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Australia v England: Ashes first Test, day two – live

Over-by-over report: The tourists take a 40-run lead into the second innings in the series opener in Perth. Join our writers for updates

Australia v England: Ashes first Test, day two – live

4.31am GMT Lunch – England 59 for 1, lead by 99 runs It was a scratchy session for England’s second pair, but it’s ultimately been successful. A lead of 99 is substantial with most of the batting yet to come. Australia need something in the next stanza from Doggett, who has been patchy today, and Boland, who has just started to find his rhythm. 4.20am GMT 15th over: England 59-1 (Duckett 28, Pope 24) Now what in the Sam Hill was that? Duckett charges Boland like a man running for his bus, does a sudden turn back like a man realising he’s forgotten his umbrella, and in between times is smashed on the front elbow. He’s in a lot of pain, wanders off to square leg, waits for treatment, and there’s a lengthy delay as he gets seen to by the physio. Finally gets back to take guard, final ball of the over, and Boland runs in and pins him lbw! The umpire gives it. Duckett reviews, because he’s jumping and it hits him above the knee roll, but he’s still short enough and playing far enough back for that to be clipping the bails… but it’s pitched outside leg! By a millimetre. Poor old Boland, thought he’d broken through, but not to be. Updated at 4.46am GMT 4.15am GMT Our reporter Ali Martin is lurking somewhere nearby at the ground, writing in. “Speaking of AC/DC, I was part of the first ever crowd in this ground, a test event eight years ago that saw England Lions play Perth Scorchers. Memories include Mitchell Johnson looking pants-wettingly terrifying on a pitch that hadn’t remotely settled, Mark Wood somehow drilling him back over his head for one of the biggest sixes I have ever seen, and the ‘Thunderstruck’ light show at the change of innings. It’s not an amazing anecdote, granted.” Cricket is full of not amazing anecdotes, Ali, but anything that involves Mark Wood hitting a dinger, I’ll listen to. 4.13am GMT 14th over: England 58-1 (Duckett 28, Pope 23) Finally, a shot makes the fence. Duckett steps into a straight drive against Doggett and hits it very nicely, no slogging, no heaving, no displaced vertebrae. “Yesterday was a whirlwind of cricket. The bowling was amazing! But the English batting was awful and Australia was even worse. Has T20 destroyed test batting? Would love to see a century or two and some determined, patient batting. Maybe I’m too old school.” Hello, Kathy Phillips. I agree that the batting was dreadful, really. But I don’t think that T20 is the culprit. Most of these players hardly play any. England’s lot are churning out 20 Tests a year, and not many of Australia’s Test side are regular short-form players. Australian pitches are good for bowlers these days, and the batters can’t handle it. Updated at 4.13am GMT 4.07am GMT 13th over: England 54-1 (Duckett 24, Pope 23) How is Pope still there? Twice more in this over he pushes at Boland, gets beaten, nearly nicks it, doesn’t nick it. He’s living on borrowed deliveries. It’s a maiden, Boland’s first for the match. 4.05am GMT 12th over: England 54-1 (Duckett 24, Pope 23) The Duck drives The Dog nicely through mid off, but again the grass saves a couple of runs. “Delighted to see Crawley’s pair, despite being English - not because of any dislike or ill will, but because I am so desperate that England reconsider whatever gnostic rites they’ve bound themselves to in the name of the Undroppable. Please, give the boy a rest. A big innings now and then is all very nice, but his average is unforgivable.” I’m broadly with you, H. North, but I think they’ve kept him for so long almost entirely because they think his booming style might harvest them a match-winning knock somewhere along the line in this series, on hard pitches against properly fast bowling. So it would waste all that previous angst by abandoning the gamble now. I say give him the next four Tests, then we’ll call the farm up-country. 