowl him for less than 10 runs.

2017-12-15T02:06:16+00:00

George

Guest


Shaun's had plenty of experience watching Test match slip catches taken from close quarters...

2017-12-15T02:02:30+00:00

Dave_S

Guest


Agree, evidence available at the time did not support a decision to overturn. At best the decision later becomes justifiable, but it is important to stick with proper decision making processes when the benefit of the doubt must go to the batter.

2017-12-15T01:56:52+00:00

Bunney

Roar Rookie


Ronan, It was a good stand last night, for certain, but I'm thinking Malan and Bairstow should probably swap positions in the order too. Bairstow has batted very patiently all tour; I've been waiting for him to get going and it hasn't really happened. Malan can also play the sheet anchor role, but can switch it up when necessary too, evidenced by his start yesterday, and then his later acceleration. I think Bairstow at 5 would suit the style of batting he's shown on this tour so far, and Malan could be a great 6 who can ramp up the scoring rate if he starts running out of partners. This might be short-sighted; I haven't seen much of Bairstow and have heard he typically has a high scoring rate, but he hasn't shown much of an inclination for that in his 5 digs so far.

2017-12-15T01:45:53+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Getting me all misty eyed over the Healy, Taylor, M Waugh Keeper/Cordon group

2017-12-15T01:42:22+00:00

Bunney

Roar Rookie


Have a look at Warner's throwing action - I reckon that is part of the reason he misses a lot. He arches back like he's going to throw a javelin. His right shoulder needs to be higher. However, yesterday's miss was an under the shoulder throw...his action on that throw looked fine. I think he just missed it, coz no one hits them all the time.

2017-12-15T01:38:58+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


Slips for the spinner is a very different position. Mark Waugh used to regularly be the main slipper for the spinners, yet he was never first slip for the pace bowlers. It's not uncommon.

2017-12-15T01:37:34+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


There's always the worry on a cracking batting pitch where the opposition makes a big score that there's the chance your guys could still play some stupid shots and get out and end up way behind. But it is a ground where many of these Aussie batsmen love to bat, they really should pile up a big score here.

2017-12-15T01:34:24+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


Warner has had shoulder issues, and since then hasn't tended to field in the more vital sorts of spots he used to field. In fact, he's regularly at mid-off / mid-on, which are spots typically given to people who aren't among your best fielders, while Lyon regularly fields at point, which is generally where you put one of your best fielders. So while the media and commentators may not get it, I think within the Aussie team they certainly do. Warner is fast across the ground, but since his shoulder issues, that's about his only real asset in the field.

2017-12-15T01:31:14+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


Jonty was fast and got to a lot of balls, but he didn't hit the stumps very often either.

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