Record crowd roars on Australia in Ashes

MCG crowd breaks Test attendance world record as Australia continues to dominate England on day one of the fourth Test.

Australian paceman Mitchell Johnson, left, celebrates dismissing England batsman Ben Stokes in Melbourne [AFP]

A world record crowd has watched another commanding Australian performance over England on day one of the fourth Ashes Test in Melbourne.

The opening day of the fourth Australia-England Ashes Test on Thursday set a new world record crowd of 91,092 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG), as Australia enjoy an unassailable 3-0 lead in the series.

Mitchell Johnson’s late double strikes fired up the MCG crowd and left England a rocky 226 for six after Kevin Pietersen threatened to win the opening day of the fourth Ashes match for the tourists.

Paceman Johnson steamed in to remove number six Ben Stokes (14) and wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow (10) in quick succession to put Australia marginally ahead at the end of a meandering Thursday’s play.

Coming in to the match under a barrage of criticism, Pietersen responded with a defiant half-century after being granted lives on six and 41, and went to stumps unbeaten on 67, with Tim Bresnan hanging on desperately with one run.

The boys in the team room are so pumped to have played in front of that many people.

by Ryan Harris, Australian fast bowler

With seamer Ryan Harris having Ian Bell caught behind by wicketkeeper Brad Haddin for 27 in the first of three wickets after tea, Australia’s bowlers worked hard to validate captain Michael Clarke’s surprise decision to field after winning his fourth successive toss of the series.

The hosts could have been in a stronger position, however, had they not let three catching chances go down, with two reprieving Pietersen. Their bowling attack also suffered a blow with all-rounder Shane Watson sustaining a groin injury.

Watson pulled up in his run-up and left the ground after lunch, and though he later returned to field in the slips, he did not bowl again.

Although quelling his usual attacking instincts, Pietersen was at his theatrical best in his 152-ball knock, slumping to his knees twice in an apparent bout of nausea after smacking a shot to midwicket where a leaping George Bailey put a tough chance down with the batsman on 41.

The crowd smelled gamesmanship as play was paused for a few minutes and Pietersen later enjoyed riling up the terraces again by holding up Johnson’s run-up in the final over.

Pietersen went on to dig in for a defiant 67-run stand with Bell before the lionhearted Harris struck. Harris unleashed a sublime delivery that jagged away off the seam and had Bell feathering an edge after he had become only the second batsman to surpass 1,000 runs in tests for the year with Clarke.

The Australian attack derived little from the drop-in pitch early but restricted England to 135 for three at tea with a disciplined line and length that saw the tourists’ run rate slow to crawl.

Before coming off injured, Watson bowled opener Michael Carberry for 38 before a flat-footed Joe Root was caught behind by Haddin off the bowling of Harris for 24.

The catch was the revitalised Haddin’s 50th in a year in which he has also scored more than 500 runs with the bat.

Siddle earlier continued England captain Alastair Cook’s forgettable series by dismissing him for 27 in the morning, breaking a promising 48-run opening stand with Carberry.

Carberry nicked behind when on two runs, but a diving Steven Smith put down a difficult chance that he might better have left for second slip Clarke.

Australia paceman Ryan Harris said said the noise at the end of the day when Johnson was charging in was tremendous.

“The boys in the team room are so pumped to have played in front of that many people,” Harris said.

England, who have already lost the five-test series 3-0 to surrender the coveted urn, dropped wicketkeeper vice captain Matt Prior, who paid the price for a poor campaign with the bat and behind the stumps.

Yorkshire’s Bairstow, recalled for the first time since the northern Ashes series, lasted 19 minutes at the crease before being bowled by Johnson.

It was the biggest single-day crowd for a cricket Test match and eclipsed the previous single-day crowd record at the MCG of 90,800 set in the 1961 Test between Australia and the West Indies.

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies