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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
Sport
Geoff Lemon (earlier) and Tim de Lisle

Australia v England: third one-day international – as it happened

England are struggling.
England are struggling. Photograph: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

If you’re recording the football for later, please look away now. Saudi Arabia have just taken the lead against Argentina. Do join Daniel Harris here for our MBM.

Time for me to sign off. Here are the scores on the doors for anyone tuning in late: Travis Head 152, England 142. And that says it all.

Thanks for your company and correspondence, and we’ll see you soon for a Test series – Pakistan v England, starting next Thursday. Can Ben Stokes’s buccaneers do it on a dustbowl in Rawalpindi? We shall see.

And here’s the winning captain, Pat Cummins. “It’s been fantastic,” he says. “Good to finish them off here with just about the best ODI I’ve been part of.” He may be referring to the Australian performance, rather than the match as a whole.

Here’s Jos Buttler, easy-going as ever. “We tried our best, we fell a long way short. I thought Australia outplayed us in every department… But lots to be proud of. We got exactly what we wanted from coming here.”

Updated

The player of the series is David Warner. He’s been good, but not that good – someone call the police, Adam Zampa’s been robbed.

Here’s Isa Guha with the presentations, wearing a pistachio suit. You don’t get that from Mike Atherton. The player of the match is, of course, Travis Head, who made 152 and put on 269 with David Warner. He makes modest noises: “I rode my luck a little bit for the first 30 or 40 runs.”

Updated

Does this count as revenge?

A few weeks ago, England beat Australia 2-0 in a T20 series. Then they went and won the T20 World Cup, while the Aussies fizzled out at the group stage. The rules of the game state that if England have the temerity to beat Australia, they have to expect a hiding the next time the two teams meet. And so it transpired.

Australia were very good, especially Head, Warner, Hazlewood and Zampa. England were very bad, and the series was very pointless. It will be forgotten next week, while the World Cup will be long remembered.

Updated

Australia win the series 3-0 (Stone b Zampa 4, England 142 all out)

Stone is befuddled by Zampa’s googly, so that really is that.

31st over: England 133-9 (Willey 3, Stone 4) A well-earned wicket for Mitch Marsh, who was moving the ball too much to find the edge in his first spell. Olly Stone, who surprised everyone by grabbing four late wickets, now repeats the trick with four early runs – a proper cover drive.

Wicket! Dawson c Carey b Marsh 18 (England 129-9)

Dawson goes for a flail and gets a nick.

30th over: England 127-8 (Dawson 16, Willey 3) Dawson misses a sweep and Zampa is convinced he’s goddim. Pitched in line, hit in line … but doing too much. This provokes a lot of high-pitched mirth on the stump mike, as if the Aussies weren’t laughing already.

“Please tell me,” says Tony Cowards, “Adam Zampa’s nickname is ‘Christmas’?”

Updated

29th over: England 123-8 (Dawson 14, Willey 1) Success for Sean Abbott, the only Aussie bowler with one-day figures (8-0-45-2).

“Evening Tim,” says Patrick O’Brien. “This is so bad, the only ethical decision is to watch the World Cup.” Ha.

Wicket! Curran c Hazlewood b Abbott 12 (England 122-8)

Looking for his second six, Curran can only pick out Hazlewood at deep mid-off. And that’s drinks, with England needing a drop of brandy.

England look knackered. Curran is out for 12.
England look knackered. Curran is out for 12. Photograph: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

Updated

28th over: England 119-7 (Curran 11, Dawson 13) Sam Curran plays the shot of the innings, a back-foot straight loft off Zampa that goes for six! And a very economical one, as it lands on the rope. Dawson backs him up with a sweep for four, which, as a commentator observes, is not an easy shot to play off Zampa. This partnership is already 24, one more than the one between Vince and Moeen, off about half as many balls.

27th over: England 106-7 (Curran 8, Dawson 3) Liam Dawson, whose bowling earlier was nothing like Zampa’s, sets about making amends with his unfussy batting. He is dropped at deep square by the sub, Mackenzie Harvey – a tough chance, over his shoulder. The ball dribbles away for four.

26th over: England 97-7 (Curran 1, Dawson 1) If you thought Cummins and Hazlewood had good figures, have a look at Zampa’s: 3-1-5-2. He has ten wickets in the series, which is apparently the most ever taken by an Aussie leggie in a bilateral one-day series. Somewhere above Melbourne, a leg-spin legend utters a chuckle of disbelief.

Updated

Wicket! Moeen c Someone b Zampa 18 (England 95-7)

Moeen goes down the track and slices Zampa straight to Marnus Labuschagne at long-off.

Out!
Out! Photograph: Graham Denholm/CA/Cricket Australia/Getty Images

Updated

25th over: England 95-6 (Moeen 18, Curran 0) Moeen, after witnessing the latest bit of carnage, strikes back with a four … off the top edge, over the keeper. We all knew this series was going to be an anticlimax, but it has surpassed itself.

