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England v Australia recap: Day one of second Ashes Test at Lord's

Updated
Josh Tongue bowls for England (L)
Josh Tongue bowls for England (L)AFP
If the first Ashes Test played at Edgbaston last week is anything to go by, a packed house at the self-proclaimed ‘Home of Cricket’ will be in for a real treat as England face Australia in the second Ashes Test - play is underway in the second Test.

See all our ball-by-ball commentary and match stats here.

Another great day of Ashes Test cricket comes to an end with honours probably even. So how did the day pan out?

Ben Stokes won the toss and opted to bowl first under an overcast sky. For England, paceman Josh Tongue was brought in for the injured Moeen Ali and for the Aussies, Mitchell Starc was carded in place of Scott Boland who was expensive in the first Test.

A protestor is tackled at Lord's
A protestor is tackled at Lord'sAFP

England’s bowlers missed a trick in the first session and a half where the conditions were all in favour of those with a ball in hand. Their seam attack failed to really exploit the conditions and went to lunch having only taken the one wicket, that of first Test man of the match Usman Khawaja (17).

He had no answer to a big in-swinger from Tongue when he shouldered arms only to see his off stump cartwheeling in the direction of wicket-keeper Jonny Bairstow on the stroke of Lunch (74/1). 

Marnus Labuschagne walked to the middle with Warner after the interval. They batted sensibly and with excellent temperament to fend off the swinging ball. They had added 22 runs when Warner (66) became Tongue’s second victim when he played all around an off-cutter that smashed into his middle and leg stumps (96/2).

Warner returns to the pavilion after being dismissed by Tongue
Warner returns to the pavilion after being dismissed by TongueAFP

Steve Smith was in at four to join Labuschagne, and in the afternoon session they made hay as the sun started to show itself and the lateral movement diminished somewhat.

They had their fair share of luck but credit where it is due to the pair, who mustered just 35 runs between them in the Edgbaston Test, played with great skill putting on 102 for the third wicket before Labuschagne (47) feathered an edge from a jaffa of a delivery from Ollie Robinson (198/3).

Next to the middle was Travis Head, he and Smith threw caution to the wind in an almost ‘Bazball’ style of batting and put runs on the board at a decent rate of knots. They put on 118 for the fourth wicket before Head had a rush of blood and charged spinner Joe Root who gave the ball extra flight which saw Head (77) take a desperate swing at the ball, missed and was duly stumped (316/4).

Root celebrates his wicket
Root celebrates his wicketAFP

Like London buses, when one finally comes, two arrive. Three balls later, Cam Green (0) was making his way back to the shed having scuffed a pull shot high off the top edge to Jimmy Anderson at mid-on, again off the bowling of Root which made things less disastrous for England (316/5). Smith (85*) and Alex Carey (11*) brought their team in on 339/5 having made 23* so far for the sixth wicket.

The England attack have not had their best day in the field by a long chalk. They have been ill-disciplined with their run-ups bowling 12 no-balls. They have not had the rub of the green either but then they haven’t deserved it. They had everything going in their favour for the most part of the day’s play and have come in with just five wickets. No doubt strong words will be said about their performance back at the Hotel.

Tongue (2/88) was the best of the seamers taking two of the five wickets to fall, with Robinson next best of the quicks coming with 1/86 off his 21 overs bowled. Sole spinner Root will sleep well tonight having contributed with the ball having figures of 8-1-19-2.

Tongue celebrates his wicket
Tongue celebrates his wicketAFP

Ok then, that’s all we have for you then from Lord’s on day one. We are back first thing tomorrow with all the live action on day two so make sure you join us then. For now though, on behalf of all the team, it’s Nick saying cheerio.

England v Australia XI:

England: Ben Duckett, Zak Crawley, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes (captain), Jonathan Bairstow (wk), Stuart Broad, Ollie Robinson, Josh Tongue, James Anderson.

IN - Josh Tongue

OUT - Moeen Ali

Australia: David Warner, Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith, Travis Head, Cameron Green, Alex Carey (wk), Pat Cummins (captain), Nathan Lyon, Mitchel Stark, Josh Hazlewood

IN - Mitchel Stark

OUT - Scott Boland

Team news

England perhaps dropped a hint about the state of this pitch when they named their team in advance as usual. Moeen Ali succumbed to that finger injury that troubled him at Edgbaston, and despite the excitement surrounding the drafting of young leggie Rehan Ahmed into the squad, they went with an all-seam bowling attack - three fast bowlers plus Ollie Robinson.

Pat Cummins confirmed yesterday that Australia would be going with the same 12 as Edgbaston (the playing XI plus Mitchell Starc), and the media whittled that down to a Starc v Boland battle. Australia's News Corp were reporting through an inside source one hour ago that Mitchell Starc got the nod ahead of Boland on a pitch that should produce more sideways movement than the Birmingham one did.

Match preview:

Australia took the spoils to go 1-0 in the five-match series with a two-wicket victory that, for the third consecutive Ashes series, sees them take a series lead into the second game.

That defeat for England in Edgbaston was only their third from their 13 matches under the Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes regime. Their unique adopted approach of ultra-positive batting almost paid off once again, only for them to be foiled by lower-order Aussie batters Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon in the last hour of play on day five.

England's captain Ben Stokes (R) reacts as Australia's Pat Cummins celebrates winning the first Ashes cricket Test match
England's captain Ben Stokes (R) reacts as Australia's Pat Cummins celebrates winning the first Ashes cricket Test matchAFP

It was instead the tactics of captain Stokes, such as a bold day one declaration when Joe Root was scoring freely, that instead attracted negative attention.

