The Ashes: England's cricketers make solid start against Aussies

Blackleaf

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Today is the day that the 2009 Ashes started.

Before I tell you what happened, you should know what the Ashes is all about.

It goes back to 1882 when Australia beat England at The Oval cricket ground in London - the first time England had been beaten by the Aussies on English soil.

Apparently, the Oval crowd were stunned into silence as they could not believe that England had been beaten by, what was then, just a British colony.

An English newspaper, The Sporting Times, ran a satirical obituary on the death of English cricket.

The obituary stated that English cricket had died, and the body will be cremated and the ashes taken to Australia. The English media then dubbed the next English tour to Australia (1882–83) as the quest to regain The Ashes.

Because of that, during that tour in Australia, a small terracotta urn was presented as a gift to the England captain Ivo Bligh by a group of Melbourne women. The contents of the urn are, to this day, something of a mystery, but are reputed to be the ashes of an item of cricket equipment, possibly a bail, ball or stump.

Some Australian Aborigines believe that The Ashes are in fact those of King Cole, the cricketer who toured England in 1868 as part of a team of Aborigines.

The Dowager Countess of Darnley, meanwhile, claimed recently that her mother-in-law (and Bligh's wife), Florence Morphy, said that they were the remains of a lady's veil.

A six verse poem appeared in the 1 February 1883 edition of Melbourne Punch, the fourth verse of which makes reference to the urn; at some point this verse was glued to the urn itself and there it remains so to the present day. The verse in question reads:

When Ivo goes back with the urn, the urn;
Studds, Steel, Read and Tylecote return, return;
The welkin will ring loud, The great crowd will feel proud,
Seeing Barlow and Bates with the urn, the urn;
And the rest coming home with the urn.

To this day, whenever England and Australia play each other in Test matches (not one day matches), they play to win the Ashes and to win the urn (a replica one. The real one is always kept at a museum in Lord's cricket ground in London)

The urn is only around 5 inches tall - probably the smallest trophy in world sport - but to the English and Australian cricket fans, it's also the most valuable.

Today was the First Day of the First Test between England and Australia in the Ashes.

England ended the day on top, scoring 336 runs for the loss of 7 men.

But there's still a long way to go for England to win that little urn that the Aussies took back off England in 2007 after England won it in 2005 for the first time since 1987.

This match is played in Wales (the England team is actually the England & Wales team) - the first Test match ever to be played there, and the first Ashes match to be played outside England or Australia.

England make solid start in Ashes

By Oliver Brett
BBC Sport


The Ashes

Day 1 (of 5), First Test (of 5)

1st Innings
England: 336-7

At the SWALEC Stadium, Cardiff

England: Strauss (C), Cook, Bopara, Pietersen, Collingwood, Prior (W), Flintoff, Broad, Swann, Anderson, Panesar
Australia: Katich, Hughes, Ponting (C), M Clarke, M Hussey, North, Haddin (W), M Johnson, Siddle, Hilfenhaus, Hauritz


Collingwood and Pietersen were together for more than two hours


England finished day one of the 2009 Ashes series on 336-7 after Australia hit back with late wickets in Cardiff.

England were 90-3 before a 138-run stand between Kevin Pietersen (69) and Paul Collingwood (64) saw them recover.

Positive batting from Andrew Flintoff (37) and Matt Prior (56) sparked some life out of a generally quiet crowd.

But Peter Siddle ended their 86-run stand by bowling both inside the last four overs, leaving Australia with some momentum going into the second day.

Andrew Strauss's decision to bat first on winning the toss was expected, and he made a positive move in going with both spinners - it was the first time England had done so in a home Ashes Test since 1993.


Prior batted with great intent in the final session


The big surprise was Ricky Ponting's decision to leave out seamer Stuart Clark, the leading wicket-taker in the 2006-07 Ashes and man of the match in the final Test at Sydney.

Australia's four-man attack had just 35 Test caps between them, none against England, and the most inexperienced of the lot, Ben Hilfenhaus of Tasmania, bowled the first over.

After the players had stood around for around 20 minutes listening to Neath-born soprano Katherine Jenkins sing the Welsh national anthem, the British and Australian anthems were also belted out and Hilfenhaus finally got the 2009 Ashes - the first Test in the sport's long history to be staged in Cardiff - under way.

Following Steve Harmison's wide to second slip at Brisbane in 2006, and his contrastingly ferocious burst 17 months at Lord's earlier, this was a more mundane opening, and the capacity crowd of 16,000 did not seem to lap it up.


