Cricket

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  • Australia 518-7 at the close, a lead of 134 with the cheat Smith unbeaten on 129.
  • More bad news, Stokes is unable to finish an over whilst bowling, and has had to leave the field with what looks like a groin strain.
  • The cheat Smith finally goes, Australia 544-8.
  • All out 567, a lead of 183.
  • edited January 7
    Crawley goes for 1 as Starc strikes in the first over yet again; a really bad decision to shoulder arms as the ball was just clipping off stump, and, as seems to be the way of things, the umpire gave it on-field. 4-1.
  • 80-1 at lunch, with Duckett given a life when dropped in the slips in the penultimate over before the break.
  • Duckett goes for 42 just after lunch, 85-2.
  • Another really close lbw decision is given on-field, with the ball barely clipping the bails when reviewed, and unfortunately that's the end of Joe Root for just 6, 117-3. Feels like all the marginal decisions are going Australia's way.
  • 174-3 at tea, just 9 runs behind.
  • Another really close lbw decision is given on-field, with the ball barely clipping the bails when reviewed, and unfortunately that's the end of Joe Root for just 6, 117-3. Feels like all the marginal decisions are going Australia's way.

    Not unlike West Ham's luck with referees's decisions.
  • Another really close lbw decision is given on-field, with the ball barely clipping the bails when reviewed, and unfortunately that's the end of Joe Root for just 6, 117-3. Feels like all the marginal decisions are going Australia's way.

    Not unlike West Ham's luck with referees's decisions.
    Tbh that was exactly my feeling as I was watching.

    I know they say that there's a margin of error with DRS, and so they like the umpires to still be relevant and so the need for umpire's call, but it still means that the umpires can still unduly influence the game; if they had given neither Root not Crawley out, then they would both have survived, but they gave both out and so they were gone.
  • edited January 7
    Quite possibly these marginal decisions were influenced by the fact that the Aussie bowlers were bowling more accurately and therefore more likely to be hitting the stumps.
  • edited January 7
    Bethell goes for 154 (not before a very dodgy umpiring decision to give him out when the ball was well high, fortunately the review saved him) to leave England on 328-9, a lead of just 145. Just Potts and Tongue left, and the second new ball only a few overs old.
  • edited January 8
    342 all out, Australia need 160, England need a miracle.
  • edited January 8
    More dreadful umpiring, this time by the 3rd umpire, there's clearly a noise on Snicko, yet the Aussie isn't given out. Absolute joke. He took ages looking at it too, then still decided not to give him out. Snicko is clearly not fit for purpose, but the umpires have given absolutely everything Australia's way all series.
  • 62-1, too little, too late.
  • Weatherald, the beneficiary of the bizarre 3rd umpire decision, goes in the last over before lunch, 71-2.
  • The cheat Smith goes for just 12, clean bowled by Jacks, 92-3.
  • Bethell puts down a very tough chance in the gully off Tongue, but it's not meant to be.
  • edited January 8
    Tongue does strike in his next over, 119-4 but only 41 more needed,
  • 121-5 as Labuschagne runs himself out.
  • Australia win by 5 wickets.
  • More dreadful umpiring, this time by the 3rd umpire, there's clearly a noise on Snicko, yet the Aussie isn't given out. Absolute joke. He took ages looking at it too, then still decided not to give him out. Snicko is clearly not fit for purpose, but the umpires have given absolutely everything Australia's way all series.

    Tbh the Snicko sound trace didn't show a definite spike that you'd expect from a momentary contact between bat and ball.
    But, yeah, the umpires have given everything Australia's way.
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