Women’s Ashes: Australia v England only cricket Test, day three – live | Women's Ashes




Key events

100 to Beth Mooney (155 balls)

121st over: Australia 424-5 (Mooney 100, McGrath 9) Sophie Ecclestone begins the day’s play with her left-arm orthodox over the wicket to the left-handed Mooney. There’s decent turn and bounce and Mooney does not look comfortable at all. The second ball of the over turned a long way from off to leg, putting doubt into the batter’s mind, but then balls three and five don’t move, beating Mooney on her outside edge. On 98, Mooney is desperate to get off strike, and is fortunate to be sent back after clipping to point.

But then, on the final ball of the over, she gets some length and width to attack and cuts safely square to bring up her first test century! Mooney becomes the first Australian to register tons in all international formats. Relief for Mooney and the Australian dressing room.

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Out walks Beth Mooney and Tahlia McGrath into the middle of the sunkissed MCG. England are in a huddle on the boundary, revving themselves up for one final effort in the field at the end of a long and challenging tour.

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It is a glorious day in Melbourne. The sky is cloudless, temperatures are nudging 30C, and there’s a whiff of southerly breeze to stop everything getting too oppressive.

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Speaking of experts, here’s Geoff Lemon who was at the MCG yesterday.

How to describe England’s fielding? Let’s say that while walking through the Betty Cuthbert Bar in the third session, witnessing a small, tired girl abruptly coat both her parents and the floor with a sluice of vomit formed from chips and lemonade, that was only the second-most noxious display at the MCG that day.

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“Good morning from chilly Yorkshire,” emails John Starbuck. (John, I hope you’re up this early by choice.) “Whoever is the best fielding coach in England is going to have a long career by the looks of it. I don’t think I’ve ever known such a sorry state of affairs. Something Must Be Done, if women’s cricket is to thrive.”

It has been a disastrous tour for England, showcased most spectacularly in their fielding. I’ll leave it for experts better qualified than me to determine whether this is an aberration or a trend, and to workshop necessary solutions.

My overwhelming feeling is just one of sadness. With the men’s summer ending early, this Ashes series getting excellent broadcast coverage here in Australia, and both teams at the top of the game, this could have been a seismic moment for women’s cricket, but England’s displays have never allowed that to happen.

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Preamble

Jonathan Howcroft
Jonathan Howcroft

Hello everybody and welcome to live OBO coverage of Australia v England in the women’s Ashes. Day three of the only Test match begins at 2:30pm local time (3:30am GMT).

It is scheduled to be the penultimate day of the series, but considering England’s wretched form it may yet turn out to be the curtain call. Australia will resume at 422/5, a lead of 252, already 30 runs greater than England’s highest total this lopsided summer.

Let’s begin with the positives: Australia’s appetite and conviction; Annabel Sutherland’s ton; Beth Mooney’s likely century; and the record aggregate crowd for a women’s Test. Ordinarily each would be cause for glowing headlines. But England have barely provided any opposition to the challenge offered by their hosts: the two big knocks benefited from multiple dropped catches, and the crowd would doubtless have been greater had this Test carried any jeopardy, instead of the Ashes been done and dusted with only white balls.

Raf Nicholson’s report from day two is superb, if at times harrowing reading, encapsulating England’s collective ineptitude.

Ecclestone, Filer and Ryana MacDonald-Gay beginning a competitive game of “who can produce the most tired misfield?” MacDonald-Gay put down a catch at cover off Ecclestone’s bowling; Ecclestone returned the favour by letting one slide through her hands at slip; Filer reached down to pick up the ball, let it through her legs, and back-kicked it halfway across the field. The winner of the competition? A late entrant, Maia Bouchier, who put down an absolute sitter at gully.

‘It’s not been the tour we wanted,’ Lauren Filer told the BBC. ‘We all know we’re better than this, we don’t need reminding.’

Annabel Sutherland added her name to the honour’s board at the MCG on Friday. Photograph: James Ross/EPA
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Posted: 2025-02-01 04:36:30

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