24th over: England 90-6 (Moeen 13, Curran 0) Cummins, finally realising that he can afford to set Test-match fields, gives Zampa two short legs for the hat-trick ball. Sam Curran is equal to it, getting a thick inside edge to a full flat delivery that may have been doing nothing at all. Still, that is a double-wicket-maiden.

Here’s Matt Winter. “I wonder if any of the stattos out there know what the ‘least inspiring run chase’ is? This must be up there. I’m giving up and watching Jersey vs. Where The Hell Is That in the wendyball. I think that’s who is on anyway.”

Wicket! Woakes LBW b Zampa 0 (England 90-6)

The googly is too good for Woakes, and Zampa is on a hat-trick.

Out!
Out! Photograph: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

Updated

Wicket! Buttler c Stones b Zampa 1 (England 90-5)

Butter isn’t going to die wondering. He goes for a big hit without sizing up Zampa at all and duly perishes to a top edge, caught at cover. And that’s that.

Out!
Out! Photograph: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

Updated

23rd over: England 90-4 (Moeen 13, Buttler 1) And so ends the most painful partnership ever between two players as elegant as Vince and Moeen. Here’s Jos Buttler, who would be England’s last hope, if this weren’t essentially a Test match played in coloured clothing. He’s off the mark with a clip to leg.

Updated

Wicket! Vince c sub b Abbott 22 (England 89-4)

Vince hits a four, at last – an elegant pull – and it goes to his head. He tries again, gets a top edge and is comfortably caught at fine leg.

Mackenzie Harvey catches James Vince at fine leg.
Mackenzie Harvey catches James Vince at fine leg. Photograph: Graham Denholm/CA/Cricket Australia/Getty Images

Updated

22nd over: England 85-3 (Vince 18, Moeen 13) Here is Zampa. As they can barely lay a bat on the seamers, England need to get about 20 an over off Zappa’s leg-breaks. They manage three off this one, with Moeen carting a couple over midwicket.

21st over: England 82-3 (Vince 17, Moeen 11) Abbott replaces Hazlewood, and after a few more dots Moeen finally locates the middle of the bat, playing an uppish off drive for four. That’s the first boundary in several years.

20th over: England 77-3 (Vince 16, Moeen 7) On this pitch, even Mitch Marsh is unplayable. He has Moeen dropped for the second time – at third man this time, by Adam Zampa, who may have been distracted by wondering if he is going to get a bowl.

Updated

19th over: England 73-3 (Vince 14, Moeen 5) Hazlewood continues, bowls a nip-backer and hits Vince slap in the box. Ouch. “It’s James Wince, isn’t it,” says Adam Gilchrist (I think). Almost as painfully, the rate required is now 10: England need 291 off 29 overs.

“Hi,” says John Starbuck. “Good news about St Helena, but what match would be between the very smallest cricket nations?” I’m going to have to throw that one out to the floor.



Updated

18th over: England 71-3 (Vince 13, Moeen 4) Moeen, facing Marsh, continues to bat like a man who’s not really in the team. His drives find the fielders in the ring, his only scoring shot is a top-edged chip over midwicket for two, and while running the second he bumps into his partner. To be fair, the commentators are saying that the movement, which has become more pronounced since the 10th over, is the most ever recorded in an ODI at the G.

Updated

17th over: England 69-3 (Vince 13, Moeen 2) Cummins takes himself off and brings back Hazlewood. He thinks he’s nabbed Vince LBW but there’s an inside edge. Together, Hazlewood and Cummins now have figures of 12-2-44-3. Their English counterparts, Woakes and Willey, managed 19-0-125-0.

16th over: England 68-3 (Vince 13, Moeen 1) Moeen gets off the mark … by being dropped at slip, by Steve Smith, off Marsh, tipping it over the bar. That was a classic Moeen waft.

The required rate is now 9.25.

Updated

15th over: England 66-3 (Vince 12, Moeen 0) Just a wicket-maiden from Cummins, who now has figures of 6-2-25-2. And here’s Moeen Ali, who wasn’t even playing until Phil Salt banged his head and his shoulder as he tried to save a boundary.

Updated

Wicket! Billings c&b Cummins 7 (England 66-3)

Just when I was thinking “why aren’t England trying to pull”, Sam Billings answers the question. He’s late on the shot and can only send it straight up into the night sky. Cummins, cool as a cucumber, waits for it to drop into his hands.

Sam Billings is caught by Cummins.
Sam Billings is caught by Cummins. Photograph: Asanka Brendon Ratnayake/AP

Updated

Drinks: Australia well on top

14th over: England 66-2 (Vince 12, Billings 7) Mitch Marsh comes on with his medium pace, which should be a relief to the batsmen, but he finds some lavish movement. Billings is first beaten by a leg-cutter, then bamboozled by a full ball that loops up off the leading edge, just over the ring on the off side. At drinks, England need 298 off 34 overs. They will be doing very well if they get anywhere near that.

