Hosts Australia amassed a formidable 459-run lead over the West Indies and were heading for a series victory with two days left in the second Test in Melbourne yesterday.
After dismissing the outgunned tourists for 271 and building a 280-run first-innings lead, skipper Steve Smith did not enforce the follow-on, preferring to recharge his bowlers and bat a second time.
By close on the third day, Smith had led Australia to 179-3 with his virtuoso unbeaten knock of 70 off 70 balls, with the under-used Mitchell Marsh, elevated to fifth in the order, chipping in with 18.
Photo: AFP
Australia have been far superior and seemed intent on constructing a huge overall lead and bowling out the Windies for a fourth time in the one-sided series.
Australia crushed the Windies by an innings and 212 runs in the first Test in Hobart and have lost only 10 wickets for 1,313 runs in three incomplete innings.
Smith had Sunday’s third Test in Sydney and the extra bowling workload in mind when he decided not to put the Windies back in to bat.
Australia went about chasing quick runs and lost wickets along the way.
Both openers were gone by the 11th over as the Windies bowlers enjoyed their best spells of the series.
Skipper Jason Holder, sharing the new ball with Jerome Taylor, had first-innings centurion Joe Burns caught by Kraigg Brathwaite at second slip for 4.
Debutant Carlos Brathwaite followed up with the prized wicket of David Warner.
Warner attempted to steer a lifter behind the wicket only to be well caught by Holder in the gully for 17.
First-innings centurion Usman Khawaja played some improvised shotmaking for his breezy 56 off 61 balls before he was caught behind attempting to paddle Holder behind the wicket.
However, despite their dire position, the Windies showed more resolve against the odds on the third day.
The tourists’ tail resisted for the first two sessions, led by Darren Bravo top-scoring with 81 and all-rounder Carlos Brathwaite adding 59.
James Pattinson finally ended the West Indies resistance in the last over before tea, getting Bravo caught in the gully to finish with four for 72.
Nathan Lyon collected four for 66 and now has 179 career Test wickets.
It was the Windies’ highest innings score in a Test at the Melbourne Cricket Ground since 1988, as they kept a dominant Australia side in the field for 100.3 overs.
Bravo was in sight of his second century of the series — after his 108 in Hobart — before he fell short, slicing Pattinson to Smith in the gully.
He faced 204 balls and hit eight fours in a disciplined innings that his team badly needed after tumbling to 83-6.
Bravo currently averages 52.57 in overseas Tests, the highest among all West Indies batsmen who have played in at least 20 away Tests.
Carlos Brathwaite’s luck ran out when he spooned a high return catch back to Lyon in the final over before lunch, ending a dogged 90-run stand with Bravo.
Brathwaite was earlier given out twice only to be recalled both times for a front-foot no-ball by paceman Pattinson.
Brathwaite swung lustily on 13 and had his stumps scattered by Pattinson before an umpire’s check detected a no-ball.
The Barbados all-rounder was again recalled on 50 after he was caught at fine leg only for replays to pick up another Pattinson no-ball.
ANFIELD BLUES: Kylian Mbappe arrived at Anfield on a run of 21 goals in 17 games, but he managed just three attempts in the match, none of them hitting the target Kylian Mbappe has been nearly unstoppable this season, but he hit a roadblock in their UEFA Champions League match at Anfield on Tuesday. For the second year running, the Real Madrid forward had a night to forget at Merseyside as Liverpool won 1-0. Mbappe looked a shadow of the player who has been tearing defenses apart all season. “We were lacking that threat in the final third,” said Madrid coach Xabi Alonso, without naming Mbappe individually. The FIFA World Cup winner for France rarely looked capable of finding a breakthrough against a Liverpool team who have been so defensively fragile for much of the
LOCAL SUCCESS: In the doubles, Taiwan’s Hsieh Su-wei and Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia defeated Italians Sara Errani and Jasmine Paolini in straight sets Elena Rybakina on Monday punched her ticket to the WTA Finals last four with an impressive 3-6, 6-1, 6-0 victory over second seed Iga Swiatek in round-robin play in Riyadh. After cruising past Amanda Anisimova in her opener on Saturday, Rybakina claimed her second win of the week to guarantee herself top spot in the Serena Williams Group. Anisimova on Monday rallied back from a set and a break down to triumph 4-6, 6-3, 6-2 in her all-American battle with seventh seed Madison Keys, who has been eliminated from the competition. “Madi was playing so well, it was quite a battle out there,”
Erling Haaland on Sunday scored twice to propel Manchester City up to second in the English Premier League with a 3-1 win over AFC Bournemouth. The Cherries started the day in second thanks to the longest unbeaten run in the English top flight, but Andoni Iraola’s side were undone by the scintillating form of the Norwegian striker, who took his tally to 13 Premier League goals in 10 games. Haaland’s relentless streak is maintaining City’s title challenge as they reduced the gap to leaders Arsenal back to six points and edged one point ahead of Liverpool, who they face at the weekend. “Important
For almost 30 minutes, Vitomir Maricic did not take a breath. Face down in a pool, surrounded by anxious onlookers, the Croatian freediver fought spasming pain to redefine what doctors thought was possible. When he finally surfaced, he had smashed the previous Guinness World Record for the longest breath-hold underwater by nearly five minutes. However, even with the help of pure oxygen before the attempt, it had pushed him to the limit. “Everything was difficult, just overwhelming,” Maricic, 40, told reporters, reflecting on the record-breaking day on June 14. “When I dive, I completely disconnect from everything, as if I’m not even there.