Bairstow 99, Wood's triple strike crush Aussies as series hangs on incoming Manchester downpour

By Tim Miller / Editor

Only rain can save Australia from a resounding Ashes loss to England after the hosts’ domination of the fourth Test only grew stronger on Day 3 at Old Trafford.

With England blasting their way to 592 all out in the fastest-scoring completed Ashes innings in history courtesy of a spectacular unbeaten 99 from Jonny Bairstow, then picking up four wickets in 41 overs before the close – three to Mark Wood – the visitors’ chances of retaining the urn in Manchester will rest on the city’s weather over the next two days.

Heavy rain is expected across much of Days 4 and 5, which could prove the error in Ben Stokes’ decision to not declare; if any play can be forced, however, Australia’s chances of avoiding an Ashes thumping look slim to none.

4/113 at the close after Mark Wood removed Steve Smith (17) and Travis Head (1) in a late burst before stumps, a pitch showing regular uneven bounce promises to make Marnus Labuschagne (44 not out) and the rest of the Australian batting order’s job a hellish one should a total washout be avoided.

For England, Bairstow’s stranding one run shy of a maiden Ashes ton at home was the one blip on another memorable day, Stokes (51) and Harry Brook (61) both reaching 50s before Wood winkled out Usman Khawaja and Smith on either side of Chris Woakes adding the scalp of David Warner (28) for the second time in the match.

It’s the first time in a remarkably even series a Test has tilted so completely and irreversibly towards one team, though the greater battle to come may prove England versus Father Time.

Mark Wood celebrates dismissing Travis Head. (Photo by Clive Mason/Getty Images)

Resuming on 4/384, Day 3 began for England with steady, though brisk, accumulation for Brook and Stokes.

A wretched fielding performance from the Aussies continued when Carey fumbled a chance to run out Stokes in the day’s second over, and when the England captain bashed Josh Hazlewood through the covers for four in the next over, the wicketkeeper would no doubt have been feeling all the worse for the error.

With Brook joining the party via a trio of boundaries within four Starc balls, cover-driving a half-volley and full toss with contemptuous ease, Australia’s utter despondency was summed up in their choice to delay taking the second new ball, on the basis the harder, shinier pill would be easier to hit to the ropes.

When Pat Cummins at last took it three overs overdue, it would immediately bear fruit, though, with Stokes’ attempted heave across the line finding only the inside edge en route to the stumps.

Brook would join Stokes in reaching 50, his second in a row this series after his match-winning turn in the Headingley run chase, but he too would fall shortly after, top-edging his most aggressive shot of the day to Starc at fine leg off Hazlewood; his 100-ball 61 almost a snail’s pace compared to Zak Crawley and Joe Root’s Day 2 blitzkrieg.

A late haul loomed for Hazlewood when the right-armer added Chris Woakes in his next over for a first-ball duck, the England all-rounder drawn into an edge behind to a tempter outside off.

A fourth would follow when Wood had his furniture disturbed one ball after clipping Hazlewood for a deft boundary to fine leg off the last ball before lunch; the over costing Hazlewood 15 thanks to a pair of earlier fours to the now-motoring Bairstow, but picking up a scalp to soften the blow.

8/506 at lunch, many expected Stokes to halt the innings there with a lead of 189 and ample time to make inroads into Australia’s top order; whether to completely shut the door on the visitors or even to enable Bairstow, on 41, to have a crack at a century, the fun would continue into the second session.

When Stuart Broad fell for 7 as Hazlewood snatched a caught-and-bowled to complete his five-wicket haul, England had 526 on the board and the end seemed nigh.

But not for the first time this series, a game of cat and mouse would ensue for the final wicket as a freewheeling Bairstow passed 50 with a vicious pull over backward square off Starc, then continued to pepper the boundaries and the stands thereafter.

Having reached his half-century off his 51st ball, he’d make it to 98 off just 28 more, on the way completing Cummins’ most expensive ever innings with two more brutal pulls into the square leg stands.