Updated

13th over: England 62-2 (Vince 11, Billings 4) Cummins kept himself on – what is this, the Ashes? – and Roy kept playing and missing. One of the commentators revealed that he had now missed 21 times in 45 balls. He managed two more misses after that, in fact three including the ball that did for him. Billings looks better already: he lets a wide go by and then hits a four, punched past mid-off.

Wicket! Roy LBW b Cummins 33 (England 57-2)

Got him! Roy moves over to off stump, tries something wristy, misses and looks plumb. Only the height can save him, and it’s umpire’s call as HawkEye shows the ball brushing the bails.

Jason Roy goes for 33.
Jason Roy goes for 33. Photograph: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

Updated

12th over: England 56-1 (Roy 33, Vince 10) Five off the over from Abbott, who tries to interest Cummins in a review for LBW as an attempted yorker thuds into the bottom of Roy’s pad. Cummins is unconvinced, rightly as it’s going down, and the umpire decides Roy has got some bat on it anyway – or perhaps forgets to signal leg-bye.

11th over: England 51-1 (Roy 32, Vince 6) Hazlewood takes his sweater (5-0-18-1) and Cummins fancies a change of ends. Roy resumes playing-and-missing but manages to pick up a two with that flick of his. The required rate is already about eight and a half.

We have an email! “You’ve not heard from me for a while,” says Damian Burns, “but as we speak another British team are playing an ICC-recognised game of cricket. St Helena, a British Overseas Territory with a population of just 4000, are competing in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup Sub Regional Africa A Qualifier in Rwanda.” That is quite the title.

“Their first game against the mighty Kenya was drawn due to rain, and the boys learned some hard lessons about playing on a difficult turf wicket in a loss to home nation Rwanda in the second game. However, the guys bounced back yesterday in a spectacular 2 run victory against the Seychelles. Live now is our fourth game against Lesotho, before we face Mali this afternoon.” Great stuff.

Pat Cummins keeps it tight.
Pat Cummins keeps it tight. Photograph: Morgan Hancock/AAP

Updated

10th over: England 49-1 (Roy 30, Vince 6) Vince, facing Abbott, plays and misses yet again before finally remembering that he’s James Vince and cutting for three. The powerplay ends with Australia well on top but England hanging in there. The sun is half-out, so England’s blushes are not about to be spared by the rain.

Updated

9th over: England 45-1 (Roy 29, Vince 3) Roy has found his touch, to the point where he can take a length ball from Hazlewood, on off stump, and time it past mid-on. He has now added 30 in a useful little stand with extras.

8th over: England 38-1 (Roy 24, Vince 2) Cummins takes himself off and turns to Sean Abbott, who starts well (four dots) before letting Roy escape with two fours, a cover punch and a flick through midwicket. At the age of 30, Abbott is playing only his eighth ODI.

7th over: England 32-1 (Roy 17, Vince 2) Vince, facing Hazlewood, gets bat on ball for once and almost perishes as an inside edge pops up towards square leg but lands just short. Serves Cummins right for not having a short leg. Vince celebrates by taking a scrappy single to mid-off. His timing, usually so effortless, has deserted him tonight.

Updated

6th over: England 30-1 (Roy 16, Vince 1) Cummins keeps himself on and starts with a wide to Roy that is so wide, down the leg side, that it goes for four byes to boot. Cummins is finding movement and beating the bat but bowling too short to find the edge. There’s a second wide soon afterwards, and then a third. England are getting ’em in extras! Eleven so far.

5th over: England 23-1 (Roy 16, Vince 1) England could do with a boundary, and J-Roy supplies one, pinging a flick off Hazelwood. Vince still can’t buy a run (1 off 11). An ad on the pitch says “Bat. Bowl. Dettol.” which may be the silliest three-word slogan since “Take back control”.

Updated

4th over: England 17-1 (Roy 11, Vince 1) Too good from Cummins too: a maiden! To Vince, who was beaten on the inside edge, then the outside edge, then the inside edge again, more painfully. Game off.

Updated

3rd over: England 17-1 (Roy 11, Vince 1) Too good from Hazlewood, a Test bowler with Test figures this evening (2-0-5-1). Shame about Malan, who was England’s best bet for a designated driver to make 130 off 100 balls. That role now beckons to James Vince, who did get a hundred two games ago in his own personal timeline.

Updated

Wicket! Malan c Carey b Hazelwood 2 (England 15-1)

Mr Measured gets his measurements wrong! Malan sees a full length and goes for the drive but can only get an inside edge, well held by the keeper.

Josh Hazlewood celebrates the wicket of Dawid Malan. England are 15-1.
Josh Hazlewood celebrates the wicket of Dawid Malan. England are 15-1. Photograph: Asanka Brendon Ratnayake/AP

Updated

2nd over: England 13-0 (Roy 11, Malan 1) OK, one over to get your eye in, then you go for it. Jason Roy, who desperately needs runs, gets four from Pat Cummins’ first ball, forcing past cover, and another four later in the over from a clip off the pads. Game on!?

