Over to you, Uzzy! Broad burst topples Labuschagne and Smith to send Aussie run chase into thrilling final day

Four years ago, the loss of Marnus Labuschagne and Steve Smith to low scores would almost certainly have signified an Australian collapse and a sizeable England win.

This time, though, while a sensational late spell from Stuart Broad winkled out both key cogs with the outswinger he had specifically devised before the series for them, the visitors head into the final day of a gripping first Test at Edgbaston with hopes well and truly alive of a stirring victory chasing 281 – only one fewer than their famous three-run defeat at this venue in the iconic 2005 series.

3/107 at stumps, with Usman Khawaja unbeaten on 34 and nightwatchman Scott Boland providing a handy 13 whilst protecting the middle order, Australia require 174 further runs on a fifth day likely to at least be partially affected by rain, after a dogged performance from England’s tail saved face to a second innings in which all but one reached double figures but no one could pass 50.

It is the perfect finish to what is already one of the great Ashes Tests of recent memory. But a match that has featured momentum swings from session to session and sometimes from over to over has hit each crucial juncture with England the barest of margins ahead, as much to do with the brilliance of Broad with the ball throughout as it has been their famed ‘Bazball’ approach with the bat.

With their long tail somewhat sorted by Boland’s promotion and late cameo – his edged four through the slips off Broad’s final over of the day may yet prove cosmically crucial – and a strong middle order of Travis Head, Cameron Green and Alex Carey to come, the match still largely rests on the shoulders of Khawaja.

Already given a reprieve on 4 thanks to another missed chance from wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow, the opener has a chance at history.

See his team to victory to go with his heroic first innings century, and his performance at Edgbaston will sit alongside Smith’s four years ago as among the finest by an Australian on these shores in a generation.

The day couldn’t have started in more dramatic fashion: having fought through eight balls for no score in between rain delays on the third afternoon, Joe Root signalled Bazball’s return by attempting a trademark reverse-ramp off Pat Cummins’ first ball.

He wouldn’t make contact, but he’d far better with back-to-back identical strokes off the slightly slower Boland next over, taking him for six and then four. Suddenly, England were away.

Having recorded just one boundary in 10 overs the previous day, six would come in the first five on Day 4, five off the serene bat of Root as Boland’s figures once again took a pounding. Most would come in more traditional fashion to the first two: a glorious cover drive here, a powerful cut there.

With Ollie Pope likewise getting going after a subdued start, his sublime late cut off Cummins to move to 14 off 14 balls appeared to suggest a long day ahead for the tourists.

Or not: out of nowhere, the Australian captain produced not just the ball of the Test, but a corker unlikely to be topped for the rest of the series: a vicious inswinging yorker that zeroed in at 139 kilometres an hour at the base of off stump, Pope a jumbled mess as he desperately tried to keep it out.

The breakthrough still left the problem of Root: having tormented the visitors with a first-day unbeaten century, he seemed to merely be picking up where he left off as he threaded gaps in the field with ease, making a mockery of Cummins’ still-defensive field placements by picking off singles at will and still dispatching anything loose to the boundary.

Harry Brook’s arrival allowed Root to go back to the business of quietly making runs, having turned aggressor to ease pressure on Pope: the 24-year old prodigy making good on his pre-series promise to take the long handle to Lyon, repeatedly using his feet to drive against the spin.

It would be Lyon, though, who found the breakthrough: as has befallen countless Englishmen this Test, Root’s aggression would prove his downfall.

Skipping down the track looking to heave to leg with the spin, the champion’s most ungainly shot of the match would fail to make contact, Alex Carey making a deceptively tricky stumping down the leg side look supremely easy.

With England’s talisman gone for a sparkling, but brief, 46, Australia’s hopes of a chase under 200 were rekindled, even more so when Brook too threw away a half-century by clipping Lyon to a diving Labuschagne at mid-wicket for an identical score.

The decisive moment appeared to have arrived when Bairstow, on 1, was given LBW to Boland in the final over before lunch, but a desperate review would turn the tables: the Eric Hollies stand up as one when ball-tracker found it to be just clearing the stumps.

5/155 at the break, a previously sedate Ben Stokes – he sat down for lunch on 13 off 34 balls – decided it was time to go.

A classic cover point punch off a short and wide Boland offering was just the pressure-release the captain needed: in the heat of battle, Stokes went one-day mode, dancing down the pitch to hoick Cummins through mid-wicket before carving him elegantly over the slips cordon for successive boundaries.

Bairstow, though, was more subdued, though his own vintage square drive off the Australian captain seemed to signal an upping of the ante.

However, a painstaking innings was ended on 20 when Lyon struck again, Bairstow missing his attempted reverse-sweep as the off-spinner skidded on lower than he was expecting and struck him plumb in front.

When Stokes joined Brook and Root in falling just shy of 50 when Cummins trapped him in front for 43, the Australians had just the tail to remove and the prospect of a run-chase well below 250, especially when Moeen, shortly after depositing Lyon over mid-wicket for six, gloved a Josh Hazlewood riser down the leg side for 19.

But as it proved on the first day, the England lower order proved a tough nut to crack. Where Broad and Ollie Robinson had been the Robin to Root’s Batman in the first innings, here they were thrust into a starring role – and were more than up to the challenge.

They’d add 27 crucial runs together, most of them agricultural, all bloody-minded, the Australians’ expected short-ball onslaught bringing with it biffs, ramps and one audacious Robinson strike back over Hazlewood’s head for four.

Even when Robinson finally tried one big shot too many, tempted to try and clear Green at long-on after being brought in 15 metres off the fence and failing to grant Lyon a fourth, a first-ball reverse sweep for four from Anderson signalled the fun was far from done.

Another 17 valuable runs were added, 12 from the 40-year old, before Cummins and Carey combined to end the innings: a wide tempter chased and edged by Anderson, caught spectacularly by the keeper diving full length to his left.

It was an identical edge, as it happens, to the one Anderson himself coaxed out of Khawaja in the first over of the chase: squared up by a perfect straightener, the nick would bisect Bairstow and Root behind the stumps, the keeper shirking his responsibility to dive for anything in his vicinity for his latest major blunder of a poor Test.

The miss would quickly prove costly as Khawaja and Warner secured Australia’s first 50-run stand for the opening wicket in a Test in England since Warner and Chris Rogers in the 2015 Ashes.

Encouraging for Australia was the performance of the latter: watchful outside his off stump, Broad’s threat was kept at bay, Warner’s safe negotiation of a four-over spell with the new ball a baby step towards respectability after the recent horrors inflicted on him by his chief tormentor.

Warner’s patience would pay off: his first ball faced from Robinson was dispatched with a gleeful cut behind point to release the shackles; with Khawaja also cashing in off the wayward offerings Moeen and his wounded finger regularly provided at the other end, the partnership blossomed.

It would reach 61 before Robinson struck: finding a perfect length and getting the ball to leave Warner ever so slightly, the opener was in good enough touch to get a feather on one he could easily have played and missed, Bairstow doing the rest.

Warner’s 36, nevertheless, has surely sealed his spot for at least the second Test, if nowhere near enough to rubber-stamp him for the series let alone his planned swansong at the SCG in January.

Labuschagne, though, is now a concern for the tourists: while a pair of reverse-sweeps for four off Moeen saw him avoid a dreaded king pair, Broad’s newfound outswinger specifically designed to unsettle the Aussie first drop had its way again.

In near identical fashion to the first innings, Broad had Labuschagne fishing outside off: a good length and the hint of away movement enough to entice the edge. Bairstow’s catch was more regulation this time – out for 13.

Suddenly 2/78 and with a previously sedate run-chase hitting choppy waters, it was the perfect time for Smith to arrive and save the day; unlike in the 2019 series, though, his stay would be brief.

It would be the Broad outswinger again that did the trick for England, Smith drawn into a nervous prod outside off that kissed the edge en route to Bairstow: an immovable object four years ago here, the champion’s two centuries gave way to 16 and 6 now.

In to negotiate the close came Boland, taking nightwatchman duties off the usually designated Lyon, and remarkably providing doughtier resistance than Labuschagne or Smith.

Leaving circumspectly, defending resolutely and even cashing in on an Anderson loosener with a cut for four, his job was done with Khawaja and next man in Travis Head safe when Broad began his final over.

That he not only negotiated it, but picked up a handy bonus four via an edge through the slips cordon for his troubles, could well mean the world to the visitors by match’s end, but in the short term, at least brought about a richly deserved new highest Test score of 13.

As it stands, an Australian win, an English victory, a draw and even a tie remain well and truly on the cards with one day still to come – the surest sign yet of a memorable Test.

Throw in the extraordinary drama at every turn already displayed, and come what may on the fifth day, we have already witnessed a Test that will live long in the memory of all who witnessed it.



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ANZAC Soccer Ashes rediscovered in former football chairman’s garage after almost 70 years

For decades, Australian football has been hunting down an object described as “the greatest domestic treasure there is”: a small, hand-carved wooden box containing the ashes of two cigars smoked by the captains of Australia and New Zealand after their first ‘A’ international match on Australian soil in June, 1923.

Known as the Soccer Ashes, this precious relic was the first trophy that was ever contested between the two trans-Tasman rivals, and forms a key chapter in the larger history of the Socceroos.

The trophy was the brainchild of New Zealand team manager and trophy-maker Harry Mayer, who was convinced the two nations needed to play for something physical, something real, like what they had in cricket.

