MELBOURNE – England stormed to an imperious innings and 157-run victory in the fourth test to retain the Ashes on Wednesday and plunge a declining Australia side into a painful period of introspection.
The victory, completed before lunch on the fourth day, gave holders England an unassailable 2-1 lead in the five-test series and made Andrew Strauss’s team the first to take the Ashes home since the Mike Gatting-led triumph of 1986/87.
Then, as now, the venue of the decisive victory was the Melbourne Cricket Ground, a hulking coliseum where England had enjoyed precious few victories in preceding years.
On Wednesday, however, it resembled a Lord’s or a Headingley, with thousands of English supporters clad in white and red chanting joyously in the stands as the tourists completed a stunning rout of their former tormentors.
The England players embraced and pumped their fists in the air upon the dismissal of the hapless Ben Hilfenhaus, caught behind for a duck off Tim Bresnan’s bowling, as Australia were all out for 258. Australia had resumed on 169 for six, still facing a 246-run deficit to make England bat again but lost their remaining wickets shortly before lunch with a day and a half left to play.
Chris Tremlett shattered Mitchell Johnson’s stumps for six, while Peter Siddle defiantly slogged his way to 40 before belting a lofted drive off Graeme Swann straight to Kevin Pietersen at long on. The injured Ryan Harris did not take his place in the side, while wicketkeeper Brad Haddin, who had refused to gift his wickets cheaply like so many of his playing partners at the top of the order, was left stranded on 55 not out.
Bresnan, called into the side for Steve Finn, was the pick of England’s bowlers in the second innings, finishing with 4-50 after ripping through Australia’s top order after tea on day three to quash the hosts’ slim hopes of salvaging a draw.
He and Tremlett, who replaced the injured Stuart Broad for the Perth test, made vital contributions in an England side whose collective efforts trumped an Australian team too often forced to rely on brilliant cameos.
The win was also a stunning turnaround from the third test in Perth, where England slumped to a 267-run defeat that levelled the series 1-1.
Australia’s resurgence on the fast WACA wicket proved little more than a mirage when their batsmen, brittle throughout the series, were skittled for a first innings total of 98, a record low against the tourists at the MCG.
England pressed the advantage by romping to 157-0 on the first day and anchored by a sublime unbeaten 168 by Jonathan Trott, who was named man of the match, posted a first innings total of 513 on day three. Trott also scored a century in the first Brisbane test in a record stand with Alastair Cook. His performance in Melbourne echoed his brilliant 119 on debut at the fifth test at the Oval that helped England seal the home series last year.
Trott gave the hosts a 415-run deficit at the MCG to make England bat again and any hope of a fightback was quashed after tea on Tuesday when Australia’s top order were blown away by Bresnan.
They limped to stumps still 246 runs in arrears and the victory early on day four for England was all but a formality.