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> <channel><title>Cricket Tournaments &#187; Ben Hilfenhaus</title> <atom:link href="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/tag/ben-hilfenhaus/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>http://www.cricket-tournaments.com</link> <description>England Vs India 2011 Coverage</description> <lastBuildDate>Thu, 29 Dec 2011 12:57:39 +0000</lastBuildDate> <language>en</language> <sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod> <sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency> <generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1</generator> <item><title>Ashes Series 2009 &#8211; Second Test Day 2</title><link>http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/ashes-series-2009/ashes-series-2009-second-test-day-2.html</link> <comments>http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/ashes-series-2009/ashes-series-2009-second-test-day-2.html#comments</comments> <pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2009 17:46:45 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Bob Bamber</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Ashes Series 2009]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Alastair Cook]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Andrew Flintoff]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Andrew Strauss]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Ben Hilfenhaus]]></category> <category><![CDATA[England]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Graham Onions]]></category> <category><![CDATA[James Anderson]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Michael Clarke]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Michael Hussey]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Mitchell Johnson]]></category> <category><![CDATA[NPower Ashes Test]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Phillip Hughes]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Simon Katich]]></category> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/?p=223</guid> <description><![CDATA[England dominated day 2 of the second NPower Ashes Test match, with a strong bowling performance that has left them well placed with Australia needing 79 runs to avoid the follow on with only two first innings wickets in hand. Andrew Strauss failed to add to his overnight score – and England as a team [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<div
class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 490px"><img
class="ngg-singlepic ngg-left" title="Stuart Broad of England takes a catch of Australia's Simon Katich in 2009 Ashes npower Test Series Second Test Second Day" src="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/wp-content/gallery/ashes-series-2009/stuart-broad-of-england-takes-a-catch-of-australias-simon-katich-in-2009-ashes-npower-test-series-second-test-second-day.jpg" alt="Stuart Broad of England takes a catch of Australia's Simon Katich in 2009 Ashes npower Test Series Second Test Second Day" width="480" height="305" /><p
class="wp-caption-text">Stuart Broad of England takes a catch of Australia&#39;s Simon Katich in 2009 Ashes npower Test Series Second Test Second Day</p></div><p><strong>England</strong> dominated day 2 of the second <strong>NPower Ashes Test</strong> match, with a strong bowling performance that has  left them well placed with <strong>Australia</strong> needing 79 runs to avoid the  follow on with only two first innings wickets in hand.</p><p><strong>Andrew Strauss</strong> failed to add to his  overnight score – and England as a team didn’t look like adding many  more after losing 3 wickets in three consecutive overs. A near half  century partnership from no 10 and 11 James Anderson and <a
title="Graham Onions" href="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/tag/graham-onions">Graham Onions</a> saw England move well past <strong>400</strong>.</p><p>After that the day was England’s. Poor  batting cost the tourists dear, and England will move into day 3 well  on top with the possibility of winning their first Ashes test at Lords  since 1934.</p><div><div><a
title="Cricket Ashes" href="http://promo.888.com/cricketashes/acq/?sr=351702" target="_blank"><img
src="/images/888Sports-Ashes-428x60.gif" border="0" alt="Cricket Ashes" width="428" height="60" /></a></div></div><p><img
class="ngg-singlepic ngg-left" title="Ricky Ponting is dismissed by James Anderson in 2009 Ashes npower Test Series Second Test Second Day" src="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/wp-content/gallery/ashes-series-2009/ricky-ponting-is-dismissed-by-james-anderson-in-2009-ashes-npower-test-series-second-test-second-day.jpg" alt="Ricky Ponting is dismissed by James Anderson in 2009 Ashes npower Test Series Second Test Second Day" width="250" height="331" />Strauss’ resistance didn’t last much  longer into day two, bowled leaving a ball off <a
