logo
Hazlewood bowls Aussies to victory in Windies opener

Hazlewood bowls Aussies to victory in Windies opener

The Advertiser2 days ago

A bowling masterclass from Josh Hazlewood has helped Australia claim a resounding 159-run victory over the West Indies on day three of the Test series opener in Bridgetown.
After a hotly contested first two days, Australia dominated on Friday (Saturday morning AEDT) with Hazlewood taking 5-43 as the tourists bowled their hosts out for 141 in their second dig.
The Windies were thwarted by a collapse of 6-26 in pursuit of 301 for victory, but were boosted by Australia's frequent tormentor Shamar Joseph who cracked 44 runs off 22 balls - including four sixes - in a furious cameo at No.10.
Veteran spinner Nathan Lyon (2-20) struck twice in the final over of the day to seal a win that helped Australia overcome their shock loss in the WTC final and start the three-match series on a high.
The tourists are likely to regain the injured Steve Smith for the second Test that begins in Grenada next week after his absence was glaring on a tough batting deck earlier in the match.
But Australia posted a competitive second-innings total of 310 on day three thanks largely to middle-order trio Travis Head (61), Beau Webster (63) and Alex Carey (65).
In the final session, Hazlewood took all four scalps in a West Indies batting implosion of 4-9 that devastated the hosts' middle order and had the veteran on a hat-trick at one stage.
Hazlewood broke the best partnership among the recognised batters, a 43-run stand between Keacy Carty and John Campbell, when Campbell (23) played a daring lap shot straight into Carey's gloves.
On Hazlewood's next ball, debutant Brandon King (0) caught a high inside edge to Cameron Green, who made up for dropping a sitter by leaping high at gully.
Captain Roston Chase (2) could not replicate a solid first innings, caught from by Sam Konstas at short leg, before Hazlewood bowled the established batter Carty with a ball that seamed in on the tricky pitch.
Axed from the XI, Marnus Labuschagne made a valuable contribution as a substitute fielder, whipping a direct hit at the stumps from the other end of the wicket to run Alzarri Joseph (0) out.
Hazlewood completed his 13th Test "five-fer" when Jomel Warrican (3) edged to Carey the ball after surviving an lbw review.
The end appeared nigh for West Indies when unlikely top-scorer Joseph edged Lyon to Usman Khawaja in the slips.
Earlier, No.5 Head (61 off 95 balls) ignited Australia's fightback after the tourists went to stumps on day two in a precarious position at 4-92.
Head was trapped lbw by a low delivery from cult hero paceman Joseph (5-87), who was again the West Indies' most important bowler after his match-winning heroics in Brisbane 17 months ago.
Showing impressive patience, the usually furious Head had been given a life earlier, spilt by Justin Greaves on 21 as one one of the hosts' seven dropped catches for the match.
After bringing up a third Test half-century, towering allrounder Webster (63 off 120) fell to an unfortunate tickle down the leg side as Joseph picked up his third wicket.
Carey, displaying some exciting stroke-making, was out caught in the deep by Greaves off Chase - the only Australian wicket that fell to spin for the match.
A bowling masterclass from Josh Hazlewood has helped Australia claim a resounding 159-run victory over the West Indies on day three of the Test series opener in Bridgetown.
After a hotly contested first two days, Australia dominated on Friday (Saturday morning AEDT) with Hazlewood taking 5-43 as the tourists bowled their hosts out for 141 in their second dig.
The Windies were thwarted by a collapse of 6-26 in pursuit of 301 for victory, but were boosted by Australia's frequent tormentor Shamar Joseph who cracked 44 runs off 22 balls - including four sixes - in a furious cameo at No.10.
Veteran spinner Nathan Lyon (2-20) struck twice in the final over of the day to seal a win that helped Australia overcome their shock loss in the WTC final and start the three-match series on a high.
The tourists are likely to regain the injured Steve Smith for the second Test that begins in Grenada next week after his absence was glaring on a tough batting deck earlier in the match.
But Australia posted a competitive second-innings total of 310 on day three thanks largely to middle-order trio Travis Head (61), Beau Webster (63) and Alex Carey (65).
In the final session, Hazlewood took all four scalps in a West Indies batting implosion of 4-9 that devastated the hosts' middle order and had the veteran on a hat-trick at one stage.
Hazlewood broke the best partnership among the recognised batters, a 43-run stand between Keacy Carty and John Campbell, when Campbell (23) played a daring lap shot straight into Carey's gloves.
On Hazlewood's next ball, debutant Brandon King (0) caught a high inside edge to Cameron Green, who made up for dropping a sitter by leaping high at gully.
