Australia were digging a massive hole for beleaguered England to escape from, as the tourists faced a demoralizing defeat in the first Ashes cricket Test at the Gabba yesterday.
Merciless skipper Ricky Ponting refused to enforce the follow-on after Australia dismissed the Ashes holders for just 157 to seize a massive 445-run innings lead.
Instead Ponting sought to give his four bowlers the luxury of putting their feet up and resting as cracks widened on the wearing Gabba pitch under a baking sun to aid his master leg-spinner Shane Warne with two days to play.
PHOTO: AFP
The Australians swelled their advantage to 626 runs cruising to 181 for one by stumps on the third day with Justin Langer unbeaten on 88 and Ponting not out 51, the pair putting on an unbroken 113-run partnership.
The highest losing fourth innings total in an Ashes Test was 417 scored by England in Melbourne in 1977.
Ponting was hellbent on ramming home the psychological advantage on the flattened tourists with a massive first-up victory here heading into the second Test of the series, starting in Adelaide next Friday.
The Australian skipper now has to decide when to call a halt to the run avalanche and unleash his bowlers on England to try and wrap up a victory set up by three lopsided days of cricket.
The Australians yesterday only lost the wicket of Matthew Hayden, who perished on 37 going for a risky second single. The video umpire needed several replays before giving him out, fractionally beaten home by James Anderson's throw from backward square leg.
Ponting, who mastered the England attack for 196 in the first innings, became the third Australian to pass 9,000 Test runs when he reached 12 during his second innings.
The other Australians are Allan Border (11,174) and Steve Waugh (10,927).
The day's star was pace bowler Glenn McGrath, who captured his 29th five-wicket haul in Tests and 10th against England to finish with 6-50 as England folded in their first innings.
McGrath, who turns 37 next February, has now taken 548 Test wickets, the third best of all-time.
Wise-cracking McGrath poked fun of pre-Test claims that he was past his best by imitating a geriatric hobbling off the field to the amusement of the crowd.
McGrath followed up the wickets of England openers Andrew Strauss (12) and Alastair Cook (11) late on Friday, to dismiss Kevin Pietersen (16), Geraint Jones (19), Steve Harmison (0) and Ashley Giles (24).
First-change paceman Stuart Clark took 3-21 off 14 overs and Brett Lee 1-51 from 15 overs, leaving little for Warne, who only bowled nine of the 61.1 overs.
Only Ian Bell showed significant resistance for England with a patient 50 in almost four hours.
Clark removed Bell with the second ball of a new spell when the No.3 attempted to drive only to thick-edge chest-high to Ponting at second slip.
Bell, who averaged just 17.10 in last year's Ashes series, batted for 228 minutes for his dogged half-century off 162 balls with five boundaries.
The tourists' slim chances of saving the Test nosedived after the dismissals of influential batsmen Pietersen and Flintoff within five balls in the first hour of play.
Pietersen did not offer a shot to a McGrath off-cutter and was adjudged leg before wicket. New Zealand umpire Billy Bowden gave Pietersen out but video analysis suggested the ball was just missing off-stump.
Flintoff was soon following Pietersen back to the dressing room when he edged Lee to wicketkeeper Adam Gilchrist for a duck.
Australia batted through almost the first two days to take an iron grip with 602 for nine declared.
The 63-year Gabba attendance record was broken after just three days with an aggregate crowd of 117,322 beating the 1933 Bodyline series Brisbane Test best of 93,143 which was set over six days.
Former England captain Ian Botham has blamed coach Duncan Fletcher's "defensive" selections for the side's poor showing in the first cricket Test against Australia.
The legendary allrounder Botham hit out yesterday against Fletcher's selections of wicketkeeper Geraint Jones, for his batting, ahead of Chris Read, and spinner Ashley Giles over Monty Panesar.
"Chris Read I think is unlucky. He averaged 42 in Test cricket last year and has been left out in the cold," Botham said.
"They've said he didn't play very well in the ICC Trophy but unless I'm mistaken, England didn't play very well in the ICC Trophy," he said.
Botham praised Panesar, describing him as "the best finger spinner in world cricket."
"He gets turn, he gets massive bounce and to win Test matches ... you need to get runs, but at the end of the day you have to take 20 wickets," he said in a television commentary stint during the second day's play.
Botham also said England may not have had enough warmup matches ahead of the first Test, claiming the side were "undercooked" after just a limited-overs match and two three-day games since arriving in Australia on Nov. 5.
"I just don't think it's enough," Botham said.
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