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1st Test day one - rolling blog

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Tom Fordyce | 11:03 UK time, Wednesday, 8 July 2009

Hard work and happiness for Hauritz

If there's larger shoes to fill than Shane Warne's, they must belong to Bigfoot.

For Nathan Hauritz, - two wickets for 260 in his two matches on tour so far - the job is an unenviable one. Picked on the morning of the match ahead of Stuart Clark to give Ricky Ponting a spinning option, his long afternoon in the Cardiff sun looked like being one big on hard work and small of turn.

From the start Ponting seemed to be determined to use him as a defensive option, despite Australia coming out after lunch with England wobbling badly at 90-3. His first field included a long on, deep midwicket and backward square leg, allowing the England pair of KP and Colly to ease the tension with strolled singles all over the park.

There was little thought of attacking, no sign of the sort of flight and variation that might have pulled the batsmen out of their comfort zone.

In some ways that's to be expected - after his flayings at Hove and Worcester, Hauritz is clearly aware that he could be the weakest link in this Aussie attack - but the monotony gave England the breathing space they had been denied by Mitchell Johnson and Ben Hilfenhaus before lunch.

Warne famously accused Monty Panesar of playing the same Test match 30 times. Early in Cardiff his successor seemed happy to produce the same ball 100 times.

Hauritz tends to get his wickets from drift away from the right-handers, rather than big turn. When he did choose to gamble, giving one some air, Pietersen was tempted into a dance down the pitch that nearly saw him beaten.

0-41 off 14 overs reads better than 2-260. 1-42 reads even better. Pietersen's sweep after tea was injudicious in the extreme, but the way that Hauritz celebrated told you that he didn't care.

A wicket from nowhere is always a joy. When it's the scalp of the opposition's best batsman, it feels even better.


Sedate scenes during early skirmishes

Nerves can do strange things to people. They turn some into screaming lunatics, others into hand-wringing mutes. So far at Cardiff on Wednesday there is a whole heap more of the latter than the former.

Such has been the build-up to this series that we almost assumed it would be as raucous as the last Test between the two teams on these shores, the flag-waving frenzy at The Oval 22 months ago.

That might still happen, depending on what happens to the partnership between Kevin Pietersen and Paul Collingwood, and how long it takes for the early afternoon beverages to fizz their way into bloodstreams - but a combination of Mitchell Johnson's wickets and an attritional afternoon are keeping the atmosphere on a tight leash.

There have been just a couple of trumpet tootles from the Barmy Army's horn section, plus an early chorus of God Save The Queen when Ravi Bopara drove Johnson for a classical four.

The Fanatics, three rows deep in the Cathedral Road stand, are making less noise than their Hewitt-cheering compatriots at Wimbledon last week.

The opening day four years ago was an action movie from start to finish - Australia on the ropes, the Lord's crowd ecstatic, England then rocked back to the delight of the cavorting tourists.

This time around it's a slow-burner rather than page-turner - although that could soon change. Representatives of the match sponsor have been handing out fake bank notes called Gatts, to be exchanged for a drink at a reception hosted by the former England captain.

One Gatt = one drink. And if there isn't some sort of all-you-can-eat buffet there too, you can bet that the host might have something to say about it.


Cricket the Welsh way

Since this is the first ever Test match in Wales, it seems only fitting that visitors from across the Severn - and the other side of the world - celebrate that fact by going a little native.

I'll assume that little assistance is needed in the guzzling of Brains, and that if those over the age of 50 wish to grow moustaches they can do it in their sleep.

Language, however, can be a tougher test - so with thanks to Cowbridge Comprehensive alumni Tom Williams and Dogger (don't ask - I can't explain) here are a few key words and phrases to roll your tongue around over the next five days.

Four - pedwar

Six - chwech

Opener - agorwr

Slow wicket - wiced araf

Reverse swing - swing newid

Spinner - troellwr

Rabbit - cwningen

How some might describe KP - chwaraewr senglau

And an easy one for slow learners: stadium - stadiwm

I realise there's not much steer on pronunciation. I'll open the floor to others to provide that - and feel free to dive in with other suggestions of your own.

Morning glory

We all know what the first few overs of Ashes Tests represent - barometers of what is to follow over the next five matches.