Captain Roston Chase (2) could not replicate a solid first innings, caught from by Sam Konstas at short leg, before Hazlewood bowled the established batter Carty with a ball that seamed in on the tricky pitch.
Axed from the XI, Marnus Labuschagne made a valuable contribution as a substitute fielder, whipping a direct hit at the stumps from the other end of the wicket to run Alzarri Joseph (0) out.
Hazlewood completed his 13th Test "five-fer" when Jomel Warrican (3) edged to Carey the ball after surviving an lbw review.
The end appeared nigh for West Indies when unlikely top-scorer Joseph edged Lyon to Usman Khawaja in the slips.
Earlier, No.5 Head (61 off 95 balls) ignited Australia's fightback after the tourists went to stumps on day two in a precarious position at 4-92.
Head was trapped lbw by a low delivery from cult hero paceman Joseph (5-87), who was again the West Indies' most important bowler after his match-winning heroics in Brisbane 17 months ago.
Showing impressive patience, the usually furious Head had been given a life earlier, spilt by Justin Greaves on 21 as one one of the hosts' seven dropped catches for the match.
After bringing up a third Test half-century, towering allrounder Webster (63 off 120) fell to an unfortunate tickle down the leg side as Joseph picked up his third wicket.
Carey, displaying some exciting stroke-making, was out caught in the deep by Greaves off Chase - the only Australian wicket that fell to spin for the match.
A bowling masterclass from Josh Hazlewood has helped Australia claim a resounding 159-run victory over the West Indies on day three of the Test series opener in Bridgetown.
After a hotly contested first two days, Australia dominated on Friday (Saturday morning AEDT) with Hazlewood taking 5-43 as the tourists bowled their hosts out for 141 in their second dig.
The Windies were thwarted by a collapse of 6-26 in pursuit of 301 for victory, but were boosted by Australia's frequent tormentor Shamar Joseph who cracked 44 runs off 22 balls - including four sixes - in a furious cameo at No.10.
Veteran spinner Nathan Lyon (2-20) struck twice in the final over of the day to seal a win that helped Australia overcome their shock loss in the WTC final and start the three-match series on a high.
The tourists are likely to regain the injured Steve Smith for the second Test that begins in Grenada next week after his absence was glaring on a tough batting deck earlier in the match.
But Australia posted a competitive second-innings total of 310 on day three thanks largely to middle-order trio Travis Head (61), Beau Webster (63) and Alex Carey (65).
In the final session, Hazlewood took all four scalps in a West Indies batting implosion of 4-9 that devastated the hosts' middle order and had the veteran on a hat-trick at one stage.
Hazlewood broke the best partnership among the recognised batters, a 43-run stand between Keacy Carty and John Campbell, when Campbell (23) played a daring lap shot straight into Carey's gloves.
On Hazlewood's next ball, debutant Brandon King (0) caught a high inside edge to Cameron Green, who made up for dropping a sitter by leaping high at gully.
Captain Roston Chase (2) could not replicate a solid first innings, caught from by Sam Konstas at short leg, before Hazlewood bowled the established batter Carty with a ball that seamed in on the tricky pitch.
Axed from the XI, Marnus Labuschagne made a valuable contribution as a substitute fielder, whipping a direct hit at the stumps from the other end of the wicket to run Alzarri Joseph (0) out.
Hazlewood completed his 13th Test "five-fer" when Jomel Warrican (3) edged to Carey the ball after surviving an lbw review.
The end appeared nigh for West Indies when unlikely top-scorer Joseph edged Lyon to Usman Khawaja in the slips.
Earlier, No.5 Head (61 off 95 balls) ignited Australia's fightback after the tourists went to stumps on day two in a precarious position at 4-92.
Head was trapped lbw by a low delivery from cult hero paceman Joseph (5-87), who was again the West Indies' most important bowler after his match-winning heroics in Brisbane 17 months ago.
Showing impressive patience, the usually furious Head had been given a life earlier, spilt by Justin Greaves on 21 as one one of the hosts' seven dropped catches for the match.
After bringing up a third Test half-century, towering allrounder Webster (63 off 120) fell to an unfortunate tickle down the leg side as Joseph picked up his third wicket.
Carey, displaying some exciting stroke-making, was out caught in the deep by Greaves off Chase - the only Australian wicket that fell to spin for the match.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Matildas concede injury-time equaliser as Slovenia snare 1-1 draw despite improved Australia performance
Matildas concede injury-time equaliser as Slovenia snare 1-1 draw despite improved Australia performance

