England's bowlers fought back with four wickets after lunch on Day Two but Michael Hussey held firm for Australia before bad light and rain stopped play in the first Ashes Test at the Gabba
England's bowlers fought back with four wickets after lunch on Day Two but Michael Hussey held firm for Australia before bad light and rain stopped play in the first Ashes Test at the Gabba.
Aussie Mike Hussey avoids a rising ball from England's Steven Finn in
Brisbane yesterday. Pic/AFP
After the hosts reached lunch with a comfortable-looking 96 for one on the scoreboard, the touring attack came to life in the afternoon session as James Anderson inspired them to make it 143 for five.
By tea Hussey (81 not out) and Brad Haddin (22 n o) were together and they combined well in a curtailed final session to see Australia to 220 for five -- 40 short of England's total -- with the new ball ready to be taken. Anderson and Stuart Broad each bowled well in the first hour but could find no way past Australia's openers.
Simon Katich would have gone on 22 had Alastair Cook managed a direct hit from cover when Watson sent his partner back and his opening partner therefore had to scamper and dive back.
Brutal bouncer
Broad produced a brutal bouncer to pin Watson on the chest and then have the batsman frantically missing a kick at the ball as it dropped into the crease and trickled past his stumps.
There were some resounding shots too -- particularly from Watson, making the most of his giant stride to drive Broad past mid-off and then crunch Steven Finn straight of mid-on in his first over. England thought they had Katich, with the partnership on 67, when Billy Doctrove gave him out lbw. But DRS evidence demonstrated the ball was clearing the stumps.
In Anderson's next over, England chose to review a Doctrove not out for lbw against Watson -- only for simulation to show the ball going over leg-stump again. It seemed nothing was going for Andrew Strauss' team, in their increasingly anxious quest for a breakthrough. But with his very next delivery, Anderson was rewarded. He located a perfect length on the line of off stump, and a little away movement off the pitch and extra bounce took the shoulder of Watson's bat for an edge to slip and regulation catch by Strauss himself.
Hussey, whose place had been in grave doubt until he made a hundred for Western Australia, was assured throughout -- after that first-ball scare. He outscored each of his partners dramatically. It was he too who set about Swann, using his feet for an early six over long-on - and he cut, mercilessly pulled and drove his way to a high boundary count of nine in his 85-ball fifty. The left-hander used the crease impressively, altering the length on both back and front foot.
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