title="Ben Hilfenhaus" href="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/tag/ben-hilfenhaus">Ben Hilfenhaus</a> – not  adding to his overnight score of 161. Graham Swann came and went in the  blink of an eye – edging the ball straight to Ricky Ponting in the  slips, the Australian captain taking the easiest catch you’re ever  going to see in the slips, Siddle picking up his second wicket of the  innings.</p><p>As if things couldn’t get any worse for  England – they did. After previously edging a ball just past the  stumps, Broad then chopped on the following ball – England had lost 3  wickets in 3 overs, and were now in danger of not making 400 – despite  Andrew Strauss targeting a “minimum” of 450 on the eve of Day 2.</p><p>England’s innings wasn’t over yet  though, James Anderson partnered by Graham Onions frustrated the  Australian attack, passing the 400 mark with a relative amount of ease.  Mitchell Johnson’s boundary problems weren’t confined to day 1 either –  Anderson striking him for successive fours. The partnership fell just  shy of 50 – but it was much needed after a disastrous start to <strong>day 2  for England, all out for 425</strong>.</p><div><div><a
title="Cricket Ashes" href="http://promo.888.com/cricketashes/acq/?sr=351702" target="_blank"><img
src="/images/888Sports-Ashes-428x60.gif" border="0" alt="Cricket Ashes" width="428" height="60" /></a></div></div><div
id="in_post_ad_middle_1" style="margin:10px 0 10px 10px;padding: 0px;float:right;"><script type="text/javascript">google_ad_client = "ca-pub-0508079154065628";
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src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js"></script></div><p>England got off to the best possible  start, after previously crashing Anderson to the cover boundary –  Phillip Hughes gloved the ball off an attempted hook to keeper Matt  Prior. England’s start got even better when Ponting inside edged the  ball onto his pad, that carried to Andrew Strauss in the slips –  Australia slipping to <strong>10/2</strong>. Ponting was unhappy with the decision, the  bat appear to hit the boot – rather than the ball. However, hawkeye  suggested that the ball would’ve been crashing into leg stump – the  wrong method to the right decision.</p><p>Australia survived the rest of the morning session, and a 4 over  stint after lunch before a short burst of rain came. Another short  burst of overs was followed by another shower. The teams came back out  again at 3:40pm. Australia’s <strong>Simon Katich</strong> and <strong>Michael Hussey</strong> worked on  building Australia’s score. Although Hussey can count himself lucky  that a mis-timed hook shot landed wide at deep backward square.  Australia entered tea on 87/2.</p><p>After a slow period after tea, Simon  Katich miss-pulled Graham Onions to fine leg, Stuart Broad running  around took a superb diving catch to dismiss the Australian – Katich  falling two short of a half century.</p><div><div><a
title="Cricket Ashes" href="http://promo.888.com/cricketashes/acq/?sr=351702" target="_blank"><img
src="/images/888Sports-Ashes-428x60.gif" border="0" alt="Cricket Ashes" width="428" height="60" /></a></div></div><p>Andrew Flintoff removed Michael Hussey  with a 95 mph delivery that Hussey left, the ball did very little –  maybe bouncing a little less than Mr Cricket was expecting – but  nonetheless – a superb delivery – Hussey going for 51. England’s day  got better when – the following ball – Michael Clarke flicked a  delivery from James Anderson to Alastair Cook at short mid wicket. With  that, both batsmen at the crease hadn’t faced the ball.</p><p>And things went from bad – to worse, for the tourists. Marcus North  chopping James Anderson onto his stumps, Australia floundering at  139/6. A procession became a rout when Mitchell Johnson hooked Stuart  Broad down to Alastair Cook at deep backward square.</p><p>Another one – this time Haddin.  Australia still needing 78 to avoid the follow on, Brad Haddin pulling  the ball to mid wicket. The floodlights – causing shadows – we enough  for the umpires to offer the batsmen the light, and Australia naturally  took it.</p><p>The visitors end day two in deep  trouble, the first three overs of the day aside – its been all England.  An ill-disciplined batting performance has left their tail needing to  do some serious work on just saving the follow on. England will look to  skittle Australia out tomorrow, and then hammer home their advantage  with possibly enforcing the follow on.</p><div
style='clear:both'></div>]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/ashes-series-2009/ashes-series-2009-second-test-day-2.html/feed</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>1</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Ashes Series 2009 &#8211; Second Test Day 1</title><link>http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/ashes-series-2009/ashes-series-2009-second-test-day-1.html</link> <comments>http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/ashes-series-2009/ashes-series-2009-second-test-day-1.html#comments</comments> <pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2009 17:18:42 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Bob Bamber</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Ashes Series 2009]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Alastair