What a difference a day's batting makes. Clueless, hopeless and helpless
at Lord's, Australia summoned long-dormant reserves of application and
patience to force England's bowlers to slave at a hot, humid Old
Trafford. In doing so they breathed belated life into an Ashes series
that now seems a fraction less inevitable in outcome than it did 24
hours ago.
It was no surprise to see the captain, Michael Clarke, at the centre of
it all, marrying grit with glitz in one of his best and most satisfying
innings, the first century by an Australia batsman since Clarke himself
seven Test matches ago. But there were also critical contributions by
the well-travelled Chris Rogers, a sparkling 84 that set exactly the
right tone, and by the precocious Steve Smith, helped by a liberal
supply of the luck that had previously deserted the tourists in the
series.
Australia had felt much harder done by in the minutes before lunch, when
Usman Khawaja was given caught behind and then had his referral
rejected despite ample evidence that he had not touched Graeme Swann's
offbreak. That verdict, reached by Tony Hill and upheld by Kumar
Dharmasena, will serve mainly to batter the reputation of the serving
umpires and the protocols of the DRS, which place a heavy weighting on
the on-field umpire's initial call.
Khawaja's exit enhanced Australia's sense of injustice in a series where
the wide margin so far has been hurried along by numerous questionable
decisions but England were to join their opponents in feeling they had
been wronged, as Smith was escaped three times in all, twice for lbw and
once on a raucous appeal for a catch at the wicket. James Anderson,
Stuart Broad and Swann were all showing signs of fatigue by the end, as
Clarke and Smith capitalised on Rogers' bridgehead.
Anderson took the new ball at his home ground, though its
reconfiguration in the middle and in the stands made it something of an
unknown quantity for players on both sides. Watson collected a single
and Rogers a boundary from the first over, a pattern that would be
maintained throughout their partnership in conditions quickly revealed
to be the most friendly for batsmen all series.
Rogers and Watson had trained together in London between Tests rather
than travelling down to play against Sussex, and their new approaches
reflected plenty of thought. Watson was largely conservative, battling
to value his wicket and also to avoid the lbw fate that had befallen him
three times in four innings. But Rogers showed far greater intent to
score than simply survive and punished all but the most minute errors of
line and length.
Sequences of boundaries pushed Rogers along in between the deliveries he
gave their due respect, a brace off Tim Bresnan through gully and down
the ground, then a trio to the fence in a single Anderson over took him
to a second Test fifty. All these shots were played with assurance and
no great sense of haste, but Rogers' intent had given Australia an ideal
start.
At the other end, however, Watson was becalmed, and though he did not
fall lbw it was less of a surprise to see Bresnan find a way through,
coaxing an edge from a firm defensive blade that flew straight to
Alastair Cook at first slip. Watson wandered off having again made only a
start, his wicket drawing England back into the morning.
Khawaja was greeted by the introduction of Swann, and in his second over
an optimistic lbw appeal was followed next ball by a more convincing
shout for a catch at the wicket. Khawaja's bat brushed his pad well
before swishing at the turning ball but Hill's finger was raised. After a
brief pause to consult Rogers, Khawaja referred, shaking his head as he
did so.
Despite replays that offered no evidence whatsoever of an edge, the
third umpire Dharmasena upheld Hill's original call. Khawaja walked off
with the air of a man found guilty of a crime he did not commit. Heated discussion
of the incident, both at Old Trafford and around the world, extended
well beyond the lunch interval. On resumption, Rogers lost some of his
earlier fluency and Clarke dealt in edges as often as the middle of his
bat. The combination of a looming century and inattentive stewards
behind the bowler's arm did for Rogers, who lost concentration when
facing Swann and swished across a straight ball to be lbw.
Smith came to the crease in halting form, despite a century at Hove, and
gave England hope of another wicket. They thought they had it when
Swann spun an offbreak sharply to strike Smith in front of the stumps,
only for Hill to decline the appeal and then Hawk-Eye to deny the
decision review by a millimetre. Happy to be reprieved, Smith gathered
in confidence alongside Clarke, who had shed his earlier uncertainty to
purr past 50.
As the tea break neared England had another moment of frustrated
jubilation, when Smith drove at Anderson and a loud sound accompanied
the sight of ball passing bat. Anderson and Matt Prior were utterly
convinced, abandoning their usual tact to gesture for a review from
Marais Erasmus even before the captain Cook had done so. But in the
absence of a Hot Spot or a visible deflection Smith survived, leaving
England to enter the final session without any reviews left to call on.
It would not be long before this came back to haunt the hosts, Hill
declining an lbw appeal by Broad against Smith that struck the batsman
in line and would have plucked out middle stump. English exasperation
was to be heightened with every subsequent run, as Clarke and Smith
established the most productive union between two Australia batsmen all
series. Smith's effort was never quite fluent but showed plenty of
gumption, while Clarke rediscovered the confident batting groove he had
sat in throughout 2012.
At times Clarke could be seen to stretch his back, an ever-more-present
handicap for Australia's captain, but his discomfort was no more evident
than that of several Englishmen. Swann resorted to painkilling tablets
on more than one occasion, while Broad spent a decent chunk of the final
session off the field and receiving treatment for a tight calf. Given
the toll taken on Australia's bowlers by earlier poor batting displays,
it was a source of relief to Peter Siddle, Ryan Harris and company to
see their opposite numbers starting to struggle.
A handful of overs before the second new ball was due, Clarke tucked
Swann away to the leg side for his 100th run, and minutes later Smith
paddled the same bowler to fine leg for his 50. They were to negotiate
the new ball ably, settling in for further occupation tomorrow with a
stand unbroken at 174. While Cook's men remain in charge of the series,
Rogers, Clarke and Smith have at least ensured they will have a steep
task ahead to seal it in this match.