Australian bloggage of The End
Submitted by rickeyre on
I'll be building up a list here of Australian blogs covering the Ashes tonight.
- Read more about Australian bloggage of The End
- rickeyre's blog
- Log in to post comments
Submitted by rickeyre on
I'll be building up a list here of Australian blogs covering the Ashes tonight.
Submitted by rickeyre on
I was born during the Adelaide Test match when Australia, under Richie Benaud, regained the Ashes. From four days old until my first week of high school, shortly after my twelfth birthday, Australia held the Ashes (and John Snow still hasn't been forgiven). We got them back for a couple of brief periods: January 1975 to August 1977, and January 1983 to August 1985.
Australia picked up the Ashes once more on August 1, 1989. It's sixteen years and eleven days later, and barring an English choke of Greg Normanesque proportions, they're on their way back to England.
Submitted by rickeyre on
Will Kevin Pietersen go down in history as the first person to score a Test century with a dead raccoon under his helmet?
Question du moment: Which Australian will play out the final ball of the Test for the draw?
I'm picking Matthew Hayden.
Submitted by rickeyre on
And you thought World Domination was limited to Google these days:
Submitted by rickeyre on
Going into the final day of The Oval Test, the four main contenders for the 2005 Midwinter-Midwinter are as follows:
1st: Shane Warne (16)
2nd: Andrew Flintoff (13)
3rd: Daylight (not appearing in this Test)
4th: Marcus Trescothick (7)
Submitted by rickeyre on
Two observations from the pre-lunch session on the last day of Les Ashes de 2005:
(a) England is close to having a match-winning lead, and the fact that they lost four wickets in the session enhances their position;
(b) Ian Bell will be a valuable participant in Warwickshire's county championship campaign for many years to come.
Submitted by rickeyre on
Bring me my bow of burning gold!
Bring me my arrows of desire!
Bring me my spear! O clouds, unfold!1
Relax, I'm a qualified cricket umpire.2
Unless I am sadly mistaken (or perhaps just mistakenly sad), this will be the first Test series decided by non-precipitative cloud cover since Zimbabwe beat Pakistan in 1998 when the final Test was fogged out.
Submitted by rickeyre on
Submitted by rickeyre on
Matthew Hayden produced a big innings on Saturday when it really mattered. Pity about all those time when it really mattered and he didn't.
Perhaps Hayden will emulate his Queensland team-mate Martin Love in scoring a century in his last Test match.
Submitted by rickeyre on
Aljazeera launches children's channel
Indeed, why not?