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Ricky Ponting trudges off after a brilliant run out
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Over by over, inch by inch, England are clawing the rug from under
Australia's feet. Nothing and no-one can be discounted just yet,
especially now that Simon Jones, England's best bowler of the last two
Tests, has been placed in a surgical boot after suffering a worrying ankle
injury. But the momentum of the series has taken a further shift to the
north, and as Ricky Ponting audibly demonstrated as he thundered back to
the pavilion, Australia's resolve is threatening to splinter with anger
and recrimination.
The flashpoint of this series has been a long time coming. One of the
glorious features of the 2005 Ashes has been the camaraderie and goodwill
between the two teams, best exemplified by Andrew Flintoff's consoling of
Brett Lee after the two-run win at Edgbaston, and Shane Warne's
generous reaction to Flintoff's match-turning innings 24 hours earlier.
But this is no ordinary Ashes series. For the first time since the sepia
era of the 1950s, the best two teams in the world are slugging it out for
supremacy - and sooner or later the laughter was going to have to stop. A
decade on from Australia's annexing of West Indies' crown in the
Caribbean, the abiding memory is still shared between Steve Waugh's
double-century in Jamaica, and his earlier eyeball-to-eyeball
confrontation with Curtly Ambrose in Trinidad on the same tour. Proud warriors do
not lay down their arms without a struggle.
Ponting's peevish reaction to his run-out was entirely understandable
given the massive significance of the moment. It was he who
single-handedly saved the Old Trafford Test with the rearguard innings of
his life, and all the while that he remained today, England had cause to
fear for the wisdom of enforcing the follow-on. But in a blur of judgment
and a swoop from the covers, Gary Pratt, the substitute fielder, produced
the moment of brilliance that had eluded Stephen Peters, his predecessor
in the role, in the closing moments at Old Trafford.
Substitute fielders have a habit of making an impact at Trent Bridge. In
the opening match of the 1930 Ashes, Sydney Copley - a member of the
Nottinghamshire groundstaff with one first-class match to his name -
produced a stunning tumbling catch off Stan McCabe to turn the Test in
England's favour. For all the resilience of Simon Katich and Michael
Clarke, and the lurking menace of Adam Gilchrist (whose flicker of form in
today's first innings was cut short by a second slip catch worthy of Mark
Waugh), Pratt's intervention could well prove to be the tipping-point of
Australia's challenge in this Test.
It has been a valiant challenge as well. The decision to enforce the
follow-on, Australia's first since Ian Healy's debut at Karachi in
September 1988, was an undoubted risk. Such decisions used to be
no-brainers, a reward for dominant teams in an era when run-rates of
two-and-a-half an over were the norm, and Tests would be hard-pressed to
finish within the five-day limit. Ever since Mark Taylor broke with the
norm at Brisbane in 1994-95, however, the preference has been for a hasty
accumulation in the third innings, and final use of a now-crumbling pitch.
Given the agony of their missed opportunity at Old Trafford, and the need
for haste in the event of bad weather, England had little choice but to
stick Australia back in, for all the risk it entailed. Four years ago in
Calcutta, Australia's last series defeat was precipitated by one of the
greatest turnarounds in history, as VVS Laxman and Rahul Dravid batted
them into oblivion from the point of no-return.
Now, in a neat reprisal of the situation, it will take Australia's own
version of Calcutta to save this match. The fury of a squandered
first-innings and the benefits of a day in the dressing-room have so far
been focussing their responses. Now it is a question of whether the
resentment that is simmering overnight can be channelled into action, or
be allowed to eat further into their resolve.
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo