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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

England look to the heavens as Australia surge for the urn

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Swann: Would like England to save it without rain (1:26)

Graeme Swann and Melinda Farrell discuss if rain will give England a hope of keeping the Ashes series alive. (1:26)

England 403 and 4 for 132 (Malan 28*, Bairstow 14*) trail Australia 9 for 662 dec (Smith 239, M Marsh 181, Khawaja 50, Anderson 4-116) by 127 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

The idea that Brits love to talk incessantly about the weather is more than a persistent national stereotype. Two years ago, research showed that at any given moment, one third of the UK population were either discussing the weather, or had just done so, or were about to. It is a trait that may serve them well ahead of the final day in Perth, where Monday's forecast is for a morning storm and up to 15 millimetres of rain. And therein lies England's hope of holding on to the urn a little longer.

The state of play was this: Australia needed six wickets to win, while England required a further 127 runs to make Australia bat again. The pitch was cracking up, the occasional ball jagging so far that fast bowlers looked like legspinners and the odd delivery staying low, just to add to the challenge. Mitchell Starc bowled James Vince from around the wicket with a ball that bit so sharply off the pitch it changed its angle from down leg to demolishing off stump, and left Vince glancing at the pitch with the same sort of mystified look that Mike Gatting had against Shane Warne in 1993.

In short, this would not be an easy task for England, if the rain stayed away. Dawid Malan was on 28 and Jonny Bairstow had 14, and England were on 4 for 132. Earlier, Australia had piled up 9 for 662 before they declared. It was the ninth-highest total in Australia's Test history, and their heftiest score since the Cardiff Ashes Test of 2009, when they amassed 6 for 674 in their second innings. England fans will remember that their side clung on for a draw on that occasion.

This time, Australia had earned themselves a 259-run first-innings lead. It was almost true to say that Steven Smith was the difference between the teams, for he himself had accumulated a career-best 239. The day began with some positive signs for England, as they plucked out Mitchell Marsh for 181, removed Smith, and ran out Starc within the first five overs. And the day ended early with Perth's wet weather giving Malan and Bairstow a reprieve. But not much that went in between was good for England.

In the second over of their reply, England lost Mark Stoneman, who flirted tamely outside off stump and edged behind off Josh Hazlewood. In the eighth over, Alastair Cook was brilliantly caught and bowled by Hazlewood, who grabbed the chance low and to his right, continuing Cook's recent run of poor form. Cook has now failed to pass fifty in any of his past 10 Test innings, and in fact has crossed 30 only once during that time. His double-century against West Indies in August seems of a different time.

The loss of Joe Root for 14 compounded England's problems and left them at 3 for 60. Root was dismissed from Nathan Lyon's first ball of the innings, caught at slip after his edge ricocheted off the wicketkeeper Tim Paine. Vince played with impressive intent in scoring 12 boundaries during his 55, but there was nothing - literally nothing - that he could have done to prevent himself being bowled by Starc. Any batsman would have assumed the ball was sailing down leg, so Vince shaped to glance, only to lose his off stump.

The early wickets of Marsh, Smith and Starc had given England hope of running through Australia's lower order, but Paine and Pat Cummins refused to budge, and compiled a 93-run stand that continued to frustrate England. Cummins made 41, his fourth score in the forties this series, and at the end of his innings he had accumulated precisely twice as many runs in this series as Cook, and had even done so from one fewer innings. Cummins was lbw to Anderson and Paine finished not out on 49 when Lyon skied a catch to give Anderson his fourth wicket.

It was Anderson who had trapped Marsh lbw from the second ball of the day, and then also had Smith lbw shortly afterwards with a delivery that angled in and then straightened. Marsh had been denied a double-century and Smith a 250, but their 301-run partnership had been enough to put Australia within reach of the urn. Starc was run out in a mix-up with Paine, perhaps distracted by another vociferous lbw appeal, but it was England's last breakthrough for more than 20 overs.

Along the way, England became just the eighth team in Test history to have five bowlers all concede 100 runs in the same innings, and Anderson and Broad became the only bowlers to have twice been part of such a scoreline, having also done so in that Cardiff Test of 2009. But if England find a way to produce the same result here, they won't mind a bit. A draw would keep them alive in the series, though they would have to win in Melbourne and Sydney to retain the Ashes. But a slim hope is better than none. For now, at least 11 Brits will be taking a close look at the weather forecast.

Comprehensive series wins

10

Number of times an Ashes series of 5+ Tests has been decided by the third Test. 9 of those have been wins for Australia; England's only such win was in 1928-29

WACA dominance

8

Number of successive Test wins for Aus v Eng at the WACA, starting 1991. The last time they didn't win was in 1986, when the Test was drawn

England's away woes

7

Number of away Tests England have lost in a row, which equals their worst streak. They also lost 7 in 1993-94; 3 in Ind, 1 in SL, and 3 in WI

Malan's WACA feat

4

England batsmen who have passed 50 in each innings in a WACA Test. The others, apart from Malan, are Pietersen (2006), Randall (1982), and Boycott (1970)

Lyon bosses Moeen

5

Number of times Nathan Lyon has dismissed Moeen Ali in this series. Moeen has scored 68 from 169 balls off him, for an average of 13.60

Bowler centuries

5

England bowlers who conceded 100 or more runs in Australia's 1st innings, only the eighth such instance in Test history, and the third for England

Top Scores for Aus in Aus

662

Runs made by Australia in this Test - Third highest score for Australia at home. The highest was 735 for 6 in 2003 also at Perth

Captain's knock

239

Runs scored by Steven Smith - Third highest score for a captain from Australia in an Ashes Test behind Bob Simpson and Don Bradman.

Mr Consistent

4

Consecutive years in which Smith has scored more than 1000 runs- Second cricketer to achieve this behind Mathew Hayden who did it five times between 2001-05.

Centurion Smith

108

Innings in which Steven Smith scored 22 Test centuries - Third quickest to this feat behind Don Bradman(58 innings) and Sunil Gavaskar(101 innings).

Warner at WACA

3

Centuries for Warner at the WACA . Before this innings he averaged 89.22 at this ground - Highest for Warner at a venue in Australia.

Double Trouble

1938

Last instance of a 200 run partnership for the fifth wicket for England against Australia. Compton and Paynter added 206 in Nottingham.

Strong Day 1 performance

305

Runs scored by England on Day 1 of A test in Australia - Highest since 2002 when they made 295 for 4 in Adelaide.

Maiden century

1

Century for David Malan in Tests. This is the first century for England in Australia since the 120 made by Ben Stokes at Perth in 2013.

Long time coming

2010

Last instance of England adding more than 100 runs for the fifth wicket in Australia. Pietersen and Bell added 116 in Adelaide.