England tightens grip on Perth Test

December 16, 2010 07:53 am | Updated October 17, 2016 08:36 pm IST - PERTH

England's James Anderson exults after dismissing Australian captain Ricky Ponting on the first day of the third Ashes Test in Perth on Thursday.

England's James Anderson exults after dismissing Australian captain Ricky Ponting on the first day of the third Ashes Test in Perth on Thursday.

England bowled out Australia for a mediocre 268 on the opening day of the third Ashes Test at the WACA grounds on Thursday. In reply, England was 29 without loss at stumps with skipper Andrew Strauss and Alistair Cook set to resume the second day on 12 and 17 runs respectively.

Swing bowlers James Anderson and Chris Tremlett snared three wickets each to send the Australian top-order crashing after Strauss had put the home side to bat first on a green-top pitch.

The situation could have been worse for Australia, which slumped to 69-5 just after lunch, but half-centuries from Mike Hussey, Brad Haddin and Mitchell Johnson enabled the hosts to post a decent total before being bowled out 30 minutes before stumps on Thursday.

Still, England is well positioned to push for a victory that would see the tourists secure a successful Ashes defence, with Australia’s bowlers having struggled for wickets over the first two Tests.

Tremlett wasted no time in making an impact, bowling recalled Australian opener Phil Hughes for 2 with the last ball of the first over, and then having the out-of-touch Michael Clarke caught behind for 4. He took 3-63 in 23 overs.

In between, James Anderson, 3-61, claimed the prized scalp of Ricky Ponting for 12 when the Australia captain was brilliantly caught at third slip by Paul Collingwood, who flung himself to his right at third slip and held on to a one-handed catch.

Ponting, whose scoring shots were three boundaries, hung his bat out at a James Anderson delivery, and another brief innings will increase pressure on the captain to keep his place in the team. Tremlett deepened Australia’s problems when he removed Steve Smith for 2 in the second over after lunch.

Hussey and Haddin, who also batted Australia out of trouble in the first Test, counter-attacked effectively. Hussey hit a six and nine fours as he continued with his imperious form with the bat. With other scores of 195, 93 and 52, he has been Australia’s standout batsman of the series.

Haddin, another batsman in form, added 52 runs for seventh-wicket with Johnson before another brilliant slip catch ended Haddin’s two-hour knock.

Earlier, opener Shane Watson, who batted for over an hour for his 13 runs off 40 balls, failed to have a lbw decision overruled by video review. He had an earlier reprieve when he was given out caught down the leg-side off Anderson, but the on-field decision was overruled by third umpire Aleem Dar.

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