'Disappointed with no one getting a big score': Marnus worried Aussies have let sizeable total slip away

By News / Wire

Australia have been left to rue several missed chances to push home their case for a drought-breaking Ashes series win in England, after going to stumps at 8-299 on day one of the fourth Test.

On a day where Stuart Broad became the fifth man in history to take 600 Test wickets, Australia let England off the hook time and time again at Old Trafford.

Seven men got starts but none went on to post a big score after the tourists were sent in, with Mitch Marsh and Marnus Labuschagne both out for 51.

Travis Head became Stuart Broad’s 600th victim when he was caught hooking on 48, Steve Smith was lbw to Mark Wood on 41 and David Warner caught behind for 32.

Alex Carey was also caught behind late in the day on 20, becoming the fourth man to fall to Chris Woakes when he nicked a ball he was trying to leave.

David Warner departs in Manchester. (Photo by Clive Mason/Getty Images)

The wickets give England the chance to take control of the penultimate Test of the series on Thursday, but a draw would be enough for Australia to retain the Ashes and a win would ensure their first series victory in the country in 22 years.

“Where we were, and how many guys got themselves in, I think we would be slightly disappointed with no one getting a big score,” Labuschagne said. 

“But I think the statistics are really skewed in England to first-innings scores above 300.

“The wicket is a little bit two-paced. It’s quite slow. It’s not like some wickets I have played here (which are) are quite quick on day one.”

Labuschagne will walk away the most frustrated, after a series of teasing starts for him.

The Queenslander showed the kind of patience and determination he is renowned for on Wednesday, at one stage going 19 balls without scoring a run late in his innings.

But after he brought up his first half-century of the tour by pulling Woakes, Labuschagne was lbw on his next ball, missing a regulation Moeen Ali off break.

“I was probably a little bit lazy on that, tried to turn it to the leg side,” Labuschagne said.

“But it was the process that I was happy with. 

“I was happy with my decision-making, which has been the part that’s really been frustrating me from a personal side.”

Warner will also be annoyed with himself.

Under pressure to retain his spot, the 36-year-old cut the first ball of the match from his nemesis Broad for four and looked in good touch in the opening hour.

But after getting through Broad’s opening spell and scoring at a fast rate through his innings, he was caught behind trying to drive outside off from Woakes.

Smith also looked on for a big score in his innings when he showed intent against Moeen, hitting the spinner back down the ground for six before becoming Wood’s only victim.

Australia’s partnerships told the story of the day, with stands of 15, 46, 59, 63, six, 65, one and 45.

Marsh was arguably the unluckiest, caught one-handed by Jonny Bairstow as the England wicketkeeper fell to his right to take the nick off Woakes (4-52).

Such has been Bairstow’s woes in this series, the 33-year-old appeared not to quite believe the ball had stayed in his glove as he sat up after taking the catch.

“It’s hard to judge a pitch here until both teams bowl and bat on it,” Broad said. 

“But the sun was out for a bit so it felt we did really well to get eight wickets today.”

Not having a specialist spinner could come back to bite the Australians but they believe the Old Trafford wicket may buck tradition and turn less later in the game.

The tourists’ decision to go into the fourth Ashes Test without a spinner continued to raise eyebrows on Wednesday, with Ricky Ponting among those surprised by the decision.

With Todd Murphy left out of the team and no frontline spinner picked for the first time since January 2011, Australia will be forced to rely on Travis Head as their main tweaker. 

Adding to the challenge for Australia is the fact they will be bowling last in the match, at a time when spin is usually the most prodigious and the injured Nathan Lyon has been a go-to option.

Labuschagne said he believed that could have been a result of a thick grass cover left of the wicket, which will flatten out later in the game.

Marnus Labuschagne is out for 51. (Photo by Gareth Copley – ECB/ECB via Getty Images)

“Because the wicket has been undercover for a few days, it didn’t have that really rock-hardness,” Labuschagne said. 

“And the thatchy grass is spinning. So once that wears off, I think the middle of the week it’s going to actually not spin so much. 

“The ends will rough up, eventually, if the weather stays good. But I think it’s actually going to spin less as the game goes on from the good part of the wicket.”

It came after Ponting also queried the decision in commentary.

“I was still surprised they didn’t go in with one,” Ponting said during Moeen’s second spell. 

“Your preference is always to go in with a spinner – unless you are brilliant at reading weather forecasts and cricket pitches. So if you haven’t got one, you can be found out very easy.”

