H
sport
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Ashes begins with a bang after 19 wickets on dramatic day one give England early edge

about 22 hours ago
A picture


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.

If they were not aware before, Australians now have confirmation that this is a very different England side from those who have landed here in the recent past.The fast-forward but fragile batting was a known quantity, granted.But it now comes with a pool of high-octane seamers who, if they are managed well, should test techniques and tickers in equal measure.Just ask Steve Smith, peppered as he was by Jofra Archer before the equally hostile Brydon Carse found his edge on 17.Archer twice cracked the funny bone that appeared to be missing 24 hours earlier when Smith was issuing that bizarre prepared speech about Monty Panesar, with another blow to a hand thrown in for good measure.

It was a serious working over.Only 71.5 overs were sent down in the day, but if anyone was claiming to be short-changed – beyond those with day three tickets, perhaps – they were howling into the void.Mitchell Starc’s career-best seven for 58 was worth the entrance fee alone, the footwork-devoid Zak Crawley knocked over with the sixth ball of the match and Joe Root, another duck, set up masterfully.The 35-year-old’s 17th Test five-wicket haul, in the absence of Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood – one that included well set up sucker balls to remove Ben Duckett and Stokes – was just one of many plotlines in a warp-speed experience for those inside the ground.

A mastermind was not needed to work out England were subpar with the bat, Starc’s wobble-seam excellence not entirely excusing some of the dismissals,Harry Brook top-scored with a daring 52 that felt like a high-wire act, Ollie Pope not far behind with a confident 46,But a lower-order collapse of five for 12 in 19 balls was a bit shallow, truth be told, with the trap of two 85m square boundaries frustratingly ignored by a number of them,What England did achieve during an innings that lasted 32,5 overs was to keep looking to score, something Australia did not.

Brendan Doggett held his own with two wickets on debut, but Scott Boland was back in his form of the last Ashes series: denied the chance to settle and taken for 62 runs in 10 overs.Cummins and Hazlewood can not return soon enough for the hosts.That may sound absurd on one level, this being the 15th time in England’s last 30 innings in Australia they have failed to breach 200.Yet the old adage about not judging an innings until both teams have had a go rang true once more.Doggett notwithstanding, the pressure of Starc was not matched at the other end.

­England’s gang of five made it an ordeal from both.It was not until Australia were 69 for four from 27 overs that Stokes felt it time to have a bowl himself.The all-rounder needed six overs to claim his second Test five-wicket haul on these shores.Travis Head, for 21, Cameron Green, 24, and Alex Carey, 26, were all wiped by his golden arm as Australia left the ground 49 runs in arrears and doubtless a bit dazed.Bouncy though it was, the surface did not appear to be the terror track the raw numbers suggested.

Air-speed counted for plenty and England had plenty more than their hosts,Gus Atkinson and Mark Wood went wicketless, but played ­significant roles in the chaos, the ­latter hitting 94mph on the speed gun,Green, struck on the helmet by Wood and nearly stumbling back on to his stumps, was another to be shaken,Sign up to The SpinSubscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week’s actionafter newsletter promotionAustralia had concerns about their top order before the series and the problems were only compounded ­further,It would be a stretch to claim it was 4D chess from England, but the lower-order collapse that followed Doggett ­getting Brook caught off the glove meant Usman Khawaja – who had been off the field with a back spasm – could not bat higher than No 4.

This forced Marnus Labuschagne to open once more and the debutant Jake Weatherald taking strike at the start of the reply.The left-hander’s first outing lasted two balls, knocked clean off his feet by Archer’s pacy full delivery and out lbw after a smart review from Stokes.Smith and Labuschagne made it to tea, but 15 runs from 10 overs told a story.It ended with Labuschagne bowled for a 41-ball nine, Archer crashing another delivery into the elbow – the ball ricocheting on to the stumps – and with tone-setting figures of two for 11 from nine overs.Though he leaked more runs, Carse was no less hostile, squaring up Smith for an edge to slip before an absolute brute to dismiss the newly arrived Khawaja.

