Australia v England: Ashes second Test, day four – live

The Guardian NaN days ago
Ben Stokes had to call for a new bat after his broke while batting at the Gabba where Australia host England on day four of the second Ashes Test. Photograph: Jason O’Brien/Shutterstock

51st over: England 176-6 (Stokes 29, Jacks 16) Bouncer plan continues from Doggett, Stokes pulls a run, down on the ball to control it. Jacks manages to knock away another run. Stokes up on his toes now, over the top of the ball again, short-arm jab to deep point. Jacks another run. The scores are almost square…

“Just look how busy the Aussies are fielding, chatting, throwing the ball about, running here and there, chirping,” writes Rich. “Beside Stokes and Root, no one has been doing much like it. There’s not been enough energy about the tourist squad. Observing the goings on from Okinawa where the humidity having finally broken allows a person to do the annual tree management jobs required for the next typhoon season.”

Thank goodness, I was worried about the Japanese arborists. One does.

50th over: England 172-6 (Stokes 27, Jacks 14) Scotty B returns, errs in line, and Stokes picks off a boundary with the leg glance. The game is drifting along. You know what might be handy here? A spin bowler, perhaps. One with 500 Test wickets, if such a thing were possible. Ah well, we are but dreamers and we can but dream. Stokes off strike next ball, Jacks leaves alone the Boland line outside off, then drives gently to cover. England trail by 5.

49th over: England 167-6 (Stokes 22, Jacks 14) Right after drinks, a medical delay as Jacks gets clonked on the lid and needs a medico to wave some fingers at him and a runner to replace his helmet. That’ll be reason enough for the match ref to wave away the 70 overs in a day that both these teams have bowled so far. Gets off strike via the ricochet, and now Stokes is getting the short stuff as well. Deep square leg, regulation square leg, long leg, fine leg, deep third, deep point, so a slip and a mid on are the only normal fielding positions. Hoping for Stokes to hook one and stick it up in the air. Instead Doggett bowls on a length and Stokes nearly nicks it! Tries to yank the bat inside the line and only just manages it, very awkwardly played. Last ball of the over Stokes goes the forehand smash down the ground, gets a piece of it and breaks his bat in the process. Waving it at the bench as he completes the first of three runs, it does look disturbingly like he’s celebrating his milestone of … 2o. “A twentchury!” says Rory Dollard nearby in the press box.

England's Ben Stokes holds up his broken bat to call for a replacement. Photograph: Hollie Adams/Reuters

48th over: England 162-6 (Stokes 19, Jacks 13) Neser to Stokes is still pitching it up with a regulation field, three slips and a backward point more than a gully. Seams the ball back in from around the wicket and Stokes prods, misses, Carey up to the stumps can’t glove it. Maiden, Neser’s first. Drinks, and sorely needed.

Michael Neser sends the pink ball down the pitch. Photograph: Dave Hunt/AAP

46th over: England 160-6 (Stokes 18, Jacks 12) Neser in from the Stanley Street end, gets. a short ball fended very close to Travis Head at short leg. The crowd is interested. Jacks plays a similar shot finer and gets a run. Stokes 18, Jacks 12, now for the overture.

On the sweepstake (keep those coming in, I’m already out under the honour system) Kev McMahon offers, “I’m at the Gabba, and it’s $#@&ing hot, so I’m seeking a balance between a match long enough to be worth coming in for and dropping dead of heat exhaustion.”

Can concur, Kev, it is exactly that hot, even on the way to the ground today. England have the chance to hurt the Aussies just by staying where they are now.

45th over: England 159-6 (Stokes 18, Jacks 11) Doggett, tall and lean and looking about 12 years old from the grandstand, with a beaky nose and a boyish haircut, lobs one past the nose of Stokes. He’s getting decent bounce, discomfited Jacks before that with one that jumped and deflected for a single. Works away in the channel to end the over against Stokes, but English discipline holds. In truth, often in the last few years Stokes has been the least Bazball of his troupe.

“Has there ever been a tie in an Ashes test?” No, Chris Bowden. Two ties in history, Australia West Indies at this ground in 1960/61, and Madras, later Chennai, India Australia in 1986. And I refer you to the earlier point that England are still 18 runs behind.

Ben Stokes evades a short ball. Photograph: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

44th over: England 157-6 (Stokes 17, Jacks 10) Neser, a couple of singles under the beating sun.

“No, I’m not getting too far ahead of myself (or alarmingly delusional), but just as a matter of idle curiosity… What would you think might be enough of a lead to make Australia’s batters just a little bit uncomfortable? Given the way Will Jacks spun a few yesterday, I reckon 180 or more could be extremely interesting.”

Christ, Gervase! Even with the caveats, we could still have an innings defeat on our hands here. I think 180 could get Travis Headbutted. They’d need closer to 300. It still looks good for batting out there. Let’s get past the 20-run deficit first.

Will Jacks at the crease. Photograph: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images
Mitchell Starc makes use of his sweat band in the Brisbane heat. Photograph: Dave Hunt/EPA

40th over: England 146-6 (Stokes 10, Jacks 6) Boland might be more the danger than Starc this morning. He’s getting Stokes tangled up a couple of times, trying to defend with the bat coming across the pad, getting squared up, then getting a rising ball on the gloves trying to play it down. Three slips in for the England captain, deep backward point for a carve, cover, mid off, mid on, square leg, fine leg. Boland goes from around the wicket to over, for the left-hander. Stokes on his toes to defend. Then back around the wicket, Boland errs in line! Down the leg-side and it zips past Carey for four byes. Carey came up to the stumps again for that last ball. Were they looking for a stumping?