4.01am GMT 11th over: England 51-1 (Duckett 22, Pope 22) Starc will be replaced, after five overs. Australia desperately need Boland to lift today. He only bowled ten overs on day one, he should be fresh, but he hasn’t been effective. Nice seam movement to beat Pope’s drive here. That’s the Boland method, subtle shifts in line. A couple of singles. “Doggett and Duckett should open a pub together when they retire.” The Dog and Duck, Tom! Great shout. The coat of arms could be the characters from the original Nintendo game. Updated at 4.18am GMT 3.54am GMT 10th over: England 49-1 (Duckett 21, Pope 21) Australia, those in the north will be pleased to know, have gone to bits in that over. First, an overthrow lets Duckett get back for a second run. Next ball, off the pad, they scurry a leg bye and Weatherald, desperate to have some influence on the game, flings at the non-striker’s end and gives up an extra four. Finally, Doggett bowls more wide junk and Pope drives what should be four runs, except the AC/DC Memorial Outfield slows up the ball for three. Australian fielders give up four extra runs, Australian concert scheduling saves one. 11 from the over. 3.48am GMT 9th over: England 38-1 (Duckett 18, Pope 14) Duckett, whisper it, seems to be playing carefully against Starc. Perhaps even… seeing him off? Pope isn’t, essaying a huge drive that misses the lot, then getting his gloves tenderised next ball, before swishing and missing again. But he’s still there. 3.42am GMT 8th over: England 37-1 (Duckett 17, Pope 14) Here’s Doggett then, to give Boland a breather before Boland replaces Starc. Bowls wide, slashed away, but the bad ball should still have been saved. Except Lyon is back on the ground, and misses it running around from point. Gives up three. No point for Duckett though, and he has a deep third and a fine leg as the only fielders back. Happy to encourage him to play in that direction, but instead he tucks to leg for one. Pope has three slips, gully, point, cover, mid off, mid on, midwicket, fine leg. So he cuts through the gap in the cordon for four! Doggett too short and too wide so far. Updated at 4.16am GMT 3.38am GMT 7th over: England 29-1 (Duckett 16, Pope 11) Starc has it swinging a bit, on this overcast day. Cuts Pope in half, over the stumps as he misses the drive, then beats him for pace to give up a leg bye off the bat. Finds the thick outside edge of Duckett’s bat for a couple of runs through point. Starc is on top of them, but can’t finish them off. That’s the fourth over in his spell, can’t imagine he’ll bowl more than six. “It was an amazing catch, but it should not mask the fact that Crawley was once again out driving on the up,” emails Adam Levine. “Rob Key has barely put a foot wrong since taking over but his blind spot via-à-vis Crawley is utterly mystifying.” Being surprised that Crawley drives on the up is like being surprised by Phar Lap running on four legs. Not that I’m comparing their success rate, but yes, it’s what he does. Getting picked to do it is puzzling, but if it spares us from watching the techniques of Burns, Sibley and the like, I say pick him for the next 10 years. 3.34am GMT 6th over: England 26-1 (Duckett 14, Pope 11) Nothing extravagant in that Boland over, Pope flicking three to midwicket, both batters trading singles. For a brief moment it looks like normal cricket. 3.32am GMT 5th over: England 21-1 (Duckett 13, Pope 7) Very early days, but it feels like England are getting back on top here. You can get Crawley cheaply twice, but Duckett has a knack of making scores, it feels like he’ll get a few in at least one of his two hits each match. Pope helps them see off another over of Starc, picking up a couple of runs in the process. 3.29am GMT 4th over: England 18-1 (Duckett 13, Pope 4) They’re trying to go after Boland again. Not without risk at this stage, but after working a two and a three, Duckett runs down last ball of the over and throws his bat, skewing the ball over gully in risky fashion but picking up four more. Updated at 3.47am GMT 3.18am GMT 3rd over: England 9-1 (Duckett 7, Pope 1) England living dangerously. Pope drives at Starc, inside edge past his leg stump down to fine leg for one. Duckett drives, slices it through the gap in the cordon for four. Then after adding a brace, Duckett cracks one to cover, straight to Labuschagne, who almost catches Pope napping at the non-striker’s end, immediately releasing the throw and not missing by much. 3.14am GMT 2nd over: England 2-1 (Duckett 1, Pope 0) Good start from Boland. Smacks Duckett on the gloves, then takes his edge, on the bounce to slip. A handy sub fielder, by the way: Beau Webster at third slip, all six-foot-fifteen of him, a good swap for the old stager Nathan Lyon. Khawaja is out there, no sign of back problems today. Duckett nudges a single, Pope adds a leg bye. 3.08am GMT 1st over: England 0-1 (Duckett 0, Pope 0) Again, Ollie Pope in early. Survives the first ball against Starc despite an lbw appeal. 