Cook]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Andrew Strauss]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Ben Hilfenhaus]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Kevin Pietersen]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Michael Hussey]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Mitchell Johnson]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Nathan Hauritz]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Ricky Ponting]]></category> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/?p=217</guid> <description><![CDATA[Andrew Strauss&#8216; unbeaten 161 gave England an excellent start in the 2nd nPower test against Australia. Adding 196 for the opening wicket with Alastair Cook, England dominated the opening exchanges with some very ordinary bowling from Mitchell Johnson in particular. Australia pegged England back in the final session, taking 4 English wickets as their middle [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p
style="margin-bottom: 0cm;"><a
title="Andrew Strauss" href="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/tag/andrew-strauss" target="_blank"><img
class="ngg-singlepic ngg-left" src="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/wp-content/gallery/ashes-series-2009/englands-andrew-strauss-celebrates-scoring-150-runs-against-australia-ashes-npower-test-series-second-test-first-day.jpg" alt="England's Andrew Strauss celebrates scoring 150 runs against Australia in Ashes npower Test Series Second Test First Day" />Andrew Strauss</a>&#8216; unbeaten <strong>161</strong> gave <strong>England</strong> an excellent start in the 2nd  nPower test against Australia. Adding <strong>196</strong> for the opening wicket with  Alastair Cook, England dominated the opening exchanges with some very  ordinary bowling from Mitchell Johnson in particular.</p><p>Australia pegged England back in the final session, taking 4 English  wickets as their middle order struggled against the swinging ball.  England ended the day 364/6 with the game firmly in the balance.</p><p>The first action of the day came from Andrew Strauss, crashing a  short, wide delivery from Mitchell Johnson to the cover boundary, two  balls later Johnson drifted onto Strauss&#8217; leg stump, and the ball got  the same treatment, this time flicked to the mid wicket boundary.</p><div><div><a
title="Cricket Ashes" href="http://promo.888.com/cricketashes/acq/?sr=351702" target="_blank"><img
src="/images/888Sports-Ashes-428x60.gif" border="0" alt="Cricket Ashes" width="428" height="60" /></a></div></div><p>Alastair Cook was then fortunate to survive, a fuller ball from  Hilfenhaus edged just to the left of a diving <a
title="Ricky Ponting" href="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/tag/ricky-ponting" target="_blank">Ricky Ponting</a>. It was  Johnson who was struggling however, in a repeat of his previous over,  Strauss crashed a short wide ball square, then the next ball Johnson  over compensated by bowling a full-ish ball on Strauss&#8217; pads – again  the ball was clipped behind square for four.</p><p>It wasn&#8217;t only Johnson who was being hit for boundaries, a  Hilfenhaus short ball just sat up nicely for Cook to pull for four.  England passed the 50 mark with little trouble after 15 overs. Johnson  continued to bowl some real loose deliveries – which – like the rest of  the of them – got the treatment for Alastair Cook. In 7 overs Johnson  was going at nearly 7 runs an over – and had conceeded 10 boundaries.</p><div
class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 490px"><img
class="ngg-singlepic ngg-left" title="Australia's Ben Hilfenhaus (C) celebrates taking the wicket of England's Ravi Bopara (L) in 2009 Ashes npower Test Series Second Test First Day" src="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/wp-content/gallery/ashes-series-2009/australias-ben-hilfenhaus-c-celebrates-taking-the-wicket-of-englands-ravi-bopara-l-in-2009-ashes-npower-test-series-second-test-first-day.jpg" alt="Australia's Ben Hilfenhaus (C) celebrates taking the wicket of England's Ravi Bopara (L) in 2009 Ashes npower Test Series Second Test First Day" width="480" height="300" /><p
class="wp-caption-text">Australia&#39;s Ben Hilfenhaus (C) celebrates taking the wicket of England&#39;s Ravi Bopara (L) in 2009 Ashes npower Test Series Second Test First Day</p></div><p>Peter Siddle was causing problems using the slope to move the ball  away from the left handers. Cook in particular left a couple of  deliveries that were mighty close to his stumps. Without success from  the other end, Ponting turned to spinner Nathan Hauritz to try and make  the breakthrough. England reached 100 without loss off 24.3 overs.</p><div><a
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style="margin-bottom: 0cm;">England  continued their dominance right up until the lunchbreak – the  Australian seamers struggling with their accuracy – and England  entering lunch 126 without loss – without question England&#8217;s session.</p><div
id="in_post_ad_middle_1" style="margin:10px 0 10px 10px;padding: 0px;float:right;"><script type="text/javascript">google_ad_client = "ca-pub-0508079154065628";