The wicket at Edgbaston was a batters’ dream, with 1,334 runs scored in the game and many of the 36 wickets to fall going down to unforced batting errors rather than the bowler getting the better of the batter.

Returning wicketkeeper-batter Jonny Bairstow believes that the Lord’s pitch, which is expected to be a fraction faster, will be more favourable to the way England play their game compared to that of Australia. 

England fielders react as Australia's Travis Head (R) plays a shot on day two of the first Ashes cricket Test match
England fielders react as Australia's Travis Head (R) plays a shot on day two of the first Ashes cricket Test matchAFP

Bairstow himself had a poor game behind the stumps, having dropped a few chances and missing a couple of easy stumpings, however, he made amends by making 78 runs in his first innings and will most likely be carded to start the Lord’s Test.

With the bat, England’s ‘Bazball’ batting saw them score 393/8 from just 78 overs (5.03rpo) in their first innings and 273 all out from 66.2 overs (4.07rpo) in their second. 

There will be no change or holding back at Lord’s, with coach McCullum assuring the press after the Edgbaston loss that “they will stick to the same strategy, which is great because we’ll go a little harder”.

England's Zak Crawley plays a shot on day three of the first Ashes cricket Test match between England and Australia at Edgbaston
England's Zak Crawley plays a shot on day three of the first Ashes cricket Test match between England and Australia at EdgbastonAFP

There was much to be pleased with for the England coach who saw opener Zak Crawley repay his faith in him with a first-innings half-century, including a four off the first ball of the series, and ex-skipper Joe Root once again showing why he is one the world’s best batters by holding the England batting together with knocks of 118* and 46.

In the bowling department, Test cricket’s third highest-ever wicket-taker Jimmy Anderson (686) had a below-par Test by his standards returning match figures of 1/109. He may be sidelined for express quick Mark Wood or bowling all-rounder Chris Woakes, the latter of whom was curiously overlooked for the recent Lord's Test against Ireland despite his batting and bowling averages of 61.20 and 11.33 respectively at the venue.

Moeen Ali blistered his index finger bowling for England during the first Ashes Test
Moeen Ali blistered his index finger bowling for England during the first Ashes TestAFP

Unfortunately, England’s injury worries continued during the week with young leg-spinner Rehan Ahmed drafted into the squad as a replacement for Moeen Ali, who has now been officially replaced for the match by Josh Tongue

Australia were evidently overjoyed by taking the spoils in the first match. However, there are concerns in the camp already as to the form of some of their key batters. Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschgane, both ranked in the top six of the ICC top batters table, aggregated just 35 runs from their four innings.

Australia's Usman Khawaja plays a shot on day two of the first Ashes cricket Test match
Australia's Usman Khawaja plays a shot on day two of the first Ashes cricket Test matchAFP

Thankfully, Usman Khawaja made up for them with excellent knocks of 141 and 65 that more than helped his team to victory. Khawaja’s fellow opener David Warner is also struggling for form, making nine in his first innings before being dismissed for the 15th time in an Ashes Test by Stuart Broad with 36 in his second innings.

In the bowling discipline, just as it was for the England attack, it was hard graft for the Aussie bowlers on the slow, flat Edgbaston strip. After much deliberation by the Aussie selectors, southpaw swing bowler Mitchell Starc was omitted from the team for new kid on the block Scott Boland to take to the field.

However, the English batters were not letting Boland have his own way as he did on their recent tour down under where Boland claimed 21 wickets for 172 runs at 8.19 apiece. 

He finished with match figures of 2/147 and could make way for Starc if the Australians opt to rotate their quicks throughout a long series.

As for injuries in the Aussie camp, Marnus Labuschagne was struck on the arm during an optional net practice at Lord’s on Saturday, but was soon up and running again.

The players walk out ahead of the first day of the first Ashes Test at Egbaston
The players walk out ahead of the first day of the first Ashes Test at EgbastonAFP

Assistant coach Michael di Venuto stated afterwards that he “kept on batting so must’ve been ok.

He’s got a finger that has copped a couple of knocks, but he said he felt better because the blood started to flow through.” It would certainly take a lot to keep Labuschagne off a cricket field!

Pat Cummins celebrates winning the first Ashes Test match
Pat Cummins celebrates winning the first Ashes Test matchAFP

Players to watch: Ben Stokes is brewing up for a big innings after a long stretch of starts. He hasn’t made a Test fifty in 14 innings but has failed to make double figures in just three of those.

Stokes is likely to face the Aussies’ key spinner Nathan Lyon, who finished the first Test with match figures of 8/229. Lyon has dismissed Stokes nine times from 30 innings, but at a costly price of 45 runs per wicket.

Stat attack:

- England have either won (W11) or lost (L4) all 15 Test matches played in the Stokes-McCullum era.

- Australia have lost just two Ashes Tests at Lord’s since World War II (W11, D9).

- The average first-innings score across the last ten Lord’s Tests is just 197, with only two teams winning by batting first (England v Ireland in 2019 and India v England in 2021).

- England have won just two of their last six Tests at Lord’s, beginning with a 2019 draw with Australia (D2, L2).

- Marnus Labuschagne has been dismissed three times by Stuart Broad for 119 runs.

- Ben Stokes averages just 16.11 against the bowling of Mitchell Starc in all international cricket, falling nine times in 15 innings in which they faced off (9/145).

- Pat Cummins has taken the scalp of Zak Crawley twice in Test matches at a cost of 107 runs.

- Ben Duckett scored 182 against Ireland on his debut appearance at Lord’s.

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