3.07am GMT WICKET! Crawley c & b Starc, England 0-1 Standing up tall, high backlift, Crawley waits for Mitchell Starc and… leaves the ball! Scandal. Drama. Nobody expected that. Thankfully he smokes the next one, but straight at mid off. Leaves the third ball. Almost offers a leading edge as he defends the fourth. The fifth, though… the fifth. What an unbelievable catch! Mitchell Starc, you absolute star! Crawley pushes defensively, the bat twists in his hand, and the ball skews back towards the bowler. Not close to the bowler, though. He’s bowling over the wicket, left-arm, and the ball has gone towards the off side of the pitch for the right-hander. But somehow, in the follow-through, Starc flings himself across space and time, like a flicked elastic, and just gets a hand to it. The ball sticks in that palm. Then as he falls, Starc cocks his wrist upwards, so his little finger stays under the side of the ball, and he keeps it sufficiently off the ground as his arm makes contact. They look at some replays but the catch is, remarkably, clean. A pair for Crawley, and all three innings so far have had a wicket in the first over without a run on the board. Check the history books, please. WHAT A RIDICULOUS TAKE! Mitchell Starc sends Zak Crawley off for a pair! #Ashes | #PlayoftheDay | @nrmainsurance pic.twitter.com/1cg8PtLzx4— cricket.com.au (@cricketcomau) November 22, 2025 Updated at 3.14am GMT 3.00am GMT “Get ready for Crawley Mania. The Summer of Zak,” mutters my colleague Charlie Reynolds in the Perth press box. We’re all set. 2.49am GMT England lead by 40 runs on the first innings Remarkable to say that, after they were bowled out for 172 yesterday, but Australia’s batting was papier-mache and England’s bowling was the sprinkling of rain required to make it fall apart. What a wild tale. Mitchell Starc is out there warming up, he’ll need another massive performance in the next two hours if Australia want to stay in the hunt. If England’s aggressive openers get away, this game could become very one-sided very quickly. 2.48am GMT WICKET! Lyon c Duckett b Carse 4, Australia 132-10 A minor victory for the batting pair in having seen off Mark Wood, but the bowling change brings the more important victory for England, as Lyon drives at Brydon Carse and slices to gully. Done and done. England lead! Updated at 3.29am GMT 2.47am GMT 45th over: Australia 132-9 (Lyon 4, Doggett 7) Another six balls faced for Doggett, for no profit this time. He leaves a few but heaves at a couple, once across the line, missing and hit on the body by Atkinson, then a big wafty uppercut that does nothing. He’s trying… 2.44am GMT 44th over: Australia 132-9 (Lyon 4, Doggett 7) The fact that the last pair are batting reasonably comfortably won’t make Australia feel good about bowling to England imminently. Doggett drives with some confidence at Wood. Mistimes it for a single to cover, but wasn’t afraid to get on the front foot. They’ve cut the deficit to 40. 2.37am GMT 43rd over: Australia 131-9 (Lyon 4, Doggett 6) And on it goes for Doggett. Another clunky drive, this time through mid on, gets him back for a second run. Fourth ball of the over he finally gets a reprieve, a single to cover. Atkinson bumps Lyon but the ball sails way over his head. 2.35am GMT 42nd over: Australia 128-9 (Lyon 4, Doggett 3) Lyon single first ball puts Doggett back on strike. Ohh, dropped catch! In at short leg, Pope under the mitre, and the ball reaches his fingertips but goes down rather than up. Mark Wood keeps peppering Doggett, who by the end of the over has faced every delivery so far today but two. The sixth ball he decides he’s had enough and aims a big drive, inside edges it, gets a run to fine leg, and keeps the strike. 