Monday 25 August 1997
Australia again fail to hammer home last nail
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins
ENGLAND cricket, the national side as opposed to the structure
which supports it, was saved in the very nick of time at the Oval
on Saturday afternoon.
There was the slenderest of margins, more slender than 19 runs
sounds, between a 4-1 and a 3-2 series defeat; between despair
and reasonable hope; between a team without confidence and one
who can draw strength from the second of two victories won
against the head in the last six months.
Australia wanted to win no less than usual and they obviously
thought they would do so when Michael Kasprowicz became an unlikely and cruelly short-lived hero by whistling though England`s tail and becoming the third man in the match to return a
seven-wicket analysis. They were denied by the inspired bowling
of Andrew Caddick and Phil Tufnell, flawless captaincy by Mike
Atherton, brilliant fielding and a crumbling pitch.
Australia played true to form, losing the last match of a series they had already won for the third time running and proving
frail, once more, when a short haul to a fourth-innings target
was demanded of them on a tricky pitch. This was the first Oval
Test to end in three days since Tony Lock took 11 wickets
against the West Indies 40 years ago. Seventeen wickets fell on
Saturday in 72 overs. It was a wonderfully exciting game, as
matches on unreliable surfaces tend to be.
Graham Thorpe played a fine innings in the morning. He was
helped by Shane Warne`s groin injury, though a leg-break in his
first over turned far enough for Nasser Hussain to be caught at
backward point as he leaned away from a square cut in his effort
to exert early control. Thorpe and Mark Ramprakash, who played
very well but still got away with two hot-headed strokes, added
79 before Thorpe drove at a ball from Kasprowicz angled across
his body and Mark Taylor took a sizzling slip catch.
Adam Hollioake was lbw, a shade unluckily, defending on the
crease and Ramprakash fell after lunch trying to hit Warne back
over his head, before the last three wickets fell in one over.
With Australia chasing 124 runs, Devon Malcolm was asked to
bowl flat out and got the early break when Matthew Elliott
padded up. Then Caddick bowled with hostility and an unremitting off-stump line to the right length.
At 36, Taylor was trapped on the crease after playing some
fine strokes. At 42, Mark Waugh was caught at slip, playing
forward. At 49, Greg Blewett drove at an in- swinger and was
adjudged by Lloyd Barker to have got an inside edge. It might
have been lucky for Caddick but this was luck he deserved and
soon after tea he took what was probably the pivotal wicket when
Steve Waugh drove with his weight on the back foot, the ball
straightened a fraction and Thorpe clutched the catch to his
chest at first slip.
There was an Australian rally now and the possibility of an anticlimax for England. Ian Healy hit a four at either end; Ricky
Ponting attacked with quick eyes and feet. At 88, he was given
out by Peter Willey when a ball spun past his front pad and hit
his back. It might have missed off stump, but the force was
with England. Healy`s crisp drive struck Caddick`s outstretched
right arm before he juggled and cradled the ball like the tenderest baby.
Atherton set his field carefully for the inevitable attempt at a
counter-attack. Peter Martin judged Warne`s skier perfectly,
running back from mid-on. Shaun Young looked calm in his first
Test and he and Kasprowicz reduced the target to 25 before
Atherton switched Hollioake from short square-leg to short extra-cover and, two deliveries later, the ball popped obligingly.
Young hit one handsome off-drive but Glenn McGrath scooped
Tufnell to mid-off, the catch was taken low and English joy
was uncon- fined. Yesterday`s ticket-holders can apply for a
full refund at a cost to the England and Wales Cricket Board
of more than -L450,000.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)