1st over: England 3-0 (Roy 1, Malan 1) How do you set about a monster chase? Sedately, it seems. At least when facing Josh Hazlewood. Three dots, two singles and a leg-bye as England’s Mr Measured, Dawid Malan, steps up to open in place of Phil Salt, who took a blow to the head earlier. I do hope he’s OK.

Updated

Hello everyone and thanks Geoff. What an elegant writer he is, even in an elongated shift covering a giant anticlimax. Still, this is quite a tally that Australia have piled up here. It should be more than enough to see off this depleted, demotivated England team. The only glimmer of hope for England is that (according to Cricinfo) of the nine successful chases above 350 in ODI history, four have come against Australia.

England must chase 364 to win

Let’s factor in the DLS adjustment. Australia’s 355 becomes 363, because if they had known about the missing overs then they would have attacked earlier.

So it will need to be one of those barnstorming England chases of old, to get something massive in 48 overs.

Should be fun. That’s enough for me, I’ll leave you in the capable typing hands of Tim de Lisle.

Updated

48th over: Australia 355-5 (Carey 12, Labuschagne 8) No time-wasting from Labuschagne. Bashes his second ball down the ground for four, cross-batted, after missing the same shot from his first. Lofts two over the bowler, then clears the front leg and smears two to midwicket.

WICKET! Marsh c Dawson b Stone 30, Australia 347-5

M-m-m-m-monster Marsh! First ball of the last over, home run over left field. Second ball though, big outside edge as he aims a drive at a full ball. Looping up to cover where Dawson tracks back under the high ball.

If Stone gets a five-for here it will be... quite something.

47th over: Australia 341-4 (Marsh 24, Carey 12) Two overs to go. Carey is clever in these situations. Flicks a couple of runs, then baseballs four over Willey’s head. Taking it off a length. Places twos into the gaps. The left-hander also messes up the bowler’s lines, twice he errs past the leg stump for wides.

46th over: Australia 328-4 (Marsh 22, Carey 3) A further drop for Labuschagne as Carey comes in, sensible option here. You do often see this after a huge partnership, that the rest of the players bat more frantically and wickets tumble. Olly Stone 3 for 6 in his last two overs after 0 for 65 in his first seven.

WICKET! Smith c Buttler b Stone 21, Australia 324-4

Olly Stone’s weird long day continues! Does well with his first couple of balls, blockholing Marsh to the tune of one run. Then Smith premeditates a scoop shot but Stone bowls shorter. Too short to make contact as Smith goes through with it. Or not quite? There’s the tinest feather of a touch on that ball, and Buttler makes a very understated appeal. Paul Wilson gives a very understated signal of out, and Smith walks straight off.

45th over: Australia 323-3 (Smith 21, Marsh 20) There’s the power of M. Bison. Short from Curran, but Marsh backs himself to make the distance and pummels it over the fence at deep square leg. Some hit at the MCG. Up and over cover for two more after that, then a single via inside edge and boot as Curran hits the blockhole. Good delivery. Too much width to Smith though, who is able to open the face and calypso drive this over backward point! Some shot for four. The field goes back there, so he hits past the bowler for two, then two through cover.

44th over: Australia 306-3 (Smith 13, Marsh 11) Smith walks at Woakes, leading edge into the covers for a run. Called a leg bye in the end. Marsh pulls another. And so it goes: back of a length, hitting to the square sweepers. Finally Marsh waits on one, pulls it finer, and nearly beats the fine leg but can’t quite. One run from each ball of the over.

43rd over: Australia 300-3 (Smith 11, Marsh 8) Chris Jordan is now at slip, following the Stoinis wicket. England taking the proverbial here. Marsh isn’t worried about slip, he flicks two runs and then bashes four straight.

Updated

WICKET! Stoinis c sub b Dawson 12, Australia 292-3

The break brings a breakthrough. First ball back, Stoinis aims leg side and gets a high leading edge towards point. And… is that Chris Jordan, sub fielding for England in the final overs? What a surprise, you’d never see that.

Updated

We’re back. 48 overs a side now.

Here’s Tom van der Gucht.

“In many ways, I’m more excited about tomorrow’s England v England Lions match. The opportunity for young upstarts to make a point is always exciting and I still remember the thrill of the Lions beating the main team on the run up to the 2010 T20 World Cup, leading to a complete change in personnel, direction and tactics.”

Em in Newcastle writes in. “Aside from congratulations Travis Head for the 100, what’s more pointless than this ODI series? How about a frisbee? That’s got no points either. What’s got more point? How about the 109th Grey Cup in Canadian Football League won by Toronto at the weekend?”