West Australian

time4 hours ago

  • West Australian

Matildas concede injury-time equaliser as Slovenia snare 1-1 draw despite improved Australia performance

The Matildas have been stunned by a last-gasp equaliser as Slovenia secured a dramatic 1-1 draw at HBF Park to deny Australia a series sweep. Michelle Heyman's 50th minute goal looked to have proved decisive as Australia offered up an improved showing in Joe Montemurro's second game in charge. But their good work was undone as Slovenia levelled in the 91st minute after Naja Poje Mihelic's shot hit the post and Mirjam Kastelec slammed home the rebound. And yet, despite the result, Montemurro would have been pleased with the Matildas performance as the 13,115 fans inside the ground witnessed an improved showing, with many of the mistakes which punctuated Thursday night's error-strewn win eradicated. Australia found solutions with the ball to counter Slovenia's press and progress the ball up the park, with Amy Sayer and Kyra Cooney-Cross important in the middle of the park, while Clare Hunt made several crucial interventions inside the 18-yard box to sniff out danger. Montemurro rung the changes pre-game, with five fresh faces inserted into the starting line-up and a new midfield tandem of Cooney-Cross and Alanna Kennedy, playing behind the retained Sayer. Where Slovenia had pressed the Matildas into frequent mistakes in their first meeting, there was more calmness on the ball in the middle of the park. After starting in midfield in the previous encounter, Winonah Heatley looked more comfortable at centre-back and made a crucial intervention just three minutes in, preventing an easy shot while almost prone on the floor. Kennedy broke up play well and helped recycle possession, while Cooney-Cross' ability to slither out of trouble helped break the press – however, it was Sayer who impressed the most. Constantly on the move and forever roaming into space, the 23 year-old's sharp instincts were at the heart of the Matildas' best moments in the first half. In the 14th minute, she glided into space, turned forward and set free the similarly-impressive Ellie Carpenter down the right, who saw her dangerous crosses turned behind before Kennedy nodded a free header over from the resultant corner. Eight minutes later, Kennedy found Heyman's feet and her flick rolled into the path of Sayer, only for Sara Gradisek's last-ditch challenge to foil Kaitlyn Torpey's finish. Heyman then shot narrowly off target from outside box after great Cooney-Cross turn in midfield, but Slovenia were able to take the wind out of the Matildas' sails for the remainder of the half. It took five minutes for the breakthrough to come, and once again Carpenter was involved as Australia won possession high up, Remy Siemsen slipped in the captain and Heyman was left with a simple finish. Arnold then faced a stern test in goal shortly after as Mateja Zver raced onto a long ball, but the Slovenian shot straight at the custodian. Only the desperation of Sara Agrez denied Siemsen from doubling the Matildas' lead in the 57th minute after a great link-up between Heyman and Charli Grant. Australia continued to work their way forward as more chances fell to Sayer and substitute Holly McNamara and as the game entered the final 10 minutes, it felt as if the Matildas had a firm grip on proceedings. But Slovenia refused to die wondering and had chances, with Korina Lara Janez heading over before Courtney Nevin had her pocket picked and Arnold was forced to come to the rescue. And as the match entered injury time, Poje Mihelic's rolled shot evaded Arnold, bounced off the post and Kastelec pounced to trigger pandemonium among the Slovenians on the touchline.

Matildas concede injury-time equaliser as Slovenia snare 1-1 draw despite improved Australia performance
Matildas concede injury-time equaliser as Slovenia snare 1-1 draw despite improved Australia performance

7NEWS

time4 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

Matildas concede injury-time equaliser as Slovenia snare 1-1 draw despite improved Australia performance