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src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js"></script></div><p>After the break control was still illuding Ricky Ponting, Cook  taking on Nathan Hauritz with a slog sweep over mid wicket for 4.  Australia began to make mistakes, Ben Hilfenhaus bought an edge from  Andrew Strauss, only to hear the no ball call from the umpire – Brad  Haddin dropping the ball aswell could do little to help his confidence.  Andrew Strauss bought up his 50 two balls later as England passed 150  without blemish.</p><p>If things weren&#8217;t bad enough for Ricky Ponting, they got worse when  Nathan Hauritz dislocated a finger on his spinning hand attempting to  claim a return catch off Andrew Strauss , Marcus North was rushed into  the attack mid over.</p><div><a
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style="margin-bottom: 0cm;">England  simply kept motoring along, as <a
title="Mitchell Johnson" href="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/tag/mitchell-johnson" target="_blank">Mitchell Johnson</a>&#8216;s return to the attack  bought him the same struggles as in the morning session. But as  normally happens with wayward bowling, Johnson got one on the straight  and narrow, Cook was trapped in front<strong> LBW for 95</strong>, England were 196/1.</p><p
style="margin-bottom: 0cm;"><strong>Ravi  Bopara</strong> came out and played his shots, but his aggression didn&#8217;t last  very long, as he was too trapped LBW by Ben Hilfenhaus – 18 off 19  balls – a whole lot of nothing. Two out swinging deliveries followed by  one which holds its line.</p><p>Hiflenhaus immeadiatly caused Kevin Pietersen problems with the  swinging ball, Pietersen playing and missing a couple of times in his  first over. On the stroke of tea, Pietersen was caught all ends up by a  short ball, an attempted hook that – in the end – was played so badly  and uncontrollably, it didn&#8217;t fall to a fielder. With Pietersen safely  off strike, Andrew Strauss struck a three through backward point to  bring up his hundred off 178 balls.</p><p>Peter Siddle struck after tea, a feather edge from a driving Kevin  Pietersen, caught begind, <strong>267/3</strong> and <strong>Australia</strong> were beginning to creep  back into the game. Siddle continued to trouble – Strauss flashing at  one that flew through Michael Hussey at gully for 4.</p><p>Paul Collingwood was unable to build on his match saving knock at  Cardiff, advancing down the wicket against Michael Clarke, he could  only skew a ball to Peter Siddle. Matt Prior fell quickly – likewise at  Cardiff – to the in swinger off Mitchell Johnson through the gate.  Australia weren&#8217;t done there, <strong>Andrew Flintoff </strong>edging Hilfenhaus to  Ricky Ponting – England now floundering on <strong>333/6</strong> and struggling against  the swinging ball.</p><p
style="margin-bottom: 0cm;">Andrew  Strauss passed 150 – as he and Stuart Broad batted through to the end  of the day , Strauss 161 not out, England 364/6 – the game in the  balance once again.</p><div
style='clear:both'></div>]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/ashes-series-2009/ashes-series-2009-second-test-day-1.html/feed</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>0</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Ashes Series 2009 &#8211; First Test Day 5</title><link>http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/ashes-series-2009/ashes-series-2009-first-test-day-5.html</link> <comments>http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/ashes-series-2009/ashes-series-2009-first-test-day-5.html#comments</comments> <pubDate>Sun, 12 Jul 2009 17:52:06 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Bob Bamber</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Ashes Series 2009]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Andrew Strauss]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Ben Hilfenhaus]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Brad Haddin]]></category> <category><![CDATA[England]]></category> <category><![CDATA[James Anderson]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Kevin Pietersen]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Marcus North]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Michael Hussey]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Monty Panesar]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Nathan Hauritz]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Paul Collingwood]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Peter Siddle]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Ricky Ponting]]></category> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/?p=201</guid> <description><![CDATA[Paul Collingwood’s magnificent 74 gave England a hard hard fought draw. 20/2 going into the final day, England needed to bat out the day. With one session to go, England only had three wickets left, and when Collingwood fell with 11.3 overs remaining, it was left to James Anderson and Monty Panesar to save the [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img
