Joe Root defied Australia after England lost three early wickets on the first day of the first Ashes Test at Cardiff’s Sophia Gardens yesterday.
At lunch, England were 88-3 after winning the toss.
Gary Ballance was 28 not out and Root, dropped on naught, 33 not out.
Photo: AFP
The Yorkshire duo had added 45 runs in 51 balls after England had slumped to 43-3.
Josh Hazlewood struck with just his sixth ball against England when he had fellow Ashes debutant Adam Lyth, aiming legside, well caught low down by a diving David Warner at gully for 6.
After just two maiden overs, Mitchell Starc was replaced by fellow left-arm fast bowler Mitchell Johnson at the Cathedral Road End.
Johnson, whose 37 wickets at under 14 apiece were a key factor in Australia’s 5-0 Ashes rout of England on home soil in 2013-2014, soon got the odd ball to bounce alarmingly.
Australia captain Michael Clarke, bidding to lead his side to a first Ashes series win in Britain in 14 years, lived up to his reputation for ringing the changes in the field by bringing on off-spinner Nathan Lyon as early as the 10th over.
Many pundits had told England to “get after” Lyon.
However, try as he might, Cook could not get Lyon away and the 14th consecutive dot ball he received from the spinner proved his undoing, an edged cut caught by wicketkeeper Brad Haddin.
Cook was out for 20 and England were 42-2.
That soon became 43-3 when experienced batsman Ian Bell’s run of low scores continued when he was leg before wicket for 1 from a fast, full-length and swinging delivery from Starc.
Bell’s swift exit meant that he has scored just 56 runs over his past nine innings.
Root almost went leg before to Starc’s first ball, spared by a thin inside edge, and the next ball he was dropped by a diving Haddin, the keeper unable to hold a right-handed chance.
However, Root was undaunted and drove Starc down the ground for a classic four.
Root has the priceless ability to up the tempo if he does stay in and when Johnson and Hazlewood both dropped short, he responded with a pair of cut boundaries.
Left-hander Ballance then struck his best short of the session when he cut a fractionally wide ball from Johnson to the point rope.
Bologna on Thursday advanced past Empoli to reach their first Coppa Italia final in more than half a century. Thijs Dallinga’s 87th-minute header earned Bologna a 2-1 win and his side advanced 5-1 on aggregate. Giovanni Fabbian opened the scoring for Bologna with a header seven minutes in. Then Viktor Kovalenko equalized for Empoli in the 30th minute by turning in a rebound to finish off a counterattack. Bologna won the first leg 3-0. In the May 14 final in Rome, Bologna are to face AC Milan, who eliminated city rivals Inter 4-1 on aggregate following a 3-0 win on Wednesday. Bologna last reached the
If the Wild finally break through and win their first playoff series in a decade, Minnesota’s top line likely will be the reason. They were all over the Golden Knights through the first two games of their NHL Western Conference quarter-finals series, which was 1-1 going back to Minnesota for Game 3 today. The Wild tied the series with a 5-2 win on Tuesday. Matt Boldy had three goals and an assist in the first two games, while Kirill Kaprizov produced two goals and three assists. Joel Eriksson Ek, who centers the line, has yet to get on the scoresheet. “I think the biggest
The Minnesota Timberwolves, with so many promising performances spoiled by late mistakes fresh in their memory bank, sure timed this strong finish well. Jaden McDaniels scored a career playoff-high 30 points and spearheaded Minnesota’s stifling defense on an ailing Luka Doncic, and the Timberwolves beat the Los Angeles Lakers 116-104 to take a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven Western Conference first-round series in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Friday night. “Jaden never looks tired. He looks like he could play 48 minutes,” said teammate Anthony Edwards, who had 29 points, eight rebounds and eight assists. Julius Randle added 22 points for the Wolves, who outscored
From a commemorative jersey to a stadium in his name, Argentine soccer organizers are planning a slew of tributes to their late “Captain” Pope Francis, eulogized as the ultimate team player. Tributes to the Argentine pontiff, a lifelong lover of the game, who died on Monday at the age of 88, have been peppered with soccer metaphors in his homeland. “Francisco. What a player,” the Argentine Football Federation (AFA) said, describing the first pope from Latin America and the southern hemisphere as a generational talent who “never hogged the ball” and who showed the world “the importance of having an Argentine captain,