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Australia’s historic day of Ashes humiliation

Aug 07, 2015
Rampaging England bowler Stuart Broad looks disbelieving after taken yet another Australian wicket.

Rampaging England bowler Stuart Broad looks disbelieving after taken yet another Australian wicket.

Australia are set to relinquish the urn after serving up one of the country’s worst days of Test cricket.

It started with a career-best haul from Stuart Broad, who snared 8-15 to roll the tourists for just 60 before lunch on day one of the fourth Ashes Test.

It ended with England 4-274, Joe Root unbeaten on 124 after hammering home the hosts’ advantage at Trent Bridge.

Their lead is already 214 runs – the third highest day-one lead in Test history.

READ MORE: Ex-captains explain what went wrong

Michael Clarke, who continued his form slump with a sloppy dismissal to Broad, ranked it alongside the infamous Cape Town collapse of 2011 as a career low.

“Nothing went right,” Clarke said.

“That and being bowled out for 47 against South Africa is not a nice one to remember.

“That’s as tough a day as you have as a player, certainly as a captain.”

Michael Clarke takes a big swing, and gifts Stuart Broad one of his eight wickets. PA Wire image

Michael Clarke takes a big swing, and gifts Stuart Broad one of his eight wickets. PA Wire image

Broad described it “as good a performance as I’ve ever seen, certainly that I’ve been involved in”.

“We’ve had a fantastic day, probably one of the best days England has ever had in the Ashes,” Broad said.

A two-day Test is very much on the cards.

Rain of biblical proportions, or a handful of miraculous acts, may be the only roadblocks to England taking an unassailable 3-1 lead in the five-Test series.

Given Thursday’s procession, Australia are unlikely to believe in interventionist cricket gods.

“It wasn’t a great toss to lose,” Clarke said.

“That’s as tough a batting conditions as I’ve faced in my career … Stuart Broad deserves a lot of credit.

“Take nothing away from Stuart and England.”

Overcast skies and high humidity helped Broad bedazzle in 9.3 overs, but disappeared after lunch.

However, attributing a collapse of 7-29 in the space of 56 deliveries to the weather would be foolish.

Clarke noted there were no easy answers regarding the batting blues, but Root’s chance-less ton showed how serious a case it is.

There are many damning numbers that sum up the carnage.

Australia’s deplorable dig lasted 18.3 overs, the last-wicket pair batting through almost six of them.

It was the fastest first innings in Test history.

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Extras top-scored for the tourists with 14.

No side had ever experienced such ignominy in the Ashes.

Historically it ranked as Australia’s lowest Test total in England since 1902.

However, it was the side’s relative incompetence that placed their woes in proper context.

Struggling opener Adam Lyth scored 14 for England, he would have top-scored for the opposition.

England had a lead by 2.56pm local time, with Lyth and Ian Bell the only men out.

Jonny Bairstow, playing his 16th Test, outscored Australia’s total by 14 runs.

Root became the first batsman to score a second-innings century on day one of an Ashes Test.

Selectors promoted Shaun Marsh at the expense of brother Mitch, hoping to shore up the side’s batting.

Instead Marsh was out for a duck, while his brother’s overs were dearly missed as Australia went into a Test without an allrounder for the first time in almost 18 months.

Snapshot of Australia’s dark day

Score: Australia 60, England 4-274 – England lead by 214 runs

Man of the moment: Stuart Broad. Leading the England attack in the absence of the injured James Anderson, Broad humiliated the Australian batting lineup. The 29-year-old finished with the extraordinary figures of 8-15 as the tourists were rolled for 60.

Key moment: From the point where Michael Clarke called `heads’ and the toss fell England’s way, leading to Australia being send in to bat on a green wicket under overcast skies, very little went right for Darren Lehmann’s man – although it would be foolish to blame the toss for Australia’s incompetence.

Stat of the day: 18.3 Australia’s innings lasted just 18.3 overs, nine balls shy of that on offer in a Twenty20 innings. It is the shortest first innings in Test history.

Summary: On one of the darkest days in Australia’s cricket history, the Ashes have surely been lost in the most embarrassing of fashions. Broad ripped through Australia’s top, middle and lower order to once again comically expose the Australians lack of ability against the moving ball. Australia were in dire straights from the first over, when Chris Rogers (0) and Steve Smith (6) both departed. Only Michael Clarke (10) and Mitchell Johnson (13) reached double figures in an innings in which sundries (14) was the top scorer in a total of 60. Any hope that Australia’s bowlers could inflict the same damage was blunted by Joe Root’s superb, unbeaten 124 and his 173-run partnership with Jonny Bairstow (74).

Quote of the day: “That’s as tough a day as you have as a player, certainly as a captain,” Michael Clarke.

– AAP

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