×
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Australians feel the heat

Last Updated 27 December 2013, 20:05 IST

Mitchell Johnson ripped through England taking the prized wicket of Kevin Pietersen to tilt the dead rubber fourth Ashes Test towards Australia on the second day today in Melbourne.

England, resuming at 226 for six, meekly succumbed to be all out for 255 with Johnson taking five for 63 in a withering four-over morning spell of three for four with two maidens.

Among the England wreckage was the wicket of Pietersen, out bowled going for a wild slog for 71 after adding just four runs to his overnight score.

In the 13 overs to lunch, Australia had reached 38 for two with Chris Rogers on 16 and Michael Clarke not out two after David Warner (9) and Shane Watson (10) went cheaply.

Warner top-edged Jimmy Anderson high into the air to give recalled wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow a straight forward catch.

While Bairstow took his second catch dismissing Watson for 10 off the bowling of Ben Stokes.

The wickets of Warner, who scored centuries in Brisbane and Perth, and Perth centurion Watson gave England some encouragement after a below-par first innings total.

Johnson now has taken 28 wickets at 14.96 for the series.

He had a double-wicket breakthrough in his opening over of the day, removing Tim Bresnan (1) and Pietersen (71).

Bresnan received a brutish rearing delivery first-up and he fended it away in an act of self-preservation to George Bailey at short leg.

Pietersen, who batted cautiously on the opening day for his 67 off 152 balls, added a streaky boundary off Ryan Harris before he fell to Johnson, four balls after Bresnan's dismissal. Pietersen went for a lusty swing and Johnson knocked back his middle stump as England's hopes slumped with the big loss of their showman batsman.

Pietersen, who passed Geoff Boycott as the fourth all-time England run-getter on the opening day, batted for 254 minutes before he became Johnson's fourth dismissal of the innings. Johnson then trapped Stuart Broad leg before wicket for 11.

Monty Panesar, who took an eye-watering blow in the groin from paceman Peter Siddle, was the last wicket to fall.

Panesar shouldered arms to spinner Nathan Lyon and was bowled for two leaving Jimmy Anderson 11 not out.

England's 255 was their highest first innings total in a poor-scoring series after 136 in Brisbane, 172 (Adelaide) and 251 (Perth), but still low to apply sustained pressure on the home side.

ADVERTISEMENT
(Published 27 December 2013, 04:11 IST)

Deccan Herald is on WhatsApp Channels| Join now for Breaking News & Editor's Picks

Follow us on

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT