The Ashes: England v Australia | 1st Test | Edgbaston | Jun 16-Jun 20 | Day 2

Head: We feel we are right in it
Australia's Travis Head....

"It has been challenging throughout and we knew that.

"We have just been saying two brilliant days of cricket so far.

"It has set the tone for what is going to be an amazing five or six weeks.

"We are right in it."
 
Head on UK 100:

A huge weight off his shoulders.

"I guess as an international cricketer, everyone talks about 100s overseas and he hasn't had the greatest of times leading into this series.

"I know he is determined and once he got through that new ball on that wicket, he played beautifully."
 
Broad: We got a lot out of a difficult pitch

England's Stuart Broad....

"I think it was a pretty good day actually.

"It has been a slow, turgid pitch so to be still 82 runs ahead of Australia with Pat Cummins and the tail next, we are pretty happy.

"Things could happen pretty quickly for us in the first hour tomorrow and there wasn't a lot in that pitch today.

"Ultimately, our aim is for Australia to bat last on that and for us to bowl last on that and hopefully it keeps deteriorating."
 
Australia had resumed on 14/0 after England declared on the first day – the second time England have made such an unusual move in 2023 under Ben Stokes’ captaincy.

And a slow opening half hour was soon blown up by a Stuart Broad double strike.

A wafted drive with limited footwork from David Warner saw him inside edge the ball onto his stumps, and Labuschagne fell victim to Broad’s recently-honed outswinger the very next ball, with Jonny Bairstow holding on to a good catch.

An attempted leg-side trap to Steve Smith on the hat-trick ball didn’t pay off, and Smith and Khawaja steadily ate through the morning session with a partnership of 38 across 16.4 overs before Stokes had the key man trapped lbw for a 59-ball 16.

Australia went in at lunch 78/3, still 315 runs behind, with England having used seven bowlers in the first session – including experimental single-over spells from part-timers Harry Brook and Joe Root.

Counter-attacking Australia took on Moeen Ali after lunch and Travis Head almost caught up with Khawaja as both reached their half-centuries in the session.

But Stokes stuck by his plan of keeping the field up to Moeen, and he reaped rewards for that faith when Head tried one shot too many and fell to the returning spinner for a 63-ball 50.

And the 35-year-old Moeen could have had a second wicket in the same over when a beautifully-flighted delivery spun past the charging Cameron Green only for Bairstow to miss the stumping opportunity.

Australia consolidated through until tea with the score at 188/4 and the lead down to 205. But just as it looked like Australia were gaining a clear upper hand in the game, with Khawaja and Green well set in the evening session, Moeen ripped a turner back through the gate to clean up Australia’s all-rounder for 38.

Khawaja’s ton gave Australia’s fans reason to cheer as the day ticked on, and the green and gold faithful had another moment of joy when Stuart Broad ripped out the off stump of the centurion with the new ball only to have overstepped – a second let-off in quick succession after Bairstow had failed to hold on to an edge from Carey off Root.

And Australia made England pay for the missed opportunities, with Carey reaching his half-century shortly before the close, as he (52*) and Khawaja (126*) saw off the second new ball and built a partnership worth 91 runs by the time play came to a close.

On a tough day for England’s bowlers, Moeen Ali got through 29 overs, three more than the number he sent down in the entirety of Chennai Super Kings’ winning Indian Premier League campaign.

And the England all-rounder is likely to be called upon plenty later in the match, with the Edgbaston wicket expected to offer more and more spin as the match unfolds.

Moeen finished with 2/124, with Broad (2/49) and Stokes (1/33) the other wicket-takers on a day when the England skipper did well to prevent over-bowling his pace-trio in morale-sapping conditions.

Khawaja and Carey will resume the third day 82 runs behind and looking to steer Australia into a first-innings lead.

ICC
 
Father time waits for no one. How long can Broad and Anderson keep toiling away in test cricket at their age? England cannot keep managing, reducing their overs at the expense of the team.
 
Father time waits for no one. How long can Broad and Anderson keep toiling away in test cricket at their age? England cannot keep managing, reducing their overs at the expense of the team.

Well you have the team captain bowling with a dodgy knee as well.
 
Australians never give up. There were quite a few moments where they could have buckled but they're as resilient as they come.

The match can go in either direction now.
 
Highlights of Day 2:

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Australians are back in the match.It is 50/50 now.

I say 60-40 in favor of Aus. I expect England to collapse in their 2nd dig leaving Australia to chase between 150-200 runs. Smith and Labu will relish it no matter how difficult the pitch will be on Day-5.
 
All the talk of Smith, Labu and Head, meanwhile Khawaja came in and stole the show.
 
England is lacking a potent spinner. Moin Ali is a part timer. Not sure why Jack Leach has not been selected.
 
England is lacking a potent spinner. Moin Ali is a part timer. Not sure why Jack Leach has not been selected.

It seems Leach is injured. In that case, Adil Rashid should have been picked. He would have turned the ball square on this pitch.
If Moeen Ali can turn the ball like this on Day-2, then you can only imagine what someone like Adil Rashid would have done.
 
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