England fought back brilliantly
with the ball after disappointing with the bat on an astonishing opening day of
the Ashes series at Trent Bridge.
In a riotous final session, the
hosts lost their last four wickets for two runs in crumbling to 215 all out
before tearing through Australia's top order with the new ball to reduce them
to 75-4.
Peter Siddle was Australia's
outstanding performer on an overcast day which offered plenty of assistance to
swing bowlers, removing five of England's top seven to finish with figures of
5-50.
But Steven Finn dismissed Shane
Watson and Ed Cowan in successive balls and James Anderson took two wickets of
his own to leave the match beautifully poised, with Steve Smith on 38 not out.
Australian
five-wicket hauls on the opening day of an Ashes series since World War II
If England can dismantle the
remainder of the Australian batting order on Thursday, they could yet escape
with the first innings lead they were targeting when captain Alastair Cook won
the toss and chose to bat on a dry pitch hardened by several days of sunshine.
It was a decision that appeared
justified as the hosts found the boundary 19 times in the first session and
advanced to a promising 178-4 in the afternoon.
But a combination of poor shot
selection and fine swing bowling saw them lose their last six wickets for 37
runs to round off an innings that had lasted just 59 overs.
With Stuart Broad off the field
receiving treatment to a shoulder injury he suffered while batting, Australia
began their innings positively. Shane Watson struck successive fours off Finn
as they took the total to 19 off as many balls.
But the Middlesex fast bowler
gained his revenge with a double strike as first Watson, then Cowan were drawn
into chasing balls outside off stump, sending thick edges through to a gleeful
England slip cordon.
If Finn's intervention had
altered the course of the match, Anderson was about to turn things full circle
with the wicket of Michael Clarke for a six-ball duck.
The Australia captain,
averaging 66 in his 24 previous Tests as skipper, was beaten by a ball that
moved away at the last moment and kissed the top of his off stump.
Anderson's 308th Test wicket
took him past Fred Trueman into third on England's all-time list, and his 309th
followed soon afterwards as Chris Rogers was trapped lbw to a ball which
replays revealed would have brushed the outside of leg stump.
It was a breathtaking finale to
a day that began with fireworks and a fly-by from the Red Arrows to mark the
renewal of hostilities in one of sport's oldest rivalries.
Australia sprung a huge
surprise before the start of play by handing 19-year-old spinner Ashton Agar
his Test debut at the expense of Nathan Lyon.
The tall left-armer, of Sri
Lankan background, had only played 10 previous first-class matches and was
lining up in the Home Counties Premier League for Henley earlier this season.
James Pattinson, one of five
Australians playing in their first Ashes Test, was given the responsibility of
delivering the first ball of the series. But as a hush descended over the
17,000 fans inside a sold-out Trent Bridge, the 23-year-old sent down a high
and wayward bouncer that was rightly called a wide.
At 19 years 269 days Agar is
the 13th youngest player to play for Australia and the third teenager since
Doug Walters in 1965. (Craig McDermott and Pat Cummins are the other two). He
is the 17th player to bowl spin for Australia in the 68 Tests since Shane Warne
retired. The most successful is Nathan Lyon - the man Agar ousted from the
line-up - with 76 wickets at 33.18.
Left-armer Mitchell Starc
delivered a similarly inauspicious first over, but once their nerves settled
Australia's new ball pair found plenty of swing and beat the bat with
regularity.
Pattinson claimed the wicket of
the England captain in the ninth over as Cook aimed a forceful shot at a ball
outside off stump and got a healthy nick through to wicketkeeper Brad Haddin.
Jonathan Trott quickly wrested
the initiative back England's way, striking consecutive boundaries in Siddle's
first over and cracking Agar's first delivery - a full toss - to the cover
fence.
Joe Root had appeared equally
assured in a partnership of 51 before he was clean bowled by a superb
away-swinging yorker from Siddle.
Kevin Pietersen and Trott
followed soon after lunch, the former edging an expansive shot to second slip
for 14 and the latter deflecting an equally reckless drive on to his stumps.
Ian Bell and Jonny Bairstow
revived England with a counter-attacking partnership of 54, but the wicket of
Bell - caught at first slip off another fine delivery from Siddle - proved
pivotal as England's lower order folded miserably.
Matt Prior lazily slapped
Siddle to point for one and Broad top-edged a pull shot to gift Pattinson the
simplest of caught and bowled dismissals.
Bairstow was bowled after
playing around a full ball from Starc, with Finn caught behind off the
following delivery.
Anderson survived Starc's
hat-trick ball but in the following over Graeme Swann prodded tamely to cover
to complete the rout.
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