Well, I would direct people back to the Sam Billings interview at the start of the blog to find some point for the players ahead of next year’s World Cup. As for the Grey Cup, that doesn’t sound very colourful. Well done Toronto – if my very distant understanding is correct, they haven’t been swimming in titles with Blue Jays, Raptors, Leafs and the like.

Here comes the rain again. Just a light drizzle, but it’ll be enough to take some time and probably cost us some overs. Wonder what Duckworth and Lewis will make of things if Australia’s innings is curtailed now? And that’s before old mate Stern gets involved.

42nd over: Australia 290-2 (Smith 10, Stoinis 11) Woakes bashes away on a hard length, hoping to use the big square boundaries as protection or a wicket-taking device. Smith backs away and misses a swish, then backs away and plays the forehand overhead smash! Only gets one run for it, to mid on, but I recall him playing that in 2014 when he made that 192 against India batting for declaration runs. No boundaries from the over, only five singles, well bowled.

41st over: Australia 285-2 (Smith 8, Stoinis 8) Dancing shoes on for Smith, who hops outside his leg stump and cuts Dawson for four. Some sharp running for twos as well. Three leg-side boundary riders for Stoinis, who isn’t ready to play any huge shots yet. Hits a run past the bowler to keep the strike.

40th over: Australia 276-2 (Smith 3, Stoinis 4) Woakes returns. He’s had moderate success against Smith, as much as anyone can claim to have had. Wonder if that’s a planned rotation or a tactical move? Three overs left for him. Bowls four balls of six to Stoinis.

Phil Withall is watching from behind the sofa. “As an Englishman the disappointment of this Australian innings is only being compounded by the emptiness of the weather radar. I can see no hope in either...”

39th over: Australia 270-2 (Smith 1, Stoinis 0) Interesting that Smith got the nod at three, but Stoinis gets elevated above Labuschagne. Two wickets and one run from the Stone over!

WICKET! Head b Stone 152, Australia 270-2

And one brings two! Head steps away to the leg side, looking to play through or over cover. Stone perhaps has time to follow him a touch. The line of the ball is just outside leg stump, and it clips the outer edge of the timber after Head’s shot misses. That cheers up Olly Stone’s day a touch. Not sure he’ll be turning cartwheels about 2 for 66 in his eighth, but it’s better than not getting them.

WICKET! Warner c Willey b Stone 106, Australia 269-1

Finally the partnership breaks. Olly Stone has been turned into a bowling machine set to slot, but he gets one lucky break. Warner pulls to deep midwicket, hits the gap between the two outfielders quite well, but just has too much elevation or not enough depth on the hit, and Willey is able to make up a lot of ground running parallel to the trajectory and pull off a wonderful catch.

38th over: Australia 269-0 (Head 152, Warner 106) Even Curran is going now, with Head smacking him to the leg side through midwicket and then the other side of the wicket through cover, both length balls that the batter could set himself up to attack by shifting position.

Century! David Warner 101 from 97 balls

37th over: Australia 257-0 (Head 143, Warner 103) Goodness me. Travis Head is just pumping them now. Stone returns, first ball after drinks, and Head blasts him over long on and over the rope. Slashes away another boundary over the non-existent cordon. Takes a two and a one, gives strike to Warner, and Stone dishes him up an absolute freebie, low full toss with width, perfect for Warner to redirect through cover for four!

That’s ODI century #19 for Warner, which takes him ahead of Mark Waugh and behind only Ricky Ponting’s 29 for his country.

And Stone’s over has gone for 19.

36th over: Australia 239-0 (Head 130, Warner 97) A rare boundary from Curran, glanced through fine leg. This pair still running the second as hard as they did 36 overs ago, as Warner places the ball to deep midwicket. Warner has been out in the 90s four times before in ODI cricket. Gets off strike. Curran oversteps bowling to Head, has to deliver a free hit, and only gives away one run to deep point. Still the only England bowler today going at less than six per over. Drinks.

35th over: Australia 228-0 (Head 129, Warner 90) It’s the Richie Benaud over, the 35th. That old rule of thumb doesn’t quite work anymore. But let’s say that Australia are on track for… lots. And England’s only chance of pulling them back is if they go too hard and lose a bunch of wickets too quickly. There’s another six for Head, stepping well outside his leg stump and down the pitch to Dawson, contorting himself into a weird pretzel shape as he thumps a ball long over midwicket. Shades of Rishabh Pant in that one.

34th over: Australia 217-0 (Head 120, Warner 88) Curran has been useful so far, he’ll have some death overs to manage as well though you’d think. Tries the yorker, tries the slow bouncer, anything to draw a mistake, but these batters just keep collecting.

33rd over: Australia 212-0 (Head 118, Warner 86) Head charges Dawson, in the end cramping himself for room and pulling a single. Warner walks at the bowler to check a drive to mid off. Batting with restraint, got time to do so. He fell short of a hundred in the first match and won’t want to do that again. Head goes hard at Dawson’s last ball but Woakes saves it on the straight boundary. At some point this innings is going to light up, and everyone will have freedom to swing.