class="ngg-singlepic ngg-left" src="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/wp-content/gallery/ashes-series-2009/james-anderson-and-monty-panesar-celebrate-after-the-match-was-drawn-against-australia-in-first-test-of-ashes-series-2009.jpg" alt="James Anderson and Monty Panesar celebrate after the match was drawn against Australia in first Test of Ashes Series 2009" />Paul  Collingwood’s magnificent 74 gave England a hard hard fought draw. 20/2  going into the final day, England needed to bat out the day. With one  session to go, England only had three wickets left, and when  Collingwood fell with 11.3 overs remaining, it was left to James  Anderson and Monty Panesar to save the game. Australia – gutted with  the draw in a game that they dominated from start to finish.</p><p>England started the day needing to attack. Captain <a
title="Andrew Strauss" href="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/tag/andrew-strauss">Andrew Strauss</a> dropping a quick single into the covers showing their intent.</p><p>Kevin  Pietersen was nearly caught out by <a
title="Ben Hilfenhaus" href="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/tag/ben-hilfenhaus">Ben Hilfenhaus</a> delivery, choosing to  leave alone a fairly straight delivery that nipped back in. Fortunately  enough for England the ball wasn’t going on to hit the stumps.</p><p>He  wasn’t out of the action for long, Hilfenhaus again, driving a ball in  the air through the covers. But the following delivery knocked  Pietersen’s off stump out of the ground, it was merely a straight ball  – Pietersen squared up, falling for 8.</p><p>Spinner Nathan Hauritz found sizeable turn on the 5th  day pitch. A short wide ball got the treatment from Andrew Strauss, but  the following ball – a ball that bounced a fraction higher than the  previous delivery – Strauss getting a thin snick to keeper Brad Haddin  – Australia were rapturous – England in ever-deepening trouble at 46/4.</p><div><div><a
title="Cricket Ashes" href="http://promo.888.com/cricketashes/acq/?sr=351702" target="_blank"><img
src="/images/888Sports-Ashes-428x60.gif" border="0" alt="Cricket Ashes" width="428" height="60" /></a></div></div><p>Hauritz was causing England all sorts of problems. Paul Collingwood  had an inside edge onto his pad, the ball popped up – but fell just  short of Simon Katich in at short leg. The following delivery  Collingwood edged one down, after clipping his pads the ball rolled  towards the stumps, the batsman got his foot on top of the ball just  before it hit.</p><p>Prior  and Collingwood stood together for a while, but the stand was unlikely  to last – and it didn’t. Prior miss cutting Hauritz – the ball looping  up – Michael Clarke taking the catch in the slips. England starring  defeat in the face at 70/5.</p><p>Ricky  Ponting chose to open up after lunch with two seamers. Ben Hilfenhaus  was getting the ball two swing just a fraction, Flintoff was flashing,  and a edge flew past 2nd slip for 4. Flintoff and Collingwood’s 50 partnership came up off 111 balls, still a long way to go.</p><p>And a  long way to go it was, Flintoff edging Mitchell Johnson to Ricky  Ponting, who took the ball into his hands just before it hit the ground.</p><div
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src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js"></script></div><p>Johnson had Broad in trouble straight away, a full-ish ball hit  Broad in front of leg stump – the umpire gave it not out – Hawkeye  suggested the ball would have hit the outside half of leg stump.</p><p>Australia  reverted to spin, Hauritz and Marcus North as England battened down the  hatches. Broad’s obduracy didn’t last for long, Hauritz angling the  ball back in, Broad went back – the ball skidded on and struck him on  the knee roll in front of middle stump England were 159/7. Broad  showing the mistake of going back to a spinner on this surface.</p><p>Collingwood bought up his half century in 167 balls. Peter Siddle  got into the new batsman striking him three times on the fingers and  arms in a fantastic exhibition of short pitch bowling.</p><p>The  short stuff from Siddle to Swann continued after the tea interval, the  Australian hitting the England spinner on the helmet – the ball running  away for two leg byes.</p><p>England  ground the Australians down, Swann and Collingwood passing their 50  partnership. With 20 overs left in the match – England were 24 runs  behind.</p><p>With 19  overs to go, Swann went to put a ball that didn’t bounce as much as he  was anticipating, pinned in front by Hilfenhaus, for a well fought 31  from 63.</p><p>Hauritz  then had a shout for LBW/Caught. Ricky Ponting to a superb catch in a  short leg, but agonisingly for Australia – the LBW was outside the line  – and the ball didn’t hit the bat.</p><p>In the  following over, Anderson got one that reared on him, there was  hesitation, Collingwood got a third of the way down the pitch, Anderson  – rightly – sent him back, Collingwood would have been gone with a  direct hit.</p><p>Siddle  finally removed Collingwood – cut the ball at Michael Hussey in the  gully, juggling the ball – Hussey took it at the second attempt – 74  runs from 245 deliveries – England 6 runs behind, 1 wicket left with  11.3 overs remaining.</p><p>It was  left to Anderson and Monty Panesar. And in a nail-biting finish for  everyone, the two ball-by-ball batted out the time. Got ahead of the  Australia score, and when the time was up Ricky Ponting shook hands  with Jimmy Anderson and the game was drawn. The fans rejoiced, England  had save the game.</p><div