The Matildas have been stunned by a last-gasp equaliser as Slovenia secured a dramatic 1-1 draw at HBF Park to deny Australia a series sweep. Michelle Heyman's 50th minute goal looked to have proved decisive as Australia offered up an improved showing in Joe Montemurro's second game in charge. But their good work was undone as Slovenia levelled in the 91st minute after Naja Poje Mihelic's shot hit the post and Mirjam Kastelec slammed home the rebound. And yet, despite the result, Montemurro would have been pleased with the Matildas performance as the 13,115 fans inside the ground witnessed an improved showing, with many of the mistakes which punctuated Thursday night's error-strewn win eradicated. Australia found solutions with the ball to counter Slovenia's press and progress the ball up the park, with Amy Sayer and Kyra Cooney-Cross important in the middle of the park, while Clare Hunt made several crucial interventions inside the 18-yard box to sniff out danger. Montemurro rung the changes pre-game, with five fresh faces inserted into the starting line-up and a new midfield tandem of Cooney-Cross and Alanna Kennedy, playing behind the retained Sayer. Where Slovenia had pressed the Matildas into frequent mistakes in their first meeting, there was more calmness on the ball in the middle of the park. After starting in midfield in the previous encounter, Winonah Heatley looked more comfortable at centre-back and made a crucial intervention just three minutes in, preventing an easy shot while almost prone on the floor. Kennedy broke up play well and helped recycle possession, while Cooney-Cross' ability to slither out of trouble helped break the press – however, it was Sayer who impressed the most. Constantly on the move and forever roaming into space, the 23 year-old's sharp instincts were at the heart of the Matildas' best moments in the first half. In the 14th minute, she glided into space, turned forward and set free the similarly-impressive Ellie Carpenter down the right, who saw her dangerous crosses turned behind before Kennedy nodded a free header over from the resultant corner. Eight minutes later, Kennedy found Heyman's feet and her flick rolled into the path of Sayer, only for Sara Gradisek's last-ditch challenge to foil Kaitlyn Torpey's finish. Heyman then shot narrowly off target from outside box after great Cooney-Cross turn in midfield, but Slovenia were able to take the wind out of the Matildas' sails for the remainder of the half. It took five minutes for the breakthrough to come, and once again Carpenter was involved as Australia won possession high up, Remy Siemsen slipped in the captain and Heyman was left with a simple finish. Arnold then faced a stern test in goal shortly after as Mateja Zver raced onto a long ball, but the Slovenian shot straight at the custodian. Only the desperation of Sara Agrez denied Siemsen from doubling the Matildas' lead in the 57th minute after a great link-up between Heyman and Charli Grant. Australia continued to work their way forward as more chances fell to Sayer and substitute Holly McNamara and as the game entered the final 10 minutes, it felt as if the Matildas had a firm grip on proceedings. But Slovenia refused to die wondering and had chances, with Korina Lara Janez heading over before Courtney Nevin had her pocket picked and Arnold was forced to come to the rescue. And as the match entered injury time, Poje Mihelic's rolled shot evaded Arnold, bounced off the post and Kastelec pounced to trigger pandemonium among the Slovenians on the touchline.

Gold Coast Titans go from bad to worse as Scott Drinkwater fires Cowboys
Gold Coast Titans go from bad to worse as Scott Drinkwater fires Cowboys

Daily Telegraph

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Telegraph

Gold Coast Titans go from bad to worse as Scott Drinkwater fires Cowboys

The Titans have endured a coastal capitulation at the hands of a Scott Drinkwater-inspired Cowboys to heap more misery on a Gold Coast team languishing at the bottom of the ladder. Gold Coast unraveled in front of 13,882 spectators in wet conditions at Cbus Super Stadium on Sunday to go down 30-24 and lose even more ground on the top eight that now sits three wins outside its reach. The win alleviates some of the pressure on Cowboys coach Todd Payten and while North Queensland remain 12th on the ladder, the club is only one point from eighth-placed Dolphins. The Cowboys shot out to an early 12-0 lead in the first half before a knock-on from Reece Robson opened the door for the Titans to score as North Queensland struggled to retain possession. Todd Payten's side came out firing in the second to regain control but instead of putting the game away they let the Titans get within six points before sneaking away with the win. DRINKWATER THE DIFFERENCE Scott Drinkwater was the difference between the two sides. The fullback scored twice, had his hand in another with a delicate kick and made two line breaks in a huge display. On an afternoon where skills were at a premium and execution was a rarity, Drinkwater was a calm head under pressure and composed with ball in hand. He took the high balls without fault and his ability to pop up at the right moment proved to be game-deciding. SCRUM SCRAMBLE The NRL needs to step in to stop teams conceding penalties from scrums in order to set its defensive line. It is an absolute blight on the game and every team is at fault. Sides are intentionally getting penalised when just outside their own tryline in order to increase its numbers on the line and increase their recovery time. Sin bins should be brought in to send a message to sides attempting to rort the system. WEAVER GROWING INTO HIS ROLE Tom Weaver has shown enormous improvement and should be knocking on the door for a regular starting role in the near future. The Titans playmaker has put on size and showed maturity with his decision making, provided a strong kicking game and was a threat when running the ball. Kieran Foran didn't actually take many kicks for the entire game, handing over the kicking duties to Weaver on the fifth tackle. Jayden Campbell will be available when the Titans return after the bye to play the Broncos but Weaver has shown he is a genuine star of the future at NRL level.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store