Updated

32nd over: Australia 206-0 (Head 114, Warner 83) There’s the 200 partnership for this pair, the second time they’ve done it in 13 innings together. Last time they went on to 284, the Australian ODI record. They take a single from every ball of Willey’s over, plus a wide. England looking flat as.

Updated

31st over: Australia 199-0 (Head 111, Warner 80) Nothing outrageous against Dawson, Warner relying on placement and running to score four from the over, Head content to knock a single to square leg.

30th over: Australia 194-0 (Head 110, Warner 76) The run rate is pushing 6.5 now, they’ve taken 38 off the last four overs. And we’re not even in the hitting stage of the innings yet. Willey manages to conjure a quiet over into existence, still six from it though. Dawson is about to come back.

29th over: Australia 188-0 (Head 108, Warner 74) Head plays his first post-ton slog, up high but with enough on it to clear mid on. It plugs for a single. That’s the second ball of the over. From the sixth, Head gets the shot more cleanly, hitting Woakes flat and wide of that fielder for four.

We’re crossing genres! Ground announcing / OBO coverage.

28th over: Australia 180-0 (Head 101, Warner 73) Ton’s up, fun’s up – but Warner is the one who decides to go big. Willey comes on to replace the struggling Stone, and Warner drop-kicks his first ball over wide long-on, the exact same spot where he hit Dawson. Six. Then closes out the over by shovelling a shorter ball over Buttler and away for four. Does Warner want to catch up?

Century! Travis Head 100 from 91 balls

27th over: Australia 168-0 (Head 100, Warner 62) A very sad sounding trumpeter is playing We Are the Champions, with all of the gusto of a deflating balloon. And Travis Head adds the final puncture, pop, by slashing World Cup winner Woakes away through backward point for four and for his century.

That’s his third for Australia, as well as nine others in List A cricket. He likes the 50-over format, for sure. Has applied his buccaneering style to this match, had some trouble early, but just ignored it and kept sailing. By now he looks completely in control.

26th over: Australia 161-0 (Head 95, Warner 60) Simple approach, and it keeps working today. Travis Head strides into that delivery from Stone, hitting it off a length over the bowler’s head, using a straight bat. Four. Tries to feather an uppercut through the vacant area by the keeper and misses that one. But if at first you don’t succeed… next ball, same ball, same shot, full face over the keeper, bat pointing back towards the boundary line. Top shot.

25th over: Australia 150-0 (Head 86, Warner 58) Moeen is looking after some of the scant fans in the ground, taking selfies down on the boundary between overs. Chris Woakes has the ball now from the Shane Warne End, England increasingly desperate for a breakthrough. No risks against the main man, but Head uses that trick again of moving to the off side and glancing fine for four. The rain didn’t cost us any overs, so it’s halfway through the innings and Australia should be thinking well over 300 by now.

24th over: Australia 143-0 (Head 81, Warner 56) Travis Head just keeps on keeping on! Stone is bowling a bit faster now, trying a short-pitched attack, but Head flat-bats him back down the ground for four, then slashes him to deep third for a couple. No fear.

23rd over: Australia 135-0 (Head 75, Warner 55) Quiet over for Dawson in contrast, four singles, but a couple of well struck shots to the boundary riders. Bold of Buttler to keep him on, that’s a test of nerve. For the bowler and the captain.

22nd over: Australia 131-0 (Head 73, Warner 53) Given that Moeen has replaced a specialist bat, he’s allowed to bat but not bowl. So go the substitution guidelines. Interesting argument as to what constitutes an all-rounder, then. Malan bowls occasionally, could he swap in both disciplines for Moeen?

Olly Stone has swung around to the MCC end, and bowls better, two singles off the over. Does bowl one down leg, Blocker Wilson is about to signal wide, but Buttler has a big appeal and then a long chat about whether to review for a catch. Wilson has to delay his signal, and by the time England’s confab is over, he has decided that the ball must have clipped clothing or pad to make a noise. Because no wide is signalled. You could say that’s tricky from England, or you could say it’s good umpiring to reconsider a decision when the first reaction was wrong.

Half century! Warner 50 from 53 balls

21st over: Australia 129-0 (Head 72, Warner 52) Now it’s Warner’s turn to swat Dawson for six. First ball of the over, lifted over wide long on and just over the rope. Neatly placed. A few singles to follow, and suddenly Dawson’s 2 overs, 0 for 7 has turned into 4 overs, 0 for 30.

20th over: Australia 118-0 (Head 70, Warner 43) Curran finishes off his interrupted over, but Head gets the better of him, finally latching onto a pull shot and hitting it for four. While you were sleeping, Phil Salt has been assessed after hitting his head while trying to save one of the Olly Stone boundaries earlier. He has been replaced via a concussion substitute by Moeen Ali, who I’m sure is thrilled. Cold, wet, fielding to another huge Australian partnership.