style='clear:both'></div>]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/ashes-series-2009/ashes-series-2009-first-test-day-5.html/feed</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>1</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Ashes Series 2009 &#8211; First Test Day 4</title><link>http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/ashes-series-2009/ashes-series-2009-first-test-day-4.html</link> <comments>http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/ashes-series-2009/ashes-series-2009-first-test-day-4.html#comments</comments> <pubDate>Sat, 11 Jul 2009 16:54:00 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Bob Bamber</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Ashes Series 2009]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Alastair Cook]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Ashes Cup]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Australia]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Ben Hilfenhaus]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Billy Doctrove]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Brad Haddin]]></category> <category><![CDATA[England]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Marcus North]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Mitchell Johnson]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Ricky Ponting]]></category> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/?p=199</guid> <description><![CDATA[Australian continued their dominance on day 4 of the first Ashes test in Cardiff. Building on their 44 run lead, Marcus North and Brad Haddin both hit centuries. England were sloppy, poor fielding was opitimised when Alastair Cook threw a ball in from the boundary, there was a very good chance of running out Haddin [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img
class="ngg-singlepic ngg-left" src="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/wp-content/gallery/ashes-series-2009/australia-is-dominate-fourth-day-also.jpg" alt="Australia is dominate Fourth Day also" />Australian continued their dominance on  day 4 of the first Ashes test in Cardiff. Building on their 44 run  lead, <a
title="Marcus North" href="http://www.cricket-tournaments.com/tag/marcus-north">Marcus North</a> and Brad Haddin both hit centuries.</p><p>England were sloppy, poor fielding was  opitimised when Alastair Cook threw a ball in from the boundary, there  was a very good chance of running out Haddin at the bowlers end,  despite plenty of time, Anderson was not stationed by the stumps, and  the opportunity was missed.</p><p>After lunch Haddin broke loose, the  Australians looking for quick runs in time for a declaration. Also in  mind was the weather, which was in danger of curtailing the fourth days  play.</p><div
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src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js"></script></div><p>Haddin eventually cracked on to Ravi  Bopara at deep mid wicket, and with that he departed for 121, <strong>Ricky  Ponting </strong>declared on 674 – a lead of 239, with Marcus North not out for  125.</p><div><a
title="Cricket Ashes" href="http://promo.888.com/cricketashes/acq/?sr=351702" target="_blank"><img
src="/images/888Sports-Ashes-428x60.gif" border="0" alt="Cricket Ashes" width="428" height="60" /></a></div><p>England returned to a grim scene – not  only their position in the game, the clouds were looming, and the  floodlights were on. They were tentative to start, after hooking him  for four, <strong>Alastair Cook</strong> played across the line of a straight ball, and <strong>Mitchell Johnson</strong> had his man – <strong>England</strong> were <strong>13/1</strong>.</p><p>The lights were on, but unfortunately  for England – there was no-one at home. Ravi Bopara was unfortunate to  be given out LBW, off the ground, the ball struck him well above the  knee roll. Billy Doctrove didn’t agree, Ben Hilfenhaus had his wicket  and England were starring down the barrell at 17/2. With a hint of  rain, and the floodlights doing their bit to keep the players out there  on a grim afternoon, England headed in for tea at 20/2.</p><p>And that ultimately – was that. The day  was called off for the day. The weather seems much better for tomorrow,  and England have their work cut-out. They still trial by 219 runs, and  with nothing to play for – other than the draw – they must be  moderately attacking and avoid the awful performance in Adelaide where  they scored 60 runs in two sessions when trying to bat out for the draw.</p><div
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