Mayer designed the casket with a combination of woods — New Zealand honeysuckle and Australian maple, to be precise — and adorned its lid with iconic national imagery, a kangaroo and two silver ferns, symbolising the relationship between the two nations.

The lid of the Soccer Ashes contains symbols of Australia and New Zealand.()

Inside the box, nestled into deep blue velvet lining, was a small silver-plated razor case that belonged to Private William Fisher, then-secretary of the Queensland Football Association, who’d carried it with him during the landing at Gallipoli in 1915 — the event that began the ANZAC legend.

For 30 years, Australia and New Zealand contested the Soccer Ashes, with the trophy travelling back and forth across the Tasman, paying homage to their wartime origin story.

But in 1954, the trophy completely disappeared.

Rumours swirled as to the trophy’s whereabouts, with some fearing it had been thrown away or destroyed entirely by someone who did not appreciate its significance.

And were it not for the ongoing efforts of historians Trevor Thompson and Ian Syson — who, with the backing of Football Australia and some government funding, spearheaded a project to track down the trophy in 2019 — it may have faded from Australian football’s collective memory, too.

Until now.

69 years after its last known sighting, the Soccer Ashes have finally been found.

The Soccer Ashes were found in the garage of Sydney Storey, former chairman of the Australian Soccer Football Association (ASFA) in the mid-20th century.()

Discovered by the family of former Australian Soccer Football Association (ASFA) chairman Sydney Storey, who helped run the game between 1922 and 1966, the trophy was identified amongst a treasure trove of football memorabilia, documents, photos, and other items as they sorted through old boxes in his garage after his death.

The sheer volume of artefacts meant the family took over a year to actually go through each box and verify their contents, but once they realised what they had on their hands, they immediately got in contact with FA.

“The large shed was literally full of relics of past days, and not easy to move around in,” Storey’s son Peter said.

“Most of these boxes had sat there untouched, decade after decade, until we started to go through them.

“There were so many historical, classical last-century items in the garage — even in the house — and the items we came across were of great interest. These included team photos, annual reports of the ASFA, an ASFA’s official badge, newspaper clippings, souvenir soccer match leaflets.

“And, importantly, found inside a well-sealed box, a wooden football match souvenir, which we identified as the Australia-New Zealand Soccer Ashes trophy.

“At that time, we didn’t realise that people might have been looking for it, or that it was of any interest, rather than just something 100 years old.”

Why Storey kept the trophy and all the other memorabilia hidden away remains a mystery.

Thompson, who authored the book Burning Ambition: The Centenary of Australia-New Zealand Football Ashes, thought Storey may have wanted to keep it safe as a political tug-of-war occurred between the old administration and newly arrived clubs and federations that were being created following post-war migration in the 1950s.

Thompson had reportedly tried to contact Storey about it 20 years ago, having narrowed down the suspects given their role inside Australian football at the time, but was rebuffed by the family.

For Syson, who first learned about the Soccer Ashes back in 2009, its disappearance was more than simple forgetfulness; it was a symptom of a broader cultural transition that football went through during the mid-20th century.

“It’s an interesting phase in Australian soccer history, where 1954 is very much the beginning of the end,” he said.

“Concern about representative football begins to decline as club football becomes much more important. The continental Europeans come into Australia and they bring professionalism, they bring quality, they bring in close[r] grounds. But they also bring club focus, to the detriment of other considerations such as international football.

“At this point, the idea of Australia and New Zealand as being an important contest starts to decline. I think we lose track of the Soccer Ashes because we lose our game’s focus on that international contest.”

However, FA are determined to fill in the gaps of Australian football’s history.

They hope to rediscover many more objects imbued with cultural memory that have faded into the dusty boxes of the game over the past century and install them at a new national Home of Football, which is slated to be built in the next few years.

Recognising its own past has already begun. Last year, FA celebrated the Socceroos’ centenary, lining up a pair of friendlies against New Zealand to mark 100 years since their first ‘A’ international, which took place in Dunedin in 1922.

The Socceroos played their first “A” international game against New Zealand in Dunedin on June 17, 1922.()

And there are already calls for the Soccer Ashes — or a replica of it — to be used as a trophy once again, and for the trans-Tasman clash to occur every year to not only mark the occasion, but to also recognise the game’s rich, storied past and ensure it does not slide into insignificance, as it has so often threatened to do over the past century.

“This trophy is symbolic of something really important, and its discovery is also really important as well,” Syson said.

“Its absence was a symptom of Australian soccer’s tendency to forget itself, and for the surrounding culture not to care at all.

“This trophy is replete with sacred significance to a country that is so obsessed with its ANZAC mythology. For that to go missing, it says a lot about the way this game manages to shoot itself in the foot all the time.

“And so maybe this is a sign that the game can correct itself, can fix itself, can remember itself — if there’s enough people caring about it, if there’s enough people taking an interest in the history.

“It means so much for the game.”

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