Matches (29)
NZ vs WI (1)
ILT20 (2)
Sa Women vs IRE Women (1)
WBBL (2)
ENG Lions Tour (1)
Sheffield Shield (3)
QEA Trophy (1)
IND vs SA (1)
SMAT (17)
Stumps • Starts 4:00 AM
2nd Test (D/N), Brisbane, December 04 - 08, 2025, The Ashes
(73 ov) 378/6

Day 2 - Australia lead by 44 runs.

Current RR: 5.17
 • Last 10 ov (RR): 51/1 (5.10)
Report

Weatherald's opening gambit inspires Australia fightback

Aggressive maiden fifty ruffles England attack, before Smith, Labuschagne cement advantage

Tristan Lavalette
05-Dec-2025 • 3 hrs ago
Jake Weatherald made his maiden Test fifty off 45 balls, Australia vs England, 2nd Test, Brisbane, December 5, 2025

Jake Weatherald made his maiden Test fifty off 45 balls  •  Darrian Traynor/AFP/Getty Images

Australia 378 for 6 (Weatherald 72, Labuschagne 65, Smith 61, Carse 3-113) lead England 334 (Root 138*, Starc 6-75) by 44 runs
After Travis Head had hogged the attention in the build-up, fellow opener Jake Weatherald emerged from his shadow with a rollicking maiden Test half-century as Australia capitalised on a ragged England bowling and fielding effort in the day-night second Ashes Test.
Australia ended day two well on top after half-centuries from Weatherald, Steven Smith and Marnus Labuschagne. It was the first time in a decade that Australia put on 50-plus stands for the first four wickets in a Test innings but no batter has yet been able to kick on for a big score.
Just a fortnight ago, England hustled Australia for 132 in Perth with hostile pace bowling that evoked peak West Indies but they have been undisciplined since and conceded 5.17 runs an over so far in this innings.
On the back of Weatherald setting the tone with 72 off 78 balls, including 59 in the first session, Australia moved into a powerful position at 291 for 3 and just 43 runs behind England's first innings.
Under major pressure after their first-Test humiliation, England appeared to be wilting amid a totally lacklustre bowling effort until Cameron Green and Smith succumbed in the same over to a short-ball ploy from Brydon Carse, who had been very expensive to that point.
Leeds-born Josh Inglis was later clean bowled by indefatigable skipper Ben Stokes as England mounted an unexpected fightback after a totally underwhelming day. But Alex Carey and Michael Neser benefited from sloppy fielding - amid five dropped catches by England so far in the innings - as they finished with an unbroken 49-run partnership to steady Australia.
After England were dismissed for 334 in their first innings early on day two, with Joe Root finishing unbeaten on 138, the focus immediately turned to Head following his extraordinary century in Perth as a makeshift opener.
With veteran Usman Khawaja ruled out due to a back injury, Head is playing this match as a specialist opener - a role he had only occupied previously in South Asia.
There was intrigue over how he would approach the situation on a ground where he bagged a king pair in the day-night Test against West Indies in January 2024.
Head had no troubles negotiating the first delivery, with Jofra Archer spraying down the leg side in a sign of things to come for England's attack. Archer could not find the right length but Head and Weatherald were circumspect as the innings started with three maidens.
Weatherald was unruffled and smacked a boundary in the fourth over to open Australia's account and the runs soon flowed. Crouching very low, watching intently and talking to himself as the bowler approached, Weatherald was compact early before growing in confidence with a trio of boundaries off seamer Gus Atkinson.
Head, meanwhile, made a watchful start and did not score until his 15th delivery. He had only made 3 of Australia's 30 runs when Archer finally got his length right and produced a cracking back-of-a-length delivery that angled in and nipped away to catch the outside edge.
But wicketkeeper Jamie Smith, playing his first day-night match, was wrongfooted and dropped a straightforward chance much to the delight of an increasingly rowdy contingent of Australian fans in the terraces.
Head crawled to 4 off 29 balls before finally scoring his first boundary in the 10th over, followed by a six off the wayward Carse. It ignited Head whose trademark cavalier style returned and he was matched by Weatherald as they knocked England's quicks off their lengths. England were either too short or full with Weatherald punishing modest bumpers with several belligerent uppercuts.
The wheels were quickly falling for England, reminiscent of many horror shows at this graveyard site for them, but they had a brief respite when Head on 33 threw away his wicket, holing out to mid-on in a rare bright spot for Carse.
Head's wicket did not slow down the momentum of Weatherald, who notched his half-century off 45 balls - the fastest in a Test at the Gabba in a decade.
Stokes resorted to spinning allrounder Will Jacks before the 40-minute tea break but his solitary over went for nine runs. After some soul searching, England's quicks bowled better on resumption and were rewarded when Archer trapped Weatherald plumb lbw with a fierce full delivery that hit flush on the toe.
Lacking support, Archer pushed through with a seven-over spell but could not produce another breakthrough as Labuschagne and Smith built a formidable partnership.
Both reached their half-centuries in 67 balls with Labuschagne judging the length superbly and unfurling the pull shot when required as he became the first batter to reach 1000 runs in day-night Tests. But he fell tamely to Stokes when he feathered an attempted cut close to the body, ending his bid for a first Test century since the 2023 Ashes.
Smith, sporting black adhesive stickers on his cheekbones, looked in control and combined in another half-century stand with Green, who batted one spot higher at No. 5 than in Perth.
England hoped to rally under the lights but wickets looked unlikely until Carse, who sported macabre figures of 1 for 92 from 12 overs to this point, bluffed Green by bowling a full delivery that rattled the stumps after the batter had been backing away against the short ball.
Carse then delivered a brute of a delivery that hit Carey on the glove but was dropped at gully by Ben Duckett. England's spirits quickly lifted when Smith on the next delivery was brilliantly caught at deep backward square by Jacks as Stokes threw his cap in the air in celebration.
But England's momentum was halted by sloppy fielding and they appear to be staring down the barrel.
England had started the day's play in considerably better shape after a momentum-swinging last-wicket partnership between Root and Archer. Making Australia's weary bowlers back up amid stifling humidity, England hoped to add more invaluable runs to their overnight total of 325 for 9.
With his century jinx on Australian soil over, Root looked to cross 150 but was content in taking singles and there was no need for anything outlandish like his reverse scoop off Scott Boland that registered his first ever Test six in the country.
In a madcap final stretch of play on day one, Archer zoomed past his highest Test score of 30 and his bid for a maiden Test half-century started well when he cracked a superb drive through the covers off Mitchell Starc. But Archer fell on 38 when a diving Labuschagne took a blinder of a one-handed catch at deep backward square to end the 70-run stand - the highest 10th wicket partnership for England on an Ashes tour since 1951.

Tristan Lavalette is a journalist based in Perth

Language
English
AskESPNcricinfo Logo
Instant answers to T20 questions
Australia Innings
<1 / 3>

ICC World Test Championship

TeamMWLDPTPCT
AUS440048100.00
SA43103675.00
SL21011666.67
PAK21101250.00
IND94415248.15
ENG62312636.11
BAN2011416.67
WI505000.00
NZ------