2.31am GMT 41st over: Australia 126-9 (Lyon 3, Doggett 2) Now Doggett is off the mark! Gets a couple of runs through backward point, steering away Atkinson. Happy to come back and keep the strike too, and sees off the rest of the over. 2.29am GMT 40th over: Australia 124-9 (Lyon 3, Doggett 0) How’s this for a task first thing in the morning. Brendan Doggett, No 11 on debut, facing Mark Wood at a million miles an hour. He does a good job, though! Leaves one, blocks one, ducks the short one, and eventually adds a run to the total via his thigh pad. Not a run for him, though, he’s yet to get off the mark. Updated at 3.32am GMT 2.20am GMT Hello again. A very different morning today than it was yesterday. Cool, overcast, but the clouds are high and bright, so don’t worry, no chance of interruptions at least in the short term. Updated at 2.46am GMT 2.13am GMT There are grey skies around Perth Stadium as we close in on the start of day two but play is expected to begin on time in 10 minutes or so. Nathan Lyon and Brendan Doggett will seek to carry Australia closer to England’s first innings total of 172, while the tourists lead by 49 runs and need one wicket to bat again. Updated at 3.30am GMT 2.06am GMT Mitchell Starc didn’t quite play a lone hand for Australia, but the hosts were well short of the five star quicks that England rolled out on day one in Perth. Simon Burnton looks at how Jofra Archer, Gus Atkinson, Mark Wood, Brydon Carse and, of course, captain Ben Stokes hunted as a pack to turn the first Test on its head. There is a strong argument that Ben Stokes should have made a different choice at the toss and immediately unleashed his barrage of fast bowlers at Australia’s openers, an out-of-sorts Usman Khawaja approaching his 39th birthday and a 31-year-old debutant in Jake Weatherald. As it turned out, his decision did not delay that moment for long, the tourists bowled out for 172 inside 33 overs. This turn of events may have brought England’s supporters down to earth, but it inspired their players to reach for the stars. Related: England’s fab five bully Australia’s finest with faultless display of raw aggression | Simon Burnton 1.51am GMT The Ashes opened with Mitchell Starc putting Australia in a position of strength while sending another reminder that he is more than just a member of a fast and furious trio. Geoff Lemon was at Perth Stadium to witness the left-arm quick’s career-best seven for 58. Starc did not pick up wickets in a kamikaze burst, but with consistent quality over a dozen overs split into two lengthy spells, the second of which was cut in half by the lunch break. Without much swing, with decent carry but no obvious weapons for a bowler, he was consistently above 140kmh (87mph), constantly at his opponents with barely a loose delivery. It might well have been his highest-quality performance on a surface good for batting. Related: Starc showed Australia they didn’t need the Big Three – the Big One would do | Geoff Lemon 1.39am GMT If you missed the remarkable day one of the first Test, or just want to relive what was the highest of drama, Ali Martin reported on all the action from Perth Stadium. Not since Old Trafford in 1909, when 20 batters were sent packing, have more wickets fallen on the first day of an Ashes Test. There were 19 here, a fast-bowling festival, and those England supporters back home who woke up midway through could have been forgiven for feeling a bit played. An initial collapse to 172 all out in 32.5 overs by the tourists must have been like discovering a horse’s head in the bed, reason to once again bemoan the excesses of so-called Bazball. But Ben Stokes (five for 23) and his ­fellow quicks then delivered a far more instructive message, reducing Australia to 123 for nine by stumps and inflicting a good few bruises to go with it. Related: Ashes begins with a bang after 19 wickets on dramatic day one give England early edge Updated at 1.40am GMT 1.20am GMT Preamble Have we all got our breath back? That was an absolutely nonsense, absurd, bizarre opening day: 19 wickets in a Test day in Australia that only contained about 70 overs. Can nobody remember how to bat anymore? Was the pitch too difficult? The answer is no, not really, because some players do still bat for long periods of time elsewhere, and the surface had some pace and bounce but nothing inconsistent or unplayable. It’s just that nobody played it well, against some decent fast bowling. So we’re almost 50% of the way through the match in scoreboard terms, in 20% of the allotted days and 16.4% of the allotted overs. Holy balance sheet, Robin. Australia trail by 49 runs! After bowling out England for 172! The last pair will resume, but we’re not imagining that Lyon and Doggett will add a lot with the bat. Then, it will be Shootout No.2. Don’t look away from the match today, there may not be much left of it by tomorrow.

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