And we’re back.

Looks pretty clear out there. The tractors are doing the rope, and as I type the small cover starts to come off. They didn’t even put down the covers for the full square. Should be back on shortly.

And the rain is back. Nothing much on the radar, a few scattered fluffs of cloud, but enough to delay us briefly. Stand by.

19th over: Australia 111-0 (Head 65, Warner 41) There’s the team hundred, and the hundred partnership, as Head drives Dawson to long off for one. Warner starts to advance but checks his shot and dabs a single behind point. He chatters and scolds himself at the non-striker’s end for some reason or other. Head though is running nicely now, and threads a shot via an angled bat between cover and point, picking up three runs after a hard chase from Willey. Head gets the strike back from Warner, then ices the over with a six! Straight hit after a little shuffle towards Dawson, and the spinner cops his first full whack.

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18th over: Australia 99-0 (Head 55, Warner 39) No run from the over for Curran! Just testing Warner out by maintaining a very tight line on the off stump, and Warner won’t take a risk at this stage. The run rate is down to 5.6 per over.

17th over: Australia 99-0 (Head 55, Warner 39) Dawson into his second over, Head cracks the sweep shot but can’t beat the outfielder, two runs. Only four from the over. Dawson has been… curiously effective in this series. Wonder if we’ll see anyone take him on.

Half century! Travis Head 51 from 55 balls

16th over: Australia 95-0 (Head 52, Warner 38) Width from Curran, cracked but to deep point where there’s a sweeper. Deep third, long leg and square leg are the other boundary riders. Backward point, cover, mid off, mid on, midwicket in the ring. Too much bounce for Curran now, as Blocker Wilson wides his bouncer, so he pitches right up to follow and Head cracks the off-drive back past him. Four! And fifty. And after another single, drinks.

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15th over: Australia 88-0 (Head 47, Warner 37) Spin time. I wonder, later in life when his knees complain from bowling, whether Liam will call it Dawson’s creak? He’s got a walk-up start, eight paces and then into his delivery movement. Lands the first set pretty well, aside from a short one that Warner pulls over midwicket but sees it saved in the deep. Two runs from that, plus a single.

14th over: Australia 85-0 (Head 47, Warner 34) Curran is getting good bounce from his not very considerable height, and the Australians are wary of taking him on cross-batted. We saw Shan Masood come unstuck like that in the World Cup final here. A couple of little dinks via the pull shot in this over, but no full swings of the bat. Then he beats Head’s cut shot over the top edge to close.

13th over: Australia 81-0 (Head 44, Warner 33) Most of the bleeding keeps coming from a Stone. Head rides the bounce to crack a couple to deep cover, then Warner ends the over with another back-cut for four. Stone has given width more often than anyone today.

12th over: Australia 73-0 (Head 41, Warner 28) Here goes Scurran, scurrying in as he does. His first ball of the day is a perfect yorker, making Head work to keep it out. Low full toss second ball but Head only gets a run to mid off. Four singles from the over.

11th over: Australia 69-0 (Head 39, Warner 26) Stone continues, and this time Warner pays him some respect for a few balls. He’s starting from beyond the fielding circle, running in and hitting low 140s in the kph range. He should have been here for the World Cup, when the radars were juiced like 90s wrestling.

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10th over: Australia 64-0 (Head 37, Warner 23) The Australians close out the first ten overs with five runs from Willey, knocking the ball around. A few opportunities for England but the opening bats are still there, having gone at six per over.

9th over: Australia 59-0 (Head 33, Warner 22) A slow start from Warner, but he opts to get going as soon as Olly Stone comes on. Too short, too wide from England’s recovering quick, and Warner forehands him through cover before pulling him past mid on, two boundaries in succession. Another wide on beats the top edge with bounce, but could have been demolished. Warner doesn’t miss out to follow it though, driving a full ball on bent knee between the cover fielders in the circle. A lazy dozen for him, and the small crowd finds voice.

8th over: Australia 47-0 (Head 33, Warner 10) Live tally suggests fewer than 5000 spectators were here at the start of play. Most of those that I can see are in the Members Stand, where they don’t pay admission. Travis Head is giving them some high-wire entertainment though, clearing his front foot and pumping Willey down the ground for six. Again, the big shot is the only score from the over, as Head can’t beat the field afterwards.

7th over: Australia 41-0 (Head 27, Warner 10) Have to keep reminding myself that the 6th over doesn’t mean anything in 50-over cricket. The conditioning has been relentless. As it has for Head, who hasn’t been playing T20 stuff, but sees a barely short ball from Woakes and has to throw the bat at it. Only around waist height when his bat comes across its line, and it’s so hard to control a shot from there. He gets a looping top edge over the keeper for another dicey four.