The Crowd Says:

2023-07-20T21:37:12+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


Our batsmen missed straight ones. Theirs did not. And we went in with three bowlers, and no spinner, on a good batting wicket.

2023-07-20T21:13:03+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Opeo, A prescient comment as it turns out. One of the worst bowling efforts in history. That's all I'll say about it.

2023-07-20T08:59:39+00:00

Pierro

Roar Rookie


184 for 3 to 299 for 8 is poor and that's with khawaja and warner effectively failing the opening

2023-07-20T07:24:35+00:00

Nick

Roar Rookie


Yes. Considering the rain coming.

2023-07-20T07:24:00+00:00

Nick

Roar Rookie


I'm looking forward to everyone blaming Cummins for the batsmen throwing their wicket away, and then insisting that Ian Chappell and Allan Border would have ensured that the batsman would never have done that.

2023-07-20T07:19:15+00:00

U

Roar Rookie


They’re really choking this series away

2023-07-20T06:17:39+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


Looking forward to everyone blaming the bowlers and Maxwell coming in for Hazlewood in the next test.

2023-07-20T04:17:49+00:00

The Knightwatchmen who say Nii

Roar Rookie


Whatever they end up with, England will need to better it by 20-30 to have the game on an even keel at the completion of both first innings.

2023-07-20T04:16:34+00:00

The Knightwatchmen who say Nii

Roar Rookie


Would you have preferred a stumps score of 5 for 235?

2023-07-20T03:29:54+00:00

Mining Man

Roar Rookie


8 for 300 at stumps when you're sent in is a win for the batting side, every time. In a match that is reasonably expected to see significantly less than 5 full days play, it would only be via a frustratingly familiar Australian second-innings collapse that would lose the match. After losing yet another toss and being sent in, it's a position you'd take with glee. Sure, the multiple starts take the shine off it, and it's easy to lament what could have been. But if Smith's first shot goes to hand, and his 40-odd runs are transferred to Labuschagne or Head, then the same 8 for 300 with a century in the top 4 looks like the inarguable win for a team sent in, that it already is.

2023-07-20T01:10:21+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


I think the difference is when they upped the ante in the first two Tests. In those games, there was at least one guy willing to put away the big shots in favour of anchoring the innings. That in turn allowed dashers to bat around them, but to really make hay when the English bowlers got tired. I suppose Labuschagne tried to do that yesterday but when he got out, no-one took on that role. The end result so far is an underwhelming first innings score.

2023-07-20T00:24:47+00:00

TJ

Roar Rookie


I'm not sure that they've changed their method. They've scored at 3.6 runs per over so far this innings which is similar to the rate they scored at in the first two tests. It's disappointing that no one was able go on and post a big score but I think the English bowlers deserve some credit for that.

2023-07-19T23:53:42+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Why has Australia moved away from the methods that won them the first two Tests and into Bazball mode? This was a pitch doing a bit and an English attack well suited to exploit that movement, so how come guys were trying to score at a run a ball, when they should have been aiming to bat for 2 days?

2023-07-19T23:45:17+00:00

The Knightwatchmen who say Nii

Roar Rookie


While it would be folly to claim Australia are in a commanding position, 8 for 299 after electing to bowl first hardly puts England in the box seat either. With the rain expected on the weekend, it will need to be a low scoring test to get a result in any case.

2023-07-19T23:32:00+00:00

TJ

Roar Rookie


Bit of a frustrating day for the Aussie's. Just needed one of the top 7 to add an extra 50 or so and we would of been in a great spot. 8-300 after being sent in to bat on day 1 isn't the worst outcome though. Hopefully Starc, Cummins and Hazlewood can add some valuable runs and get that total closer to 350.

2023-07-19T23:05:39+00:00

Damo

Roar Rookie


"So once that wears off, I think the middle of the week it’s going to actually not spin so much. " Someone want to tell him that the one that got him didnt spin much either??

2023-07-19T22:38:16+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


If Australia lose the 4th test, they can blame their 1st innings: 8-299 at stumps; 7 dismissed batsmen scoring between 51 & 16; equal 51 top score, another two in the 40s. It simply isn't acceptable. Starc & Cummins will need to put on a 40-50 run partnership to bring respectability to the final innings score. The batsmen played like millionaires with nothing to lose. Very disappointing.

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