Ashes 2010/11


So, an encouraging day for England. There was enough in the wicket for the current holders of the Ashes to take wickets and establish a promising position against Australia earlier in the day. Stuart Broad troubled the Canary Yellow openers, James Anderson is in the wickets (and well on course for the five wicket bag I predicted), while Stephen Finn looked a handful at times.

It could have been better though. The partnership between Michael Hussey – who seemed to have a little too much to pull – and Brad Haddin – who didn’t do too much, puts Australia in front, but within reach. Hussey played Swann really well, the best of any batsman I can remember.

But England have a brand new ball and fresh bowlers in the morning. It’s going to be a big first session tomorrow.

197 for 7, and Peter Siddle has just turned the innings on its head with a hat-trick. Alistair Cook, Matt Prior and Stuart Broad have all gone. I don’t like the first day at The Gabba, too many bad memories.

Didn’t look too bad 10 mins ago. The Aussies weren’t on their way to 600, no-one had suffered a career threatening injury, and none of the bowlers had hit second slip. We are batting, which is the right thing, but we need to play very well for the rest of today to stay in this game.

The ball is still swinging after 60-odd overs, but England really want to be scoring 400 plus in the first innings here. You have to score big in Australia. Right now, I’d take anything over 300. Come on Ian Bell.

So, nothing over the summer. Sorry about that. Perhaps you never noticed. Was a busy one playing and having fun, and to be fair the cricket that followed the T20 World Cup win always seemed a bit low key and not worth talking about. I went to the Saturday of the Trent Bridge against Pakistan and had a good day. The there wasn’t really a contest, and the no-ball fixing stuff left me cold.

Things have, however, looked on the up recently. Some good ODI cricket, and the lure of the forthcoming Ashes series is exciting me.

It should be a cracker, and I’m really looking forward to seeing Finn and Broad bouncing Ponting in the tests with two men back for the skied catch. Have enjoyed watching the Sri Lanka v Australia highlights today, and also the fact that I’ve played against two out of the three Sky presenters covering the India v New Zealand test today.

Back in August 2003 I took the wicket of Matt Floyd when he was playing for Hampstead 3rds against the mighty Pheasant on a cabbage patch at the Civil Service sports grounds in Chiswick. In May 2007 I faced two balls against Iain O’Brien for Chesterfield at Queen’s Park. Naturally, we finished better than the oppo on both occasions. Robert Croft, you are next sunshine!

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