Khawaja, Marsh brothers make England sweat in final Test

Published January 7, 2018
Australia’s top-order batsman Usman Khawaja pulls on his way 
to 171 during the fifth Ashes Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground 
on Saturday.—AFP
Australia’s top-order batsman Usman Khawaja pulls on his way to 171 during the fifth Ashes Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Saturday.—AFP

SYDNEY: Usman Khawaja hit a mammoth 171 and Shaun Marsh was approaching his sixth Test century as Australia eased 133 runs ahead of England on 479 for four after the third day of the fifth Ashes clash on Saturday.

Khawaja shared a stand of 188 with captain Steve Smith, who was dismissed just before lunch, and another of 101 with Marsh, who just missed out on his second hundred of the series in the over before stumps.

Marsh will resume on 98 on day four with his brother Mitchell, who was 63 not out, as they look to bat the tourists out of the match and set up an opportunity for their bowlers to secure a win that would give Australia a 4-0 series triumph.

The Marsh brothers combined for 104 in the final session and punished England with a flurry of boundaries in the last hour as the bowlers tired after a long day’s slog in bright sunshine at the Sydney Cricket Ground.

It was Khawaja’s sure hand, though, that guided Australia past England’s tally of 346 after Mooen Ali (1-125) had stunned a packed house by moving the apparently unmovable when he dismissed Smith caught and bowled for 83.

“It’s awesome,” Khawaja said of his innings. “The SCG was where I grew up playing cricket for New South Wales and an Ashes century is something I have wanted for a long time and I haven’t been able to achieve, so it was very satisfying.

“You don’t get to celebrate Test centuries too much unless you’re Steve Smith. You’ve got to enjoy them when they come.”

Smith had already scored three centuries, two of them unbeaten and one a double, in the series and although denied a fourth, walked off his home ground having amassed 687 runs at an average of 137.4 over the five Tests.

Khawaja had an lbw scare in the following over but was reprieved when TV pictures showed Mason Crane had bowled a no ball and he otherwise looked assured as he calmly totted up the runs in the face of some tight English bowling.

A fine stroke-player but considered suspect against spin bowling, the Pakistan-born Khawaja has had a stop-start career in the baggy green since making his debut at the SCG in the corresponding Ashes clash eight years ago.

He wasted no time in knocking off the nine runs he needed to secure his maiden hundred against England at the start of the day, cutting Moeen for two before soaking up the ovation from a 43,170 crowd largely clad in pink in support of Glenn McGrath’s cancer charity.

Spinner Moeen was again bowling when he reached the 150-run mark, two consecutive fours to get over the mark a rare flourish in a 381-ball innings that contained 18 of them along with a solitary six.

England captain Joe Root came closest to a breakthrough in the second session when Shaun Marsh, on 22, was given out caught behind only for the decision to be reversed when TV pictures showed a big gap between ball and bat.

It was debutant leg-spinner Crane who finally ended the 31-year-old’s time out in the middle to claim his first Test victim, beating the bat to leave Khawaja stranded and Jonny Bairstow with a simple stumping.

Crane, 20, attracted the ire of the crowd with his habit of pulling out of his run-up but kept his head up despite finishing with figures of 1-125.

It was a very good day on the decision review system for Australia with Mitchell Marsh also reversing a late lbw decision after the snicko revealed an inside edge.

“It was pretty tough,” said Bairstow. “We’re 150 overs into the innings so there’s going to be a few tired bodies but I thought the way the guys toiled out there and worked hard was really impressive.”

Australia won back the Ashes with victories in the first three matches in Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth with the fourth Test in Melbourne finishing in a draw last week.

Scoreboard

ENGLAND (1st Innings) 346 (J.E. Root 83, D.J. Malan 62; P.J. Cummins 4-80).

AUSTRALIA (1st Innings, overnight 193-2):

C.T. Bancroft b Broad 0

D.A. Warner c Bairstow b Anderson 56

U.T. Khawaja st Bairstow b Crane 171

S.P.D. Smith c and b Ali 83

S.E. Marsh not out 98

M.R. Marsh not out 63

EXTRAS (B-2, LB-3, W-1, NB-2) 8

TOTAL (for four wkts, 157 overs) 479

FALL OF WKTS: 1-1, 2-86, 3-274, 4-375.

TO BAT: T.D. Paine, M.A. Starc, P.J. Cummins, J.R. Hazlewood, N.M. Lyon.

BOWLING (to-date): Anderson 30-11-52-1; Broad 23-2-70-1; Moeen Ali 37-9-125-1; Curran 20-2-71-0 (1w); Crane 39-3-135-1 (2nb); Root 8-3-21-0.

Published in Dawn, January 7th, 2018

Opinion

Editorial

Ties with Tehran
Updated 24 Apr, 2024

Ties with Tehran

Tomorrow, if ties between Washington and Beijing nosedive, and the US asks Pakistan to reconsider CPEC, will we comply?
Working together
24 Apr, 2024

Working together

PAKISTAN’S democracy seems adrift, and no one understands this better than our politicians. The system has gone...
Farmers’ anxiety
24 Apr, 2024

Farmers’ anxiety

WHEAT prices in Punjab have plummeted far below the minimum support price owing to a bumper harvest, reckless...
By-election trends
Updated 23 Apr, 2024

By-election trends

Unless the culture of violence and rigging is rooted out, the credibility of the electoral process in Pakistan will continue to remain under a cloud.
Privatising PIA
23 Apr, 2024

Privatising PIA

FINANCE Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb’s reaffirmation that the process of disinvestment of the loss-making national...
Suffering in captivity
23 Apr, 2024

Suffering in captivity

YET another animal — a lioness — is critically ill at the Karachi Zoo. The feline, emaciated and barely able to...