England steady at 211-3 after rain-hit day
Joe Root and Harry Brook produced a composed and counter-attacking batting display to steady England on a rain-affected opening day of the fifth and final Ashes Test, frustrating Australiaโs all-pace attack at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Sunday.
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The pair put on an unbroken 154-run partnership to guide England to 211 for 3 before bad light forced players off the field shortly before tea, with subsequent rain and the threat of lightning bringing an early end to play.
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Batting first after captain Ben Stokes won the toss at a sold-out venue, England found themselves in early trouble at 57 for 3 after losing Ben Duckett, Zak Crawley and Jacob Bethell before lunch.
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Duckett looked fluent during a brisk start, striking five boundaries in a 27-ball 27, but was dismissed by Mitchell Starc, edging behind to wicketkeeper Alex Carey. It was the fifth time Starc has dismissed Duckett in the series.
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Crawley followed soon after, trapped lbw by Michael Neser, while Bethell endured a tentative stay before edging Scott Boland to Carey as England slipped further.
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Root and Brook then took control, rotating the strike smartly and capitalising on any loose deliveries on a pitch offering little assistance to the bowlers. Both batsmen brought up hard-earned half-centuries during a productive second session.
Also read: England end 15-year Ashes jinx with MCG Test win
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Root remained unbeaten on 72, registering his 67th Test fifty, moving him within one of Sachin Tendulkarโs record tally of 68 half-centuries. Brook, equally assured, finished on 78 not out, reaching his 15th Test fifty after surviving a scare on 45 when a mistimed stroke landed safely between fielders.
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England entered the match buoyed by a four-wicket victory inside two days in Melbourne, which ended a 15-year winless run in Australia, although the hosts had already retained the Ashes by winning the first three Tests.
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Australia surprised by fielding an all-seam attack, leaving out off-spinner Todd Murphy and bringing in allrounder Beau Webster. It marked the first time in nearly 140 years that Australia have not played a frontline spinner in a Sydney Test.
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โHate doing it,โ Australia captain Steve Smith said.
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โBut if we keep producing wickets that we donโt think are going to spin and seam is going to play a big part and cracks are going to play a big part, you kind of get pushed into a corner.โ
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England made one change, drafting in seamer Matthew Potts for the injured Gus Atkinson, while frontline spinner Shoaib Bashir missed out for a fifth consecutive Test.
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The day began with a tribute to first responders from the Bondi mass shooting last month, drawing a strong response from the crowd when Ahmed Al Ahmed, who tackled one of the attackers, appeared on the field.