What it's all about: Both teams are playing to win the Ashes urn

With no pace in the wicket, and just a bit of swing and seam, Hilfenhaus and Mitchell Johnson bowled too straight and struggled to find the right length, allowing Strauss and Alastair Cook to tick along smoothly enough.

But it was the briefest of honeymoons for Cook, lasting only until the last ball of the eighth over, when he played a half-hearted force off the back foot to a ball well wide of off-stump - and to the delight of the bowler Hilfenhaus, Michael Hussey dived expertly in the gully to take a fine one-handed catch.


Hauritz was eventually rewarded with the key wicket of Flintoff

The new batsman, Ravi Bopara, had to weather a stormy introduction to Ashes cricket - which included a nasty ball from Siddle which struck his throat.

But he survived to play some of the day's most attractive shots, including an on-drive off Siddle to bring up England's fifty, and a square-drive off the same bowler for four more.

The ball was still hard enough to go through with reasonable pace, however, and two Johnson wickets before lunch left England on 97-3 and gave Australia a clear advantage.

The first of Johnson's victims was Strauss, who
fell for 30. England's skipper had been dealing with the short ball really well before ducking out of a bouncer, which hit his gloves and looped to first slip.

Then Bopara was deceived on 35 by a Johnson slower ball, playing a checked drive through the covers far too early and looping a catch to point.

So it was left to Pietersen and Collingwood, well versed in establishing big partnerships against Australia, to alter the balance of power.

The two right-handers put on 153 together at Brisbane and a massive 310 at Adelaide - and in a middle session in which they faced plenty of spin bowling - showed a hunger for Ashes runs again.


Ben Hilfenhaus kept Stuart Clark out of the starting side and took two wickets

Nathan Hauritz was swept for a barrage of singles by Pietersen, while Collingwood sought out gaps in other areas for his runs.

It did not trouble the two batsmen at all that 21 overs passed without a boundary, then Collingwood cut Hauritz twice in an over for fours, before Pietersen used his feet to drive Michael Clarke wide of mid-off for four more.

Tea was taken with England 194-3, Collingwood and Pietersen were on half-centuries, and all was well in the home dressing room.

The mood darkened early in the final session, however. Hilfenhaus and Siddle were back on, there was a bit of reverse swing for them and the first sign of danger came when Pietersen, on 66, survived an lbw appeal off Hilfenhaus that should have been upheld by umpire Billy Doctrove.

The same bowler had reason to celebrate soon afterwards when Collingwood's defensive edge to a good ball that held its line was well held by a diving Brad Haddin.

And with the total on 241, England lost their fifth wicket - and the vital one of Pietersen. Shaping to play a premeditated sweep to Hauritz, the batsman was given a ball well wide of off-stump - and he should have aborted the shot.

But he failed to do so, and Pietersen ended up in a dreadful position as he gave short-leg a simple catch.



Flintoff has lost the number six position to Prior for this series, but on this occasion both came to the crease at more or less the same time.

After scoring quickly against the spinners, it was no surprise that they were made to face the seamers again as soon as the new ball became available.

Flintoff's ferocious pull shot off Hilfenhaus took him past 30, and a quick single brought up England's 300. Ten runs followed off the next over, bowled by Johnson, and when Siddle came on Prior laced him to the cover-point boundary. A single soon afterwards brought him a 54-ball fifty.

Finally, Flintoff went for one more crashing boundary and inside-edged Siddle onto his stumps. Only 20 balls now remained in the day, but that proved enough time for Siddle to send down a booming inswinger which cleaned up Prior and left a bit of a sour taste in the mouth for England fans.

A score of 340-5 would have been brilliant; now Australia potentially had the upper hand.


First blood: Ricky Ponting lost the toss and Andrew Strauss had no hesitation in batting first
Picture: REUTERS

On song: Katherine Jenkins opens proceedings in Cardiff
Picture: REUTERS

Holy smoke: England and Australia get ready for the first Test
Picture: PA

All smiles: despite losing the toss, Australia players look in fine fettle as they run out in Cardiff
Picture: GETTY IMAGES

We're off: England openers Andrew Strauss and Alastair Cook open up the Ashes
Picture: PA

Sideshow: Brett Lee watches from the dressing-room after his injury forced Australia into late changes
Picture: REUTERS

First strike: Ben Hilfenhaus dismisses Alastair Cook to give Australia their first wicket
Picture: AP

Wine and grind: former Australian primer minister John Howard chats with ICC president David Morgan
Picture: REUTERS

news.bbc.co.uk/sport
 
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