PERTH: Makeshift opener Travis Head smacked an explosive 69-ball century to power Australia to an astonishing eight-wicket victory inside two days against England on Saturday, powering his side to 205-2 late in the final session of a high-octane Ashes opener at Perth Stadium.
The manic style of cricket, which produced the shortest Ashes Test by overs-bowled to deliver a result since 1888, kept the crowd enthralled as both sides gained and relinquished the ascendancy throughout.
Head slammed a brilliant 83-ball 123 as the hosts romped home in an electric start to the five-match series. Marnus Labuschagne was not out on 51 and stand-in skipper Steve Smith on two as England meekly surrendered in the Perth cauldron.
“Wow, what a couple of days. It’s been unbelievable,” said Head. “The emotions are pretty high. They [England] were seriously good out there yesterday and started to drag it back, so we knew we couldn’t afford to let the game slip. To be able to contribute the way I did, it feels pretty special.”
England had set Australia a target of 205 after being bowled out for 164 by tea on day two, losing nine second-session wickets in the wake of a Scott Boland seam masterclass of 4-33. The tourists had made 172 in their first innings.
Head, taking the place of opener Usman Khawaja, who gingerly left the field in England’s 27th over with back trouble, got Australia’s run chase off to a rollicking start, giving England a taste of their own ‘Bazball’ medicine in the third session.
The near 50,000-strong crowd came to life when Head, who has opened nine times previously in Test cricket, quickly got into his destructive rhythm, crunching some lovely boundaries including big sixes off Brydon Carse (2-44) and Mark Wood.
He made it look easy, making a mockery of the struggles other batsmen had on the bouncy track, bringing up his half-century in 36 balls, passing 4,000 Test runs in the process.
Looking to emulate him, debutant Jake Weatherald also went on the attack, but it cost him, out for 23 after a mistimed pull shot was taken by Ben Duckett off Carse.
An unruffled Head kept the pressure on, slamming four boundaries in one Ben Stokes over and sending a six back over the head of Jofra Archer, and brought up Australia’s equal-third fastest century with a risky upper-cut and a scurried single.
The fourth innings raced to a conclusion with Head clubbing four sixes and 16 boundaries before launching Carse to Ollie Pope at deep midwicket, hugging Labuschagne and soaking in the applause as he walked off.
Smith hit the winning run with a single punched to the off-side.
“Today was just incredible, wasn’t it?” said Smith. “That innings from Travis Head was out of this world. He just played some outrageous shots, and even when he shanked it, he seemed to hit the gaps. It’s one of those days when you’re on, you’re on, and he made the most of it and got us home.”
England skipper Stokes agreed.
“I’m a little bit shell-shocked, I think that innings by Travis Head was pretty phenomenal,” he said. “It’s quite raw, quite fresh at the moment, but sheesh that was some knock. We tried 3-4 different plans there, he was going like a train. The runs were coming through quickly, he is really hard to stop when he plays like that.”
England had quickly bowled Australia out for 132 to start the day, breaking the last-wicket partnership between Nathan Lyon and Brendan Doggett which added only nine to the side’s overnight score.
In a relatively sedate passage of play in the lead-up to lunch, the visitors added 59 for the loss of Zak Crawley, who suffered his second first-over duck of the match at the hands of spearhead Mitchell Starc, leading the attack in the absence of stalwarts Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood; the veteran diving to his left in an incredible feat of athleticism for a memorable caught-and-bowled.
Boland, who stood up with 4-33 after going wicketless in the first innings, then ran rampant, breaking through in the second session when opener Duckett was caught for 28.
The 36-year-old claimed two more in his next over, with Pope left punching his bat in frustration after being caught behind on 33 and Harry Brook trudging off for a three-ball duck having nicked to first slip.
One of the loudest roars of the day came when Joe Root, on eight, chopped-on Starc (3-55) from well outside off-stump.
Not even the boisterous support of the “Barmy Army” could lift the tourists, as Starc celebrated his first match-haul of 10 wickets in an Ashes Test with a bouncy delivery that Stokes, on two, popped to second slip.
On a painstaking review, Jamie Smith was adjudged to have feathered debutant Doggett (3-51) to keeper Alex Carey and England’s last recognised batsman walked off for 15 as the home side pressed their advantage.
Gus Atkinson and Carse put together a valuable 50-run partnership at the tail but Boland closed out the innings by having Atkinson caught in the deep for 37.
“We’ll obviously let this sink in,” Stokes added. “It obviously hurts extremely, but we’ve got to get our head around [it] and move on to Brisbane and then hit the ground running there.”
Scoreboard
ENGLAND (1st Innings) 172 (H. Brook 52, O. Pope 46; M. Starc 7-58)
AUSTRALIA (1st Innings, overnight 123-9):
J. Weatherald lbw Archer0
M. Labuschagne b Archer9
S. Smith c Brook b Carse17
U. Khawaja c Smith b Carse2
T. Head c Carse b Stokes21
C. Green c Smith b Stokes24
A. Carey c Carse b Stokes26
M. Starc c Carse b Stokes12
N. Lyon c Duckett b Carse4
S. Boland c Brook b Stokes0
B. Doggett not out7
EXTRAS (LB-8, NB-2)10
TOTAL (all out, 45.2 overs)132
FALL OF WICKETS: 1-0 (Weatherald), 2-28 (Labuschagne), 3-30 (Smith), 4-31 (Khawaja), 5-76 (Head), 6-83 (Green), 7-118 (Starc), 8-121 (Carey), 9-121 (Boland)
BOWLING: Archer 9-4-11-2; Atkinson 12-5-24-0; Wood 8-1-21-0 (1nb); Carse 10.2-1-45-3 (1nb); Stokes 6-1-23-5
ENGLAND (2nd Innings):
Z. Crawley c & b Starc0
B. Duckett c Smith b Boland28
O. Pope c Carey b Boland33
J. Root b Starc8
H. Brook c Khawaja b Boland0
B. Stokes c Smith b Starc2
J. Smith c Carey b Doggett15
G. Atkinson c Doggett b Boland37
B. Carse c Carey b Doggett20
J. Archer c Smith b Doggett5
M. Wood not out4
EXTRAS (B-1, LB-11)12
TOTAL (all out, 34.4 overs)164
FALL OF WICKETS: 1-0 (Crawley), 2-65 (Duckett), 3-76 (Pope), 4-76 (Brook), 5-76 (Root), 6-88 (Stokes), 7-104 (Smith), 8-154 (Carse), 9-160 (Archer)
BOWLING: Starc 12-1-55-3; Boland 11.4-2-33-4; Doggett 9-0-51-3; Green 2-0-13-0
AUSTRALIA (2nd Innings):
T. Head c Pope b Carse123
J. Weatherald c Duckett b Carse23
M. Labuschagne not out51
S. Smith not out2
EXTRAS (B-1, LB-1, W-4)6
TOTAL (for two wkts, 28.2 overs)205
FALL OF WICKETS: 1-75 (Weatherald), 2-192 (Head)
DID NOT BAT: U. Khawaja, C. Green, A. Carey, M. Starc, N. Lyon, S. Boland, B. Doggett
BOWLING: Archer 8-0-45-0; Atkinson 9-1-61-0 (3w); Carse 5.2-0-44-2 (1w); Wood 3-0-23-0; Stokes 2-0-18-0; Root 1-0-12-0
RESULT: Australia won by eight wickets.
MAN-OF-THE-MATCH: Mitchell Starc
SERIES: Australia lead five-match series 1-0.
Published in Dawn, November 23rd, 2025