Much better from the fifth ball, as he gets proper width from Woakes and crashed it through cover. But misses the inside edge and takes it on the pad to end the over. One of these misses is surely going to be his undoing…

6th over: Australia 32-0 (Head 19, Warner 10) Willey still swinging it, and Head is now muddled. Leaves, blocks, then hurls his bat through an off-drive for four. Streaky as, airborne and flapped away with a bent back knee, but straight of the field. Takes the next ball on the pad but too high to threaten, enough contact to scurry off strike. Warner reaches and nearly kisses width from the last of the over.

5th over: Australia 27-0 (Head 15, Warner 10) There goes Warner at last. Gets the whisper of width he wants from Woakes and plays his vintage back-cut, forcing the ball away with such timing that it speeds to the rope. Always such economy of movement in that shot that’s barely a shot. Follows up with three runs through cover. They’re going at a decent clip despite some good bowling.

4th over: Australia 19-0 (Head 14, Warner 3) There is some assistance for bowlers! Willey got one to jag in his last over, but it started wide and went wider. Now he gets a couple to swing in, it looks like live. And some seam movement away on the replay. There’s some graft for this batting pair in the near term. Head respects it and gets forward to defend for just about the first time today. Has to take his hand off the handle when the next ball bounces at him. Good contest. And brave from Head to end the over: guessing Willey’s line, he shifts over a mite and opens up a leg glance very fine. Four! The only scoring shot.

3rd over: Australia 15-0 (Head 10, Warner 3) Overturned on review! The luck is running for Head. Woakes nails him in line with the stumps, and Pistol Reiffel pulls the trigger, but Head was up on his toes and has cause for concern about the height. As it turns out, the review shows it pitching a millimetre outside leg stump, so the ball-tracking doesn’t even come into it. Warner demonstrates to him how to play a leave after that, then all but chips a catch to mid off, landing just wide and short. Which is also a description of the batsman.

2nd over: Australia 12-0 (Head 9, Warner 1) Head: dropped! And England drop heads. Willey the bowler this time, from the Members End. Another flash from Head, another edge, this one fine enough to hit the second slip, but above his head. Dawson in that spot, tips it over the bar and away for four runs.

1st over: Australia 5-0 (Head 4, Warner 1) Away we go. Two slips and a backward point in for Travis Head. Do you think that stops him hurling his hands at a line outside off stump? Don’t be daft. The edge flies fine to deep third and is well saved by Curran sliding across. Warner adds a single, Head clips three runs to leg. Chris Woakes adds another good over to his good last match.

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The rain has gone, the covers too, and the players are walking out to the middle.

In fact, if you’re wondering about the significance of this series for some of the players, I had a long conversation with Sam Billings about it only yesterday at the very ground we’re sitting in. Forgive the pragmatism but it seems relevant.

There’s a video version or the audio interview is part of a podcast here.

A bit more drizzle at the ground, so the hessian is going back on. This should pass quickly, the sky is bright. The ground announcer is still getting very pumped up announcing all of the players. “Number 33, Mah-nus Lllllllaba-shane!”

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Teams

Starc goes out for Hazlewood under the rotation policy. Ashton Agar is replaced after playing well for Abbott’s first match of the series. Stoinis and Marsh stay in rather than Cameron Green. England go with one spinner in Dawson as Stone comes back for Adil Rashid. Moeen Ali makes way for Buttler to return as captain.

Australia
David Warner
Travis Head
Steve Smith
Marnus Labuschagne
Alex Carey +
Mitchell Marsh
Marcus Stoinis
Sean Abbott
Pat Cummins *
Adam Zampa
Josh Hazlewood

England
Phil Salt
Jason Roy
Dawid Malan
James Vince
Sam Billings
Jos Buttler * +
Chris Woakes
Sam Curran
Liam Dawson
David Willey
Olly Stone

England win the toss and bowl

The visitors chased in the second match and couldn’t get there, despite good innings from James Vince and Sam Billings. Mitchell Starc was back on song, taking four wickets as did Adam Zampa. England will choose to chase again though, on what historically would be a good batting track at the G, but in the last two or three years has been a lively bowling surface. Matt Page the head curator has done wonders here. Interested to see what he serves up for a one-dayer.

As far as excitement goes, this is the third match in a decided series, it was raining up until a few minutes ago, and I can tell you from recently entering the ground that there is not a torrent of eager Melburnians flocking to this game. So far the seating bowl looks about the same as a healthy Sheffield Shield crowd.

Preamble

Here we go for one more time. The third instalment in… well, is it fair to say the least popular ODI series ever? There have been series between smaller teams with fewer people in attendance and smaller television audience, but there’s a difference between being ignored and having active antipathy towards matches actually existing.

That’s not for everybody, of course: plenty of the players in these matches have a point to make and the opportunity to do so. Not everybody is comfortably ensconced in the England squad with multiple World Cup medals. Nor do the Australians know exactly how they want to structure their team ahead of next year’s Cup, without a whole lot of runway left.

Anyway, it’s cricket, we like it, I’m watching it, you’re reading about it, so perhaps we should just enjoy it?

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