Scott Boland in action at the Gabba. Photograph: Jason O’Brien/Shutterstock

38th over: England 140-6 (Stokes 9, Jacks 5) Boland continues, with Carey up to the stumps to stop Jacks going for a walk. Gloving them superbly, it’s not like Boland is slow. After three balls though, Carey goes back and swaps the helmet for the hat. Jacks bats out the over, no run until the final ball, which he nudges fine for one.

Ben Stokes and Will Jacks fist bump on the pitch. Photograph: Robbie Stephenson/PA

37th over: England 139-6 (Stokes 9, Jacks 4) Here comes Mitchell Starc, from the Vulture Street End, and per Mark Seymour, those big black birds are circling in the skies. Not this over though, Starc is a bit stiff and rusty through overuse perhaps, and bowls too short and at times too wide, before getting full enough that Stokes can flick him delightfully through midwicket off the front foot.

36th over: England 135-6 (Stokes 5, Jacks 4) The tourists in the crowd get through Jerusalem without further damage, unlike Adelaide 2017 when Josh Hazlewood got Joe Root and Chris Woakes in the first over of the morning. Stokes awkwardly stabs away a single into the leg side first ball of the day, before Boland sends down a typically accurate five balls at Will Jacks, who defends stoutly from the crease. Miralo, chicos, it can be done.

Steve Smith leads the Australian team on to the field on Sunday. Photograph: Bradley Kanaris/CA/Cricket Australia/Getty Images

“Hi from Sweden, Geoff,” writes Julian Menz. I can only assume ”James Wallace (later)” is an example of that cheeky Aussie humour. He’s already down the pub mate!

In defence of Jim’s professional honour, I can attest that he’s two seats down from me in the press box, by all appearances transcribing an interview with some marginal figure from a long-ago Ashes defeat. Bless him, he’s made the trip out here for his first Aus visit and had to pick two Tests of the five, so he’s had six days of cricket for his trouble.

He’ll be on with blazing fingertips later if Stokes and co. manage to build a redoubt.

Let’s run a sweep for the time that this match will finish, on the clock, in Brisbane local. That’s one hour behind Melbourne and Sydney, 10 hours ahead of London, and the rest of you can work it out on your own.

Email your finish time in 24-hour format to geoff.lemon@theguardian.com. I won’t necessarily be publishing these, but I’ll find the winner when it comes. Closest to the pin without going over.

For the McSweeney freaks out there, AAP have been chatting to him about his brief time (so far) as a national player.

Nathan McSweeney believes he is a better player for having had a brief Test stint, after smashing his highest first-class score in a timely reminder to Australian selectors.

The 26-year-old produced the best knock of his career on Saturday, blasting an unbeaten 226 for Australia A against the England Lions at Allan Border Field in Brisbane.

His eighth first-class century dwarfed his previous best of 127 not out.
It was McSweeney’s second century of the summer, bouncing back after being dropped following three Tests against India last year when he averaged only 14.4.

“Playing Test cricket exposes a few opportunities to learn,” McSweeney said.

“I definitely like to think that I’ve learned from those experiences, and I can continue to try and grow my game. I feel like I’m in a good spot at the moment. It’s a game, we’re probably never going to finish the puzzle, but really content with how it’s shaping. Hopefully I can continue to learn and hopefully score some runs.”

McSweeney is a natural No.3 or No.4, but was given the chance to open for Australia with Usman Khawaja. However, the pair were worked over by the world’s best Test bowler, Jasprit Bumrah.

Khawaja is hopeful of being fit for the third Ashes Test in Adelaide on December 17, but it remains to be seen whether the 38-year-old is picked.
Travis Head and Jake Weatherald are averaging 76 after two innings opening together in the absence of Khawaja.

But if selectors believe Head should go back to No.5 when batting in Australian conditions, McSweeney could be up for an opening spot.
McSweeney’s improvement against spin has him ideally placed to be in contention to tour India for a blockbuster series in early 2027.

The South Australia captain obliterated England spinner Shoaib Bashir, who was dropped for the start of the Ashes.

“Over the last 12 months, I’ve really tried to focus on trying to put the spinner under a little bit more pressure,” McSweeney said. “I was able to be sharp on my feet and try to expose their lengths as best I could.”

Good morrow, gentlefolk. It is afternoon in Brisbane and who knows what time anywhere else. More importantly, it is crunch time for England. Let us be honest: the show is almost over. Resuming 43 runs behind with four wickets in hand, England lost the Test in that dramatic final hour last night, ending up at six wickets down.

“They haven’t lost yet!” Ah, you are correct, my apple-cheeked young interlocutor. Your belief in the impossible will stand you in good stead. So let’s consider, what must England do to turn this around? First, let’s have Ben Stokes and Will Jacks put on a double century partnership. Done. Then, Gus Atkinson and Brydon Carse whack 40 each, and Jofra Archer finishes it off to round the late-order contributions up to a hundred.

So that’s 300 in front, meaning 250 to defend, and then the same bowlers who’ve done all the batting will turn around and bowl out Australia.

Either that or England lose four in the first half hour and get this thing over and done with.

I may not be painting the rosiest picture, it’s true, but that’s out of annoyance at the lack of a contest through most of this series. Let’s see how this bit pans out, and if Stokes with the bat still has a streak of resistance still in him.

Ben Stokes will need to produce a miracle for England to have a chance in the second Test. Photograph: Philip Brown/Getty Images