With Bairstow cleverly farming the strike with a series of quick byes run off Carey’s arm, the keeper’s tenpin bowling erring where it had infamously succeeded at Lord’s, the partnership swelled past 50 as Australia’s torment continued.

Only one short shy of a ton did the much-maligned keeper-batter err: an ambitious attempt to run two off a cover drive into the deep would nearly leave Anderson high and dry before Bairstow sent him back, the throw coming into the wrong end to attempt a run out.

Regardless, Australia would have their man; needing to survive three Cameron Green balls to give Bairstow a chance at the run he needed, Anderson would be trapped plumb in front to the first, standing Bairstow on 99 and adding a tinge of sadness to the generous applause ringing around Old Trafford.

With a lead of 275, England could be content to embark on all out attack with the ball for the rest of the day, though Khawaja and Warner looked secure early.

After the latter saw off Broad’s opening spell for the second time in the Test, Warner began to play more expansively when Moeen Ali was given an early spell; first launching the off-spinner over his head and down the ground, then cashing in on a full toss with a clip through the vacant mid-wicket region, the veteran was away.

The same couldn’t be said of Khawaja, who, discomfited by Wood’s pace and bounce once more, not only lost his wicket to a faint edge behind off a rising delivery from the English paceman an over before tea, but burned a review trying desperately to overturn the on-field call of out.

1/39 at the final break slowly grew as Labuschagne joined Warner and looked confident from the outset; though troubled by the occasional low shooter from Broad, the pair’s hard running between the wickets even forced four overthrows when a wayward Anderson throw missed both ends by a considerable distance to frustrate his long term new ball partner.

On 28 and set again, though, Warner would squander his second start of the Test: Chris Woakes’ incisive line and perfect length angling across the left-hander left him in two minds, initially shoulder arms but at the last second jamming down, only for the ball to ping off the inside edge and back onto his own stumps.

Second ball, Smith came within millimetres of joining him when a thick edge carried close enough to Root at slip for the former captain to insist on a check with the third umpire despite refusing to celebrate; that lack of reaction may have been what cost him in the end, a line-ball call confirmed to be not out by third umpire Kumar Dharmasena.

Looking to capitalise on the good fortune, Smith’s innings was properly away when he flicked a straight offering from Woakes through mid-wicket for a trademark boundary – but the good times wouldn’t last.

On 18, Wood would again provide England the breakthrough they needed, a short ball onto Smith coming through slightly slower than he anticipated and making him pay the price for a half-hearted pull shot, the ball grazing his glove en route to a gleeful Bairstow.

Not even waiting for the umpire’s decision, Smith’s latest failure left Australia even further in the mire – and when Head, once again targeted with the short ball by Wood, could only fend a vicious riser to Duckett at gully for 1, the Manchester crowd had yet another highlight to crow about.

Batting stoically through the carnage, Labuschagne continued to look as solid as at any point in the first three Tests, driving crisply and putting away anything short with control and precision.

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With he and Marsh safely through to stumps, Australia’s hopes of forcing a draw remain alive – though of 180 possible overs remaining on the final two days, a good three-quarters of them will need to be lost to rain to give the visitors any hopes of securing the urn before The Oval.

The Crowd Says:

2023-07-23T03:21:35+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


His 10000 hours should have been done before he was 15 years old

2023-07-23T02:17:22+00:00

Insult_2_Injury

Roar Rookie


Ironically Head's short ball problem is.....in his head! He played a couple of sublime pull shots in the first innings off Wood when the ball was at chest height. He appears to be thinking shot first, not ball. Nothing 10,000 hours won't help, which he should be at least 2,000 hours into at his time in Tests. I had a coach who avoided a couple of snorters in a Grand Final once by ending on his back, to the mirth of the opposition. He ducked all short stuff for the next hour, brought up his 100 a coupla hours later with a hooked six. He ducked for half an hour at the start of day 2 and then proceeded to destroy the attack, bringing up his 150, 200 and 250 with hooked or pulled sixes. He ended with 291*. He told me early on that I could be a more consistent middle lower order if I watched the ball more, because it trains you to recognize the ball you should leave. He then started wanging random balls at me, with some at my chin height and told me to watch the seam. I thought he was crazy, but it showed me I wasn't actually watching the ball, or the tell all bowlers have when they go short. It certainly improved my ability to determine which to leave until you have seen what the track, bowler and conditions are doing, then be selective. It also taught me to use my wrist more when bowling a short ball, as an opening bowler, to disguise the tell as much as possible. Head can easily improve his ability to judge when and if, he just needs self control!

