Australia vs England - First Test at The Gabba
Australian XI
Mark Taylor
Michael Slater
Justin Langer
Mark Waugh
Steve Waugh
Ricky Ponting
Ian Healy
Michael Kasprowicz
Damien Fleming
Stuart MacGill
Glenn McGrath
English XI
Michael Atherton
Alec Stewart
Nick Knight
Graeme Hick
Graham Thorpe
Craig White
Paul Nixon
Andy Caddick
Darren Gough
Dean Headley
Alan Mullally
- - -
Australia win the toss and choose to bat
- - -
Upon arriving in Brisbane for the first Test, the teams found a very green 'Gabba track waiting for them. This informed how both teams picked their bowling attacks: the Australians went for a trio of brisk but not express-pace seamers alongside their best uninjured leg-spinner, Stuart MacGill; the tourists meanwhile chose to put forth an all-seam attack that included the height of Caddick, the pace of Gough, the swing of Headley and the angle of Mullally. As far as the batting and keeping selections went, both teams arrived at more or less full strength.
England started excellently with ball in hand: tight spells from Headley, Caddick and White were each rewarded by hard-earned wickets as Australia were reeling at 64 for three. Of course, with this team that is only half the job done: both Waugh brothers were together at the crease with Ponting still to come - all three of them more than able to turn a tough Test around single-handedly. In this instance, all three of them contributed with scores of over 70, including a priceless Steve Waugh century. Most surprisingly, number eight Michael Kasprowicz proved himself anything but an easy wicket by cuffing a priceless career-best 66 against a tiring attack that looked like it might in fact have needed the spin of Phil Tufnell to shoulder some of that burden.
The touring batters were now facing some very real scoreboard pressure, exacerbated by the early loss of Michael Atherton to a suicidal run-out. Alec Stewart in particular shouldered that workload by compiling a wonderful, chanceless innings well into the third day: however, in attempting to turn a century-sealing single to the leg side, he instead edged a superb leg-break from MacGill into the waiting hands of Mark Waugh at slip. After a decent 58 from Captain Hick and a stoic 210-minute 41 from Thorpe, England were still some way behind in the match, only for a superb rescue act from Paul Nixon who eked out a fighting 84 before ultimately being the last man out. Perhaps Jack Russell won't be so sorely missed after all?
Thus, Australia had around a day to try to set a total. They did so off the back of Steve Waugh's second century of the match, and in the face of another excellent Alan Mullally spell - although by the end of his fourth spell, he was visibly exhausted from the workload given to him by Graeme Hick - but he had prised out six of the eight Australian wickets to fall before Taylor declared. This left England with 344 runs to win, but more realistically five and a half hours to draw.
A flurry of early wickets for McGrath and Kasprowicz put England right behind the eight-ball with four hours still to go. Thorpe did his best to hang around, but fell to a lifter from Kasprowicz that brushed his glove before settling safely with Ian Healy behind the stumps. This created a fascinating contest between Craig White and the tail, and leg-spinner MacGill operating from one end on a fifth-evening pitch. The balance of power ebbed and flowed - Craig White's stoic defence took England in exactly the right direction, but the wickets of Nixon, Caddick and Gough (all falling to googlies) put Australia right back on the brink. Then, disaster: White attempted to keep the strike for an all-important MacGill over, and was instead run out at a crucial time. Could notorious rabbit Alan Mullally see off the leg-spinner? Amazingly, he did.
Not only that, but Glenn McGrath couldn't quite get through the defences of Dean Headley, and against all the odds England escaped the opening Test with a draw.
Australian XI
Mark Taylor
Michael Slater
Justin Langer
Mark Waugh
Steve Waugh
Ricky Ponting
Ian Healy
Michael Kasprowicz
Damien Fleming
Stuart MacGill
Glenn McGrath
English XI
Michael Atherton
Alec Stewart
Nick Knight
Graeme Hick
Graham Thorpe
Craig White
Paul Nixon
Andy Caddick
Darren Gough
Dean Headley
Alan Mullally
- - -
Australia win the toss and choose to bat
- - -
Upon arriving in Brisbane for the first Test, the teams found a very green 'Gabba track waiting for them. This informed how both teams picked their bowling attacks: the Australians went for a trio of brisk but not express-pace seamers alongside their best uninjured leg-spinner, Stuart MacGill; the tourists meanwhile chose to put forth an all-seam attack that included the height of Caddick, the pace of Gough, the swing of Headley and the angle of Mullally. As far as the batting and keeping selections went, both teams arrived at more or less full strength.
England started excellently with ball in hand: tight spells from Headley, Caddick and White were each rewarded by hard-earned wickets as Australia were reeling at 64 for three. Of course, with this team that is only half the job done: both Waugh brothers were together at the crease with Ponting still to come - all three of them more than able to turn a tough Test around single-handedly. In this instance, all three of them contributed with scores of over 70, including a priceless Steve Waugh century. Most surprisingly, number eight Michael Kasprowicz proved himself anything but an easy wicket by cuffing a priceless career-best 66 against a tiring attack that looked like it might in fact have needed the spin of Phil Tufnell to shoulder some of that burden.
The touring batters were now facing some very real scoreboard pressure, exacerbated by the early loss of Michael Atherton to a suicidal run-out. Alec Stewart in particular shouldered that workload by compiling a wonderful, chanceless innings well into the third day: however, in attempting to turn a century-sealing single to the leg side, he instead edged a superb leg-break from MacGill into the waiting hands of Mark Waugh at slip. After a decent 58 from Captain Hick and a stoic 210-minute 41 from Thorpe, England were still some way behind in the match, only for a superb rescue act from Paul Nixon who eked out a fighting 84 before ultimately being the last man out. Perhaps Jack Russell won't be so sorely missed after all?
Thus, Australia had around a day to try to set a total. They did so off the back of Steve Waugh's second century of the match, and in the face of another excellent Alan Mullally spell - although by the end of his fourth spell, he was visibly exhausted from the workload given to him by Graeme Hick - but he had prised out six of the eight Australian wickets to fall before Taylor declared. This left England with 344 runs to win, but more realistically five and a half hours to draw.
A flurry of early wickets for McGrath and Kasprowicz put England right behind the eight-ball with four hours still to go. Thorpe did his best to hang around, but fell to a lifter from Kasprowicz that brushed his glove before settling safely with Ian Healy behind the stumps. This created a fascinating contest between Craig White and the tail, and leg-spinner MacGill operating from one end on a fifth-evening pitch. The balance of power ebbed and flowed - Craig White's stoic defence took England in exactly the right direction, but the wickets of Nixon, Caddick and Gough (all falling to googlies) put Australia right back on the brink. Then, disaster: White attempted to keep the strike for an all-important MacGill over, and was instead run out at a crucial time. Could notorious rabbit Alan Mullally see off the leg-spinner? Amazingly, he did.
Not only that, but Glenn McGrath couldn't quite get through the defences of Dean Headley, and against all the odds England escaped the opening Test with a draw.
I'm also adding a Player of the Season award in the style of the Allan Border Medal - the Barrington Medal.
Standings
1. Alan Mullally - 3 points (+3)
2. Craig White - 2 points (+2)
3. Paul Nixon - 1 point (+1)
Drawn or lost match
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Standings
1. Alan Mullally - 3 points (+3)
2. Craig White - 2 points (+2)
3. Paul Nixon - 1 point (+1)