Australia 4 for 549 (Smith 229*, M Marsh 181*) lead England 403 by 146 runs
It would be hard to imagine a day of greater Australian
dominance than this one. It was a day on which Steven Smith made his second
Test double-century, Mitchell Marsh scored his maiden Test hundred, England
claimed just a single wicket and Australia piled on 346 runs. A day that began
with Australia trailing by 200 finished with them 146 runs in front, and with a
realistic chance of pushing for victory - and the urn - over the next two days.
Remind us why Australia would want to move Ashes Tests away from the WACA
This was a day that can best be illustrated by the numbers,
and at the close of play, the numbers were these: Smith was on 229, Marsh was
on 181, and Australia had 4 for 549. Hundreds were also piling up in England's
bowling analysis: Craig Overton, Chris Woakes, Stuart Broad and Moeen Ali had
all conceded centuries by the close of play, and if James Anderson - currently
at 0 for 85 - joins them on the fourth day, it will be just the eighth time in
Test history that a team has had five or more bowlers concede 100 in the same
innings.
Some more numbers: by stumps, the Smith-Marsh partnership
was worth 301 runs, the most prolific partnership Smith has ever been involved
in at Test level. And Marsh's score was already the sixth-highest of all time
by an Australian No.6. Along the way, Smith passed 1000 runs in a calendar year
for the fourth consecutive year, joining Matthew Hayden as the only men to
achieve this feat, and Smith has done so averaging 60-plus in every year.
The day had started in vaguely reasonable style for England,
when they claimed the wicket of Shaun Marsh, who edged Moeen to slip for 28. It
was the only reason England had to celebrate all day. Reasons for optimism were
rare: occasionally Smith edged, but his soft hands always ensured the ball
dropped short of the slips, and an lbw review from England against Smith found
that James Anderson had over-stepped,
although in any case the umpire's on-field call of not-out would have been
upheld by the ball tracking.
Mitchell Marsh roars after hitting his maiden Test hundred
ABOCcricnfo
No matter what Joe Root tried, it failed. In the morning,
Smith brought up the fastest century of his Test career, a 138-ball effort that
showed just as much ability to read the circumstances as had his slowest Test
hundred, scored at the Gabba earlier in this series. He continued to be strong
when cover-driving, when walking across the stumps and whipping to leg, and
frankly playing wherever he wanted to.
Marsh was especially powerful driving straight down the
ground and through the off side, and also found the gaps when cutting. He let
out a roar after bringing up his home-town hundred in the final over before
tea, with a pair of boundaries through point off Broad, the milestone coming
from his 130th delivery. His efforts had continued a fine summer of selections
from the Australian panel, who have found excellent contributions from Shaun
Marsh, Tim Paine and now Mitchell Marsh, three selections that sparked much
debate.
And still the runs kept piling up. Late in the day, Smith
moved past his previous highest Test score of 215, and had been at the crease
for nearly 10 hours. He was just the fifth Australia captain to score an Ashes
double-century, after Billy Murdoch, Don Bradman, Bob Simpson and Allan Border.
Marsh by the close was eyeing off a double-century, a
sentence which on its own tells all that need be told about this day. The
result was that England was sunk, if not in the series, then at least in their
hopes of winning this test.
More Updates: ESPN-Cricinfo
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More Updates: ESPN-Cricinfo
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