Australia's Head fires quickfire 68 as England's Ashes hopes fade

AFP
Brydon Carse is cut away to the fence by Travis Head
Brydon Carse is cut away to the fence by Travis Head
© AFP

A dangerous Travis Head crunched an unbeaten 68 as Australia built an ominous 204-run lead Friday in the third Test as England’s hopes of salvaging the Ashes slid away.

At tea on day three, the hosts were 119-2 with Usman Khawaja partnering Head on 27 as they set about piling up a big total to put the five-match series out of England’s reach.

England lost the first Test at Perth inside two days and the second in Brisbane inside four, both by eight wickets, and only victory in Adelaide can save them.

Australia suffered an early setback in a tense 20 minutes before lunch after England were all out for 286 on the back of Ben Stokes’ gritty 83 in response to Australia’s first innings 371.

Bryson Carse trapped Jake Weatherald lbw for one and he walked without reviewing after the umpire lifted his finger, although replays showed the ball was pitching outside leg stump.

After the break, a busy Head began cutting and chopping boundaries to all corners of the ground, reviving memories of his match-winning 123 in Perth.

Marnus Labuschagne had a fright on eight when England made a huge appeal for caught behind, but the third umpire ruled there was a gap between bat and ball.

He had no such luck on 13 when he edged Josh Tongue to Harry Brook at slip, with reviews showing it carried.

Khawaja, who hit a defiant 82 in the first innings after his last-minute call-up for the ill Steve Smith, was again composed and a perfect foil for the more aggressive Head.

Ben Stokes scored 83 and Jofra Archer his maiden Test fifty in a 106-run stand
Ben Stokes scored 83 and Jofra Archer his maiden Test fifty in a 106-run stand
© AFP

After a woeful batting display on Thursday, Stokes and Jofra Archer kept England’s dreams alive with a stirring 106-run ninth-wicket stand.

They resumed at 213-8 in overcast and muggy conditions with Stokes not out 45 and Archer on 30.

Stokes, who suffered leg cramps and dehydration during his gutsy rearguard action in sweltering 40 Celsius heat on Thursday, brought up his slowest ever 50 in Tests, off 159 balls.

He kept plugging away but finally fell when Mitchell Starc took the new ball and bowled him, with Stokes one of the few players who showed the fight he had demanded before the game.

Archer was another, ably supporting his captain.

The fast bowler was the last man out when caught by Labuschagne off Scott Boland for 51 -- his highest Test score and a maiden half-century

Boland ended with 3-45 while Pat Cummins took 3-69 in his first Test since July after lower back issues.

England’s woes began when openers Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett, along with the under-performing Ollie Pope, departed in a 15-ball blitz on Thursday at the hands of Cummins and Nathan Lyon.

Harry Brook showed some resistance with 45, but the Australian attack was relentless.

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