It shouldn't really be the case, but it almost inevitably has been - Steve Harmison's woeful first-ball wobbler out to second slip at Brisbane in '06, his tenderising of Justin Langer at Lord's four years ago.

At lunch in Brisbane Australia were 108-1; at Lord's they were five down with captain's cheek cut. Go back a bit further and it's worked out the same way - Brisbane '02, and Nasser Hussain's nightmarish decision to put Australia in; Glenn McGrath squeezing the life out of England in '01; Phil DeFreitas going short and wide in '94 to allow the Aussies to sprint away to 26-0 after four overs. The way the first morning goes, the rest of the series often follows.

And the class of '09: with the caveat that barometers can be broken, the first five overs were exactly what England would have hoped for.

Toss won. First job done. Mitchell Johnson wide and short with his first over - 2-0, the only danger a leading edge along the ground from Skipper Strauss.

After three overs, 14-0 - not Michael Slater and Matthew Hayden by any means, but neither was it Graeme Wood and Andrew Hilditch.

Lesson #1 of playing Australia: never relax. Hussey goes full length, the ball sticks, Cook's early work is undone.

There's an awful long way to go in Wednesday's play, let alone in this Test series. But if the first half hour tells us one thing, it's that this summer's ding-dong will be every bit as tight and tough as most of us thought.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    almost as interesting as the game itself

  • Comment number 2.

    So what does that phrase that might be used to describe KP actually mean? And is it damning enough to be equally applied to Ravi Bopara for playing that gormless shot?

  • Comment number 3.

    We really need to see the same KP that we saw in the closing innings of the 2005 series (after he survived an early catch, dropped by Warne). As it stands a good partnership between KP and Collingwood is a huge requirement.

  • Comment number 4.

    KP - player of singles, IRONY then.

  • Comment number 5.

    Great to hear Blowers on the radio!
    Wouldn't be a Test Match summer without him!

  • Comment number 6.

    Thats a nice touch there Tom (Welsh translations). But the question is, will you be providing us with similar levels of local insight(slang or varieties of gravy) for any future Northern hosted tests? Or maybe the low down on 'praperrr' culture in the South West for Tests held there?

    I can only hope!

    Would love to see a big knock from Collingwood to hush the great but outspoken Shane Warne.

  • Comment number 7.

    As someone who got married in Welsh - despite being "Sais" it was great to see some Welsh on the site - my other half who occasionally contributes in her native language to Ö÷²¥´óÐã Radio Cymru on line to the "Tramor" section will be delighted.

    Not many of us here in Muscat in Oman who speak the language though!

    And one of the huge frustrations of being a long-term exile though is the inabililty to listen to the TMS crew - for reasons I never understand we cannot get the Ö÷²¥´óÐã on the internet overseas.

    Anyway Diolch yn Fawr and Croeso i Sultanate Oman


  • Comment number 8.

    MuscatK Try again mate. Ö÷²¥´óÐã RADIO 5 LIVE SPORTS EXTRA I,m listening to TMS now here in Brasil.
    Collingwood just out, steady as you go KP.

  • Comment number 9.

    2 things really
    1) Listening to the British commentary you'd think 2007 never happened. We lost in 2005 narrowly and then thumped the English in 2007! Please Aussie commentary is one sided but we have a luagh at ourselves.
    2) Australia don't have Warne and McGrath, it will be decades before any country gets a combination like that again. We know, we know they aren't around.

  • Comment number 10.

    The Ashes : Y Lludw

    Yorker : Efrogyn

    Silly mid-on : Coeswr agos

    The pitch : Y llain

    ( In Wales, as in England, the wickets are the stumps !)

    Middle stump : Ffon ganol

  • Comment number 11.

    It would certainly seem to be the start to a series of two teams unsure of what to expect from themselves as much as the opposition. Neither side seems to have much confidence in it's own abilities and are subsequently taking things very tentatively on what seemed to be otherwise a very subdued pitch and neither side looking to really dominate the other as they have in previous years. I'm sure things will happen to take this series on to bigger and better things than we have seen on the first day although it certainly looks like we are in for another very close affair!

  • Comment number 12.

    This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.

  • Comment number 13.

    Hogygog - nice work. Beats the "G'dai" signs they've got on lamp-posts round Cardiff.

    anfield81returns - thoughts on KP's knock and demise?

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