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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, August 21, 2001 |
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Butcher takes England to an incredible win
By Ted Corbett
LEEDS, AUG. 20. A third-wicket stand of 181 between captain
Nasser Hussain and Mark Butcher turned England from derided
outsider to winner by six wickets in the fourth Ashes Test at
Headingley today.
Hussain was out just before tea with 93 needed in 36 overs but,
on a placid pitch, the England batsmen scored 315 for four to
make the series score 3-1 with one to play at the Oval later this
week. Butcher was unbeaten on 173, his highest Test score.
At 11.15, I inquired of a bookmaker what price England might be
and he gave me a pitying look. ``We have marked up 12- 1,'' he
said with the air of a man who knows a fool when he meets one.
``But I am sure we can offer you a little more. What price would
you like, sir?'' I took his first offer. After all, England had
just lost two wickets for 33, and I was not too sure of my
ground.
But the pitch was playing easy and the good folk of Yorkshire,
who are not easily fooled about cricket matters, had rolled up in
their thousands to see the last rites. Of course, a ten pound
entry fee helped.
``Something for nothing is Yorkshire's favourite price,'' one
told me in the car park which was not charging today.
They also seemed to feel, judging by the way they formed a queue
at that same bookmakers shortly afterwards, that victory was due.
They were just as convinced of England success three years when
9,000 saw the tense win over South Africa on the fifth morning.
Entry was free that day too.
It did not look England's match in the first half hour. Michael
hooked Glenn McGrath's first ball of the day for four and was
caught behind from a fountain spout of a ball from that great
bowler's third.
Marcus Trescothick pushed the score along briskly but at ten he
drove uppishly to second gully-the outside man of a circle of six
behind the bat-and so England had two new batsmen at the crease
and appeared to be on the verge of a collapse.
In the next 90 minutes Butcher, who had declared overnight that
he intended to put a positive bat to the ball, and Hussain
reached a fifty stand in 55 minutes and 118 for two at lunch
without a heart-stopping moment.
Adam Gilchrist, who had debated batting for another five overs
last night but decided to go flat out for victory, tried Shane
Warne who found the ball would not turn quickly and Brett Lee
whose first over went for 14. Lee was bowling somewhere in the
mid-80s, at least ten per cent below his potential.
When the 100 came up the bad boys in the West stand stood up and
cheered and cheered. Like the rest of us they have spent the
summer in search of a hero and now they had two.
England had reduced its requirements to 197 by lunch, and the
total was beginning to look as gettable as that 279 at Centurion
18 months ago when England won by seven wickets to retrieve some
honour from another series that threatened a whitewash.
Afterwards, when Australia had another opportunity to break
through, Butcher in particular picked up the pace again. He was
lucky to survive a run-out chance on 97 when he suddenly, without
enough warning for Hussain to start his engine, rushed down the
pitch and had to rush back.
When he dived in and the ball missed the stumps all the signs
showed the gods were behind England.
As his third Test hundred came up the whole ground rose to greet
the man who thought he was not among the contenders at the
beginning of the series.
Hussain, who had been hit on the hand again, was content to play
second fiddle but the pitch was quiet and in the face of the best
England batting of the series the bubble seemed to have gone out
of the Australians.
The crowd was only 2,000 short of maximum when Gilchrist called
up Jason Gillespie for the first time for two hours.
He made Butcher edge the ball high over slips, England went to
200 and Lee produced several balls above 90 miles an hour before
Hussain cut him twice for four and reach fifty in 99 balls.
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