2023-07-23T01:52:05+00:00

Insult_2_Injury

Roar Rookie


Agreed on the approach to Stokes, they were playing him with a 2019 mindset and that's why I believe they have a confused 'plan'. They know if he has a day out those grounds are too small, but that he wants to score. I can't for the life of me work out why you would ring the boundary and bowl short with a Test attack which has won ODI world championships by mixing pace and starving pet shots to force a shot maker to make his own pressure to relieve it by playing cement foot across the line slaps. The fact it finally worked to dismiss him seems lost on the hierarchy as they revert to the bowl short on leg to all of them and hope they hole out!

2023-07-22T23:12:17+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


How about the English stealing the Stone of Destiny & putting it under the English throne. I believe the English were none to pleased when some Scottish students took it back . Even though it belonged to Scotland . Plus it was taken back in the modern era. England did everything they could to steal it back again. Was that making things right & moving on ? That’s one Long Memory! :stoked:

2023-07-22T23:01:20+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Did the media make up & publish stories about certain players, that never happened? That increases the anger of the public towards them. I don’t recall any of that here.

2023-07-22T09:20:49+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


Which country are you from Ak? Seems a high and mighty one free from the human condition

2023-07-22T08:15:22+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


How is what happened to Broad lies? Yes, Boof went over the top but he didn't lue about Broad like Cook did Carey. And tgere was no impropiety abiut Carey whereas Briad knew he hit the ball.

2023-07-22T08:04:12+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Did that old one get pulled down? I haven't been to Ad'laide for 10 years l think. I went there on my 1977 R100S BMW

2023-07-22T07:31:56+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I agree PiE needs to get a handle on things.

2023-07-22T07:12:07+00:00

Neil Back

Roar Rookie


Pot. Kettle.

2023-07-22T07:11:34+00:00

Neil Back

Roar Rookie


How you don't see the irony in your comments is beyond me.

2023-07-22T07:09:28+00:00

Neil Back

Roar Rookie


Sure. Five English batters out score Australia's best bat so far, and a sixth equals it. We must have the lucky country all wrong.

2023-07-22T06:09:07+00:00

Rabbitz

Roar Guru


I guess it has been too little, too late for this mob then. They do not seem to have learned anything...

2023-07-22T04:21:57+00:00

Dwanye

Roar Rookie


Exactly. Which countries boards have addressed bad actions in a serious way? Not 100% of the time, at any time?

2023-07-22T04:03:34+00:00

Polymath

Roar Rookie


Smith is back and is Captain when Cummins is side-lined.

2023-07-22T04:02:39+00:00

Polymath

Roar Rookie


I still see countries bowling a ‘leg theory’ line today. Have a look at the West Indies bowling to Brian Close in 1976 if you want to see nasty, dangerous fast bowling to a man with no helmet, should be easy enough for you to find the video. Would have been interesting to see how the Don would have gone against Marshall, Holding, Garner, Roberts. He scored most of his runs against neutered Pommy attacks.

2023-07-22T04:01:36+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


If Head continue to not be able to play the short ball, his place in the team will eventually come under threat so I don't know if he is a long term option to Captain

2023-07-22T03:49:57+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


LOL And the selectors wonder why we’re losing…

2023-07-22T03:23:42+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


An Aussie cricket player or fan accusing any other human being on the planet of being ‘arrogant and boorish’ is truly the day satire died.

2023-07-22T03:17:14+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


We haven't add roads everywhere for a few seasons now.

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