In the closing stages of day 1, Michael Carberry dropped
Brad Haddin right at the start of his innings; few could have imagined just how
costly a drop it would prove to be. Michael Clarke (148) and Haddin (118)
crushed England on day 2. Any hope of winning the game had evaporated long
before close, yet again England were looking just to dig in and survive.
The tourists had gone into the day with high hopes. They
nearly had Clarke almost immediately, however his horribly skewed attempt of
hitting Monty Panesar into the stands landed safe. From then on Australia
marched merrily towards a score that would put England out of the game. They
aggressively accumulated, punishing anything that was loose from the five-man
England attack.
The duo seemed to take it in turn in leading the charge. Clarke
would effortlessly caress the ball to the boundary for a while before settling
down briefly, then attacking again. Haddin was proactive throughout most of his
innings, including smiting no less than five sixes.
At times England looked bereft of ideas, unable to stem the
flow of runs and desperate for anything to go their way. Ben Stokes (2-70)
thought he had the first Test wicket of his fledgling career when Haddin edged
behind. However in the now customary check to see if the bowler had
overstepped, the raucous roar of the crowd revealed that Stokes didn’t have
anything behind the line.
Haddin made the most of his reprieve as he and his skipper
pressed on. They made a clear effort of going after the spinners; Graeme Swann
(2-151) and Monty Panesar (1-157) were left scratching their heads amongst the onslaught.
The seamers were doing a decent job, Stuart Broad (3-98) impressed again.
Public enemy number one bowled intelligently, frequently changing his pace and occasionally
deceiving the batsmen, he deserved more.
After a fruitless morning, the afternoon seemed to be all
about milestones. Clarke and Haddin were busy breaking all sorts of Australian
records. In the first two Tests of this series, Clarke has shown just how good
he is. His 26th Test hundred was typically imperious and fearless.
He repeatedly went over the top and even when it didn’t quite work, the intent
shown left a clear imprint.
Stokes did get that first Test wicket to finally end a
partnership that was now worth 200. A leading edge from Clarke was gratefully
snaffled by a diving James Anderson. Mitchell Johnson (5) and Peter Siddle (2)
didn’t hang around long; any hope of a revival was short lived though.
Haddin continued to attack and found a worthy partner in
Ryan Harris (55*). The Aussie number ten enjoyed a rather uncomplicated innings;
he simply biffed the ball to the boundary repeatedly. Haddin celebrated his ton
before perishing off the bowling of Broad. All eyes were on Clarke, he allowed
the carnage to ensue a little longer.
Last man Nathan Lyon (17*) got in on the act with a steepling
six. The now demoralised England side couldn’t wait to get off of the field.
Clarke granted them their wish giving his pumped-up bowlers twenty overs to try
and make inroads into the England batting line-up.
Johnson (1-9) clearly has aspirations to be Merv Hughes. He
has been reborn as a hostile, in-your-face, and extremely effective fast-bowler
as well as sporting a rather abysmal moustache. His raw pace proved too much
for Alastair Cook (3) he was leaden at the crease as a fullish ball from the
left-armer left him fractionally and careered into his off-stump.
The floodgates could have opened right there and then for
England, however Carberry (20*) and Joe Root (9*) dug in and made it through to
close despite Johnson delivering a painful blow to the arm of England’s new
number three.
There is much work to do if England are to save this game,
but save it they must if they want to retain the Ashes. 2-0 would not be a
scoreline that would see them lose the series immediately, but the
psychological damage that it would bring would probably be too high a mountain to
overcome.
They need to bat well, but also bat positively. They scored
at a painstakingly slow rate but this was understandable given the situation.
England must show controlled aggression throughout the remainder of this game
if they are to avoid falling into the sort of rut they saw them collapse so
dismally on the final day of the Adelaide Test seven years ago.
Australia are relentless, England are very much on the
ropes. The question now is can the tourists survive and battle back to save
this game?