A fightback might have followed against an attack featuring a drop-off after the frontliners, but Stokes, the fifth quick, kept the foot on the throat with a ­remarkable 36-ball spell.English hands were adhesive, save for one chance dropped by Atkinson off his bowling, with Brook the standout at second slip.The Yorkshireman had earlier given the 9,000 strong English contingent the jitters with his batting, repeatedly backing away to unleash his usual inside-out carves.But his own heart rate was seemingly low all day; one of only a few as this much-hyped series set pulses racing from the outset.
sportSee all
A picture

Your Guardian sport weekend: more Ashes drama, F1 in Vegas and the north London derby

Ashes series in Australia mostly unfold through the night for England’s followers at home, meaning keeping up with the series start to finish is strictly for the hardcore. For our Australian readers, though, you’ll be fine. In Perth play begins at 2.30am GMT/10.30am AWST and is scheduled to end at 9

about 15 hours ago
A picture

England’s fab five bully Australia’s finest with faultless display of raw aggression | Simon Burnton

After freewheeling at increasing pace for 16 giddy months, the Ashes hypemobile had to run out of road. But instead of letting it come to a juddering halt, the 22 players somehow managed to conjure a fresh acceleration.It is implausible for something as anticipated as this not to produce disappointment, as anyone who follows England knows far too well. Those memories will have flooded miserably back when Zak Crawley nicked the sixth ball of the day to slip. His wicket marked the start of not only the sudden whoosh of optimism leaking from the English balloon, but of a day of 19 wickets, bowling of impeccable quality (with exceptions) and absurd entertainment

about 17 hours ago
A picture

Alastair Cook and Becky Ives make best of TNT Sports’ shonky Ashes production | Barney Ronay

Presenter Ives was breezy, while Cook fronted everything like the last ceremonial horse of some dying cavalry unitYou know what they say. Never judge a pitch until both teams have batted really badly on it. You know what they say. Over here you bat long, bat hard, bat short, bat soft. You know what they say, the Ashes in Australia is all about a hybrid maverick production with a fan-first identity

about 18 hours ago
A picture

Wounded Wallabies on brink of unwanted 67-year record as French test awaits

As recently as August, the Wallabies humiliated rugby’s No 1 side, back-to-back world champions South Africa, in Johannesburg. They then smashed the pride of the northern hemisphere, the British & Irish Lions, in Sydney. By going all-in and not settling for a draw with Argentina, they won that Test – and with it, a nation’s heart.“The Wallabies are back”, we proclaimed. And indeed they are – back in the doldrums

about 18 hours ago
A picture

Golovkin to be elected World Boxing president and lead buildup to 2028 Olympics

The former world middleweight champion Gennady Golovkin is to be elected president of World Boxing and lead the sport as it heads towards the Los Angeles 2028 Olympics.Golovkin, who won Olympic silver in Athens in 2004 and went on to make the most world title defences in middleweight history, is the only presidential candidate approved by the sport’s independent vetting panel for Sunday’s election. As a result he will take charge of World Boxing, which became the governing body for amateur Olympic boxing this year.That role used to be held by the International Boxing Association but it was banished by the International Olympic Committee in 2023 after a series of judging, corruption and governance scandals.In his manifesto, the 43-year-old Golovkin, whose initial term runs until 2027, promised to restore trust in the sport and secure boxing’s long-term place in the Olympic programme, starting with Los Angeles 2028

about 19 hours ago
A picture

Brydon Carse hails ‘relentless’ England pace attack after thrilling Ashes start

Brydon Carse hailed England’s pace attack after an extraordinary first day of the Ashes, when 19 ­wickets fell, ended with ­Australia nine down and 123 runs on the board.After winning the toss England were bowled out for 172, with Mitchell Starc outstanding in claiming seven for 58. But while Carse ­admitted their total was under par, he said the mood in the tourists’ dressing room – and that displayed by their captain, Ben Stokes – never dipped.“He was always positive, always full of enthusiasm and very simple messaging. That’s the way that he has always dealt with the side,” Carse said

about 20 hours ago
recentSee all
A picture

Hospitals and clinics are shutting down due to Trump’s healthcare cuts. Here’s where

about 10 hours ago
A picture

Falling stock markets and high shop prices hit US consumer confidence; rate cut hopes lift Wall Street – as it happened

about 12 hours ago
A picture

Leading law firm cuts London back-office staff as it embraces AI

about 21 hours ago
A picture

Elon Musk’s Grok AI tells users he is fitter than LeBron James and smarter than Leonardo da Vinci

1 day ago
A picture

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

about 4 hours ago
A picture

The Disneyfication of F1: Goofy in the pitlane and Fantasia in Vegas underline sport’s US transformation

about 14 hours ago