8th over: England 70-1 (Duckett 25, Jacks 0) So an innings from Salt that could have been a classic ends up as just a very good cameo – 45 off 27 balls with five fours and three sixes. But he has set the tone for his team, who have to rattle along at a T20 pace today because the game may well end up in the hands of Duckworth-Lewis.
Duckett moves into the driving seat now, lofting Hazlewood over mid-on and then getting lucky with a big fat nick through the gap at second slip. His 25 has come off 21 balls with five fours.
WICKET! Salt c Labuschagne b Hardie 45 (England 58-1)
7th over: England 58-1 (Duckett 13) Steve Smith makes his first change, replacing Starc with Aaron Hardie. Salt pulls his first ball for six! Knowing the next ball will be fuller, he chips it into the Toblerone at long-on for six more! That brings up England’s fifty, 52 off only 38 balls. After a couple of singles, Salt makes room to cut for four with fast hands – and then gets out, caught low down by the cover sweeper as he slices a square drive.
6th over: England 40-0 (Salt 28, Duckett 12) A graphic has just shown us that in the Powerplay, Hazlewood bowls the same length all the time – aiming for good, sometimes back-of, occasionally a touch fuller. The first ball of this over is at the short end of his range, and Duckett does well to pull it for four.
5th over: England 34-0 (Salt 27, Duckett 7) After going a full five balls without a boundary, Salt is becoming impatient. He charges at Starc, swings the bat, slices the ball and gets six over first slip. Atherton produces another factoid: Salt plays and misses 16pc of the time, which is more than any other top-five batter in men’s ODIs, apparently. He doesn’t give a timespan but still, that’s quite a stat. And, in its way, quite a skill.
4th over: England 24-0 (Salt 18, Duckett 6) Hazlewood puts the plug in as this over goes for just a single. He even persuades Duckett to leave one.
3rd over: England 23-0 (Salt 17, Duckett 6) Starc manages three dots and two singles, one of them a leading edge from Duckett that wasn’t far from being a caught-and-bowled. But then Starc strays onto the pads and Duckett comes to the party with a lofted flick for four. On a cold day, dotted with beanie hats, it’s been a breezy start.
“Do you know if there is an overseas TMS link for today?” asks Matt Dale. “I can’t seem to find it on the BBC website.” Hoping the hive mind can help.
2nd over: England 17-0 (Salt 16, Duckett 1) Ben Duckett gets off the mark less flamboyantly, with a nudge to leg for a single off Hazlewood. Salt is beaten again, perilously close to the off bail, as Hazlewood finds a classic length and some movement off the seam. But Salt hits back with a lofted square drive. He already has four fours, which is one more than ten of the Aussies managed at Lord’s between them (Head four, the rest three).
1st over: England 12-0 (Salt 12, Duckett 0) Well, well. Salt plays another cracking cover drive off the last ball, and in the middle he guides the ball past the slips. So this over looks like a triumph for England. But the guide was jammy – Salt seemed to be pulling the bat away – and he also played and missed, twice. So honours were actually even, whatever the scoreboard has to say.
1st ball: England 4-0 (Salt 4, Duckett 0) In comes Mitch Starc, curls the ball back in towards off stump – and sees it fly through the covers for four as Phil Salt finds the middle of the bat. An opening gambit from the Zak Crawley handbook.
An email! “Factoid,” says Mark Hooper. Do I detect some scepticism in the air? “The latest as in the most recent? Amazing! (I know, etc)“ Ha.
A couple of factoids for you. One from Mike Atherton, so good at adding facts to all the opinions on Sky: this is the latest international game ever played in England. And one from me: it’s Steve Smith’s first outing as Australia’s captain since … February 2024, when he led them in three ODIs against West Indies.
Teams in full
England 1 Phil Salt, 2 Ben Duckett, 3 Will Jacks, 4 Harry Brook (capt), 5 Jamie Smith (wkt), 6 Liam Livingstone, 7 Jacob Bethell, 8 Brydon Carse, 9 Matthew Potts, 10 Adil Rashid, 11 Olly Stone.
Australia 1 Travis Head, 2 Matthew Short, 3 Steve Smith (capt), 4 Josh Inglis (wkt), 5 Marnus Labuschagne, 6 Glenn Maxwell, 7 Aaron Hardie, 8 Cooper Connolly, 9 Mitch Starc, 10 Adam Zampa, 11 Josh Hazlewood.
Teams in brief: no Jofra, no Carey
Jofra Archer, so good at Lord’s the other night, is overdue for a breather, so Olly Stone comes in to join Brydon Carse and Matthew Potts.
For Australia, Alex Carey and Sean Abbott join Mitch Marsh on the sidelines. Aaron Hardie and Cooper Connolly come in, so Hardie will be the third seamer, behind Mitch Starc and Josh Hazlewood, and Connolly will join Glenn Maxwell and Travis Head in the queue to fiddle through a few overs.
Australia win the toss and bowl
A grey morning, with rain around later: no captain would bat first today. It’s a big toss to win … and the Australian captain calls right. Hang on, he looks familiar – it’s Steve Smith!
It’s also the last day of the County Championship. Do keep a window open on your browser for Tanya Aldred, the queen of the county scene. Start at the bottom with a post so succinct that it may one day be held up as a model at preamble school.
Preamble
Morning everyone and welcome to the last stop on a long and winding road. It’s the end of the home international cricket season, the final act of the drama, the fifth set of the match. It could be anything from a cliffhanger to a damp squib.
England have to beat Australia for the third time in a week to complete a barnstorming comeback. Australia have to remember how experienced they are and put these upstarts in their place. And both sides have to beat the weather, which is looking dodgy all day and downright dismal from mid-afternoon.
The captains should really meet in the middle now and agree to play a T25. But that might require a better relationship between cricket and common sense.