MELBOURNE: England still have the upper hand going into the final two Tests of an enthralling Ashes series, needing only one more victory to retain the coveted urn against Australia.
Australia go into Sunday’s fourth Melbourne Test fuelled by the momentum from their emphatic 267-run victory in Perth, which levelled the series at 1-1. But they cannot afford a slip-up in the last two matches.
“We always talk about the last two Tests in a series being where things are won and lost,” England skipper Andrew Strauss said on Friday. “The first few games set it up and the last couple bring it home. That is the challenge for us.” England looked poised for their first series triumph Down Under since 1986-87 after an innings victory in the second Adelaide Test, before Ricky Ponting’s team hit back spectacularly in the third Test at the WACA. Alastair Cook has scored 495 in five innings, Strauss and Jonathan Trott hit centuries in Brisbane, and Kevin Pietersen was unstoppable with a majestic 227 in Adelaide before they all stumbled in Perth.
Strauss gave a strong hint that the in-form Ian Bell would remain at number six despite Paul Collingwood’s low-scoring series.
“I appreciate why people are clamouring for Bell to go up the order, but I am happy with what he is doing where he is,” Strauss said. “He has been a very reassuring presence at number six. “The main problem is that he has been left with the tail because there haven’t been batsmen alongside him building big partnerships. That is our job. I do not think this is a time for massive changes.”
Australia looked a different team in Perth with pacemen Mitchell Johnson and Ryan Harris taking 18 wickets between them as England slumped to sub-200 scores in both innings. A dilemma for Australia will be whether to retain the four-man pace attack that was so effective on the lively WACA wicket, or call up untried spinner Michael Beer on the drop-in MCG pitch. Australia have never gone into an MCG Test without a frontline spinner during 102 Tests going back to the very first match in 1877. Even though Steve Smith has been primarily chosen as a number six batsman and did not bowl in Perth, Ponting indicated he could use the all-rounder as his main spinner with his leg-breaks. “Only a few months ago he played as our number one-picked spinner against Pakistan in England so I’m not worried about what he’ll be able to give,” the skipper said.