Hussain
heroics steady England
Leeds,
August 17: England,
with Nasser Hussain back at the helm, were clinging on in the fourth
Ashes Test on Friday after a scintillating century from Damien
Martyn on the second day.
England,
replying to Australia's first innings of 447, closed on 155 for two,
with Hussain on 45 and Mark Butcher on 47 after the pair had put on
an unbroken 88 for the third wicket.
England
are 292 runs behind Australia and need another 93 to save the
follow-on.
Damien
Martyn completed his second century of the series before Glenn
McGrath removed both England openers shortly after tea, raising the
spectre of another home team collapse.
Hussain
and Butcher, however, clung on, mixing stubborn defence with the odd
flurry of boundaries off the pacemen and Shane Warne's leg spin
until play was ended two overs early by bad light.
The
Australians, who have already secured the Ashes after winning the
first three Tests of the five-match series, had broken through just
after tea after Michael Atherton and Marcus Trescothick put on an
opening stand of 50.
But
Atherton, fencing on the back foot, was then caught behind for 22
off the fourth ball after the restart and Trescothick, on 37, tried
to pull a fullish delivery and also departed caught by wicketkeeper
Adam Gilchrist as McGrath took two wickets for five runs in 13
deliveries.
That
brought Hussain, sidelined for most of the summer with a broken
thumb and fractured finger.
But
he looked in unexpectedly fine form, hooking and pulling powerfully
before producing his best shot just before the close, a checked
drive off Brett Lee which raced to the cover boundary.
England
fans, however, will not sleep too comfortably, having seen the
team's middle and lower order collapse in each of their previous
innings during the series.
If
their batsmen showed real tenacity against pinpoint bowling, the
impressive Martyn, in contrast, had thrived on England's wayward
seam attack, scoring at almost a run a ball.
RUN
FEAST
After
resuming on 288 for four, Australia had piled on 120 in the first
session, with Martyn, batting at five, unbeaten on 97 at lunch.
Immediately afterwards, he reached three figures with a deft cut off
Alan Mullally.
His
century was the second of the Australian innings after Ricky
Ponting's 144 on Thursday.
The
29-year-old Martyn, exiled from the test team for six years until
last year, was the last man out for 118, caught on the rebound by
wicketkeeper Alec Stewart after Atherton parried an edge at first
slip. His dismissal, after facing 135 balls and hitting 18 fours
during a three-and-a-half-hour stay, gave Darren Gough five wickets
for 103.
The
right-hander from Western Australia had attacked from the outset,
debutant Simon Katich contributing just 15 to their quickfire 67-run
partnership in the morning.
Katich,
a replacement for the injured Steve Waugh, opened his account with a
textbook drive through extra cover off Andrew Caddick but then
shouldered arms to a Gough delivery which moved back into the
left-hander and clipped the top of the off stump, making it 355 for
five.
Martyn,
however, who made a century in the first test and a 50 in the
second, timed the ball to perfection and was particularly brutal off
the back foot.
Gough
helped England wrap up the Australian tail with the minimum of fuss
for once, as the last five wickets fell for 51 either side of lunch,
including that of the dangerous Gilchrist.
|