England closes in on follow on target

August 23, 2013 09:18 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 12:25 pm IST - London

Mitchell Starc (right) celebrates with Nathan Lyon after Jonathan Trott was given out LBW during play on the third day of the fifth Ashes Test at the Oval cricket ground in London, on Friday.

Mitchell Starc (right) celebrates with Nathan Lyon after Jonathan Trott was given out LBW during play on the third day of the fifth Ashes Test at the Oval cricket ground in London, on Friday.

England moved to 247-4 at stumps on Friday at the Oval, ending day three of the fifth test 245 runs behind Australia.

Ian Bell and Chris Woakes were unbeaten on 29 and 14 respectively, leaving the hosts needing another 46 to avoid following on.

Joe Root was the highest scorer with 68, from 184 balls with 11 fours, while Kevin Pietersen made 50 (133 balls, four fours).

Mitchell Starc, who finished with Australia’s best figures with 2-60, took the only wicket to fall in the evening session when he had Pietersen caught by Shane Watson.

The cricket was turgid at times and Australia’s Peter Siddle laughed when was asked if it as as boring to play in as it was to watch.

“It’s been hard work out there,” he admitted. “All we can do is go out there and try to get the six wickets as quick as we can. Our consistency today was spot and I think it showed.”

The English have already won the five-match series, which they lead 3-0, but Root denied they were playing for a draw.

“People come and watch cricket for a number of reasons, but it’s something we can’t always control,” he said. “Australia bowled pretty well and made it hard to score fluently. We’ve played pretty well to get where we are tonight. We’ve played some hard cricket. It’s not always easy to go out there and score at four an over. All we can do is play the situation.”

For an hour, while batting conditions were still excellent, Australia struggled to make any headway and squandered a referral on an lbw shout against England captain Cook from a Ryan Harris delivery that pitched outside leg stump.

Paceman Starc was particularly wayward, bowling one delivery so wide that it eluded first slip on its way to the boundary.

That ended England’s best opening stand of the series at 68 but the hosts were otherwise untroubled and Root reached his fifty when he pulled Peter Siddle to square leg for a single in the penultimate over of the session.

Under more overcast skies, Australia stifled England after lunch although Root was unbothered until the 54th over when he tried to sweep Nathan Lyon and was caught by Watson at backward square leg off a top edge.

Trott faced 78 balls before hitting a boundary and another 11 overs went by before the next four, which came when Steven Smith’s full toss was driven to the rope by Pietersen.

The pitch showed some signs of turn but Australia’s decision to take the new ball as soon as it became available was instantly vindicated.

Starc ripped the ball into Trott’s pads at the start of the 80th over and, after a seemingly interminable delay, umpire Aleem Dar raised his finger a decision Trott unsuccessfully referred.

The scoring rate slowed even further after tea, with the first 10 overs producing just 20 runs and by this stage the crowd was cheering singles.

Australia used up its final referral when Siddle rapped Pietersen’s pads with a ball that him outside the line of off stump.

Pietersen reached his 50 with an ugly pull shot off James Faulkner that squirted past off stump for four, but he was out without adding to his score in the 101st over when he was caught at first slip.

Dar reviewed the catch as Pietersen initially stood his ground, but replays confirmed the ball had carried.

Woakes arrival for his first test innings briefly added some impetus as cover drove his first ball for four and as the light faded the debutant looked assured as he batted out the session with Bell.

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