AFL Round 12 Collingwood vs Hawthorn live blog: Magpies and Hawks meet at the MCG for clash of the titans
It doesn't get much bigger than flag-hunting Collingwood and Hawthorn under the MCG lights on a Friday night.
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News.com.au
10 minutes ago
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Aussie quicks lead fightback at Lords
The Australia pace attack has struck back in the last session in the World Test Championship, reducing South Africa to 4/43 at stumps.

News.com.au
28 minutes ago
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Marnus Labuschagne's ‘frustrating' first day on the job leaves Pat Cummins with a headache
Marnus Labuschagne's future at Test level could be hanging by a thread. As Australia marched into the World Test Championship final this week at Lord's, the spotlight turned a little sharper onto the Queenslander's recent output. Especially after skipper Pat Cummins opted to send him in to face the new ball while desperate for runs. Labuschagne has averaged just 28.33 across the two-year WTC cycle. It's a far cry from the prolific heights he once occupied, and now calls to axe him are slowly amplifying. His experience at No. 3 made it a somewhat logical selection for Pat Cummins to promote him to opener heading to Lord's. His ability to occupy the crease are, on paper, a captain's dream when looking for an opener. To his credit, he did a job, of sorts, on Wednesday. Surviving 18 overs of probing swing under moody skies at Lord's isn't a cakewalk. But it wasn't exactly reassuring for selectors looking to the future. His lack of momentum sparked criticism from the commentary box, as 20 consecutive dot balls sapped the momentum from Australia's innings early on. 'It's quite frustrating to watch,' said former England batsman and Aussie arch-nemesis Kevin Pietersen in commentary. 'He has the ability to hit the ball.' Even his own captain seemed to gently nudge him toward a more proactive mindset. 'We love when (openers) are busy and they're putting pressure back on the bowlers,' Cummins said. 'That's our message here to Marnus... There's runs to be scored there.' South African skipper Temba Bavuma also threw a veiled swipe before play this week, suggesting his strike team of seamers could capitalise on the 'opportunity' of having Marnus in a new position while in a slump. 'I think there is an opportunity there,' Bavuma said. 'I think the conditions as well, I believe, bring us into the game a lot. With the swinging ball, (it's) very different to Australian conditions. Different to South African conditions as well, so that definitely gives us an opportunity.' Towering left-arm quick Marco Jansen took that opportunity just as Labuschagne appeared to get over the initial hurdle, snagging his outside edge and sending him on his way for 17. Former captain and Marnus' good mate Steve Smith backed up Marnus in front of the press after day one, declaring that he 'looked really sharp'. That was echoed by former South African superstar AB de Villiers, who suggested the 30-year-old actually looked to be 'in form'. 'I thought he started pretty well today. He looked really sharp in his movements. He left really nicely. He was solid in defence and he played some really good shots,' Smith said. 'So I think it would have been nice (for him) to have gone on and made a few more, as it would have been for all of us out there, but I think we can take some positives on the way he was moving and the way he was playing.'

News.com.au
28 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Poor review use, bad shot, Australia's quicks define day one of World Test Championship final
It was as costly as a regulation dropped catch. South Africa will lament 64 of Beau Webster's career-best 72 runs after failing to review a stone-cold LBW. Webster was in all sorts at the start of his innings, struggling to lay bat on ball and narrowly surviving numerous appeals. One of those shouts was not sent upstairs and later deemed to be crashing into the stumps on ball tracker. A successful referral would have reduced Australia to 5-94. The missed opportunity spooked Proteas captain Temba Bavuma into wasting two reviews in their next two appeals. Webster escaped an earlier review on 1 that remained the umpire's call, as did Steve Smith when he was on 27 batting Australia out of early trouble. The reviews were just about the only thing South Africa did wrong in the field on day one after bowling and catching brilliantly. ODD SHOT BLOWS DOOR OPEN The Proteas couldn't have asked for a timelier gift after tea. Australian wicketkeeper Alex Carey picked a peculiar time to play his favoured reverse sweep after the break. Carey (23 off 31 balls) had to that point supported Beau Webster in getting the game back on Aussie terms. There was a deep point protecting the boundary and it was Carey's second ball after the break when he was bowled by off-spinner Keshav Maharaj. The Carey dismissal opened the door for class South African fast bowler Kagiso Rabada to run through the Aussie tail. Carey had a 90 minutes to forget after tea, later dropping a catch off Mitchell Starc. Luckily for the gloveman, the grassed catch only cost the Aussies five runs. CLINICAL KG Rabada issued a stern reminder of his prowess with three magical spells on day one. The first sent a chill through the Australian dressing room as he took two wickets inside the first hour of play. Rabada supported his captain's decision to send the Aussies in by claiming opener Usman Khawaja and No.3 Cameron Green in the space of four balls. The No.2 ranked Test bowler in the world then produced a superb spell after lunch but luck was not on his side. That luck ultimately came after tea and he made the most of it with three quick wickets. Rabada's clinical 5-51 – his second five-wicket haul at Lord's – helped sink Australia from 5-192 to all out for 212. THE END CHANGE HERO South African Aiden Markram became the unlikeliest of partnership breakers in an end change over. All-rounder Wiaan Mulder bowled beautifully in his first spell at the Nursery End but struggled in the first over of his second spell down the slope at the Pavilion End. Mulder was replaced after that one over by opening bat and part-time off-spinner Markram in an obvious tactical end change. But Markram, with a previous bowling average of 85, mounted a case for more overs by jagging the prized scalp of Steve Smith (66). Smith saw the funny side of his dismissal after the day's play, laughing at the thought of outside edging the part-timer up the slope. NO ESCAPING THESE QUICKS If Mitchell Starc or Josh Hazlewood don't get you, then Pat Cummins will. The superstar Aussie trio penned an all-too-familiar story in another remarkable final session. Starc, as he often does, got Australia off to the perfect start by castling Markram in the first over. He then dismissed Ryan Rickelton (16 off 23) soon after before Hazlewood and Cummins put the finishing touches on an exquisite display of new-ball bowling. The three quicks have combined for 959 Test wickets and it's hard to not see them piling more on top of that tally on day two.