Travis Head’s Stunning Performance Seals Australia’s Unexpected Triumph as England Falters in First Test

England suffer humiliating first Test defeat after yet another batting collapse - before Travis Head masterclass leads Australia to unlikely victory
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In just under five and a half hours, England’s seemingly firm grip on the opening Ashes Test slipped away, resulting in a disheartening eight-wicket loss to Australia. This defeat leaves England trailing 1–0 and facing an uphill battle to bounce back.

During a lively second evening at Perth Stadium, Australia was propelled towards their target of 205 runs by an astonishing 123 off 82 balls from Travis Head. Head, stepping in as an opener for the sidelined Usman Khawaja due to back issues, delivered a performance that will be remembered as one of the most opportune injuries in Test cricket history.

Head’s rapid century, achieved in just 69 balls, ranks as the second-fastest in Ashes history, only behind Adam Gilchrist’s explosive 57-ball innings at the WACA 19 years earlier. English spectators had anticipated witnessing Bazball cricket, but instead, they saw it executed brilliantly by an Australian.

England’s lapse in concentration proved costly, quickly undoing the efforts of their bowlers from the previous evening. At that time, it seemed they had discovered a pace attack capable of unsettling the Australians.

Australia claimed an unlikely eight-wicket victory in the first Ashes Test in Perth

Travis Head smashed 123 off 82 balls to steer Australia to victory

The attention now shifts back to England’s hasty batting, which had already jeopardized their first innings less than a day earlier. After being bowled out in 32.5 overs on Friday, they managed only 34.4 on Saturday—a performance insufficient for a serious Ashes challenge, even against an Australian side missing two of its top three seamers.

You have to go back to Nottingham in 1921 for the last two-day finish in an Ashes Test. And not since 1904 have England been bowled out twice inside the 67.3 overs they lasted here. It really was that bad.

The morning’s play had offered little sign of what was to come. At lunch, England seemed to have quietly taken control: having removed the last Australian wicket for the addition of just nine, they had built on a first-innings lead of 40 to reach the break on 59 for one.

Zak Crawley had come and gone for nought, completing the first pair by an England opener since Mike Atherton at Johannesburg in 1999-2000 thanks to a wondrous return catch by Mitchell Starc, diving at full stretch to his left to secure the ball an inch from the turf.

But Ben Duckett and Pope had ridden their luck, and England were 99 ahead. A couple of good partnerships, and the game was theirs. Wasn’t it?

Instead, a collapse of six for 39 meant that even an eighth-wicket stand of 50 in six overs between Gus Atkinson and Brydon Carse couldn’t tidy up the mess.

Havoc was wreaked first by Scott Boland, a passenger in the first innings, then by the inevitable Starc, who finished with match figures of 10 for 113. He has responded like a champion to the absence of Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood.

Head was promoted to open the batting with Usman Khawaja struggling with back spasms

England’s bowlers had no answers to the Head onslaught

Boland had begun to settle into a rhythm before lunch, perhaps helped by Pope’s indecision over whether to defend or attack. Now, Boland squared up Duckett, on 28, in the second over after the break, before finally finding Pope’s edge after one hopeful drive too many. Three balls later, Brook aimed a drive that did not have the percentages on his side, and found Usman Khawaja in the slips.

But the stuffing was truly knocked out of the innings when Starc, with the second ball of a new spell, bowled Root off an inside edge for eight.

It was all so careless. Pope had fallen for the second time after playing himself in, adding 33 to his first-innings 46, while Brook didn’t bother playing himself in at all. Root, meanwhile, having at least avoided the indignity of a pair, offered to Starc an angled bat of the kind English players are warned to forego in these parts.

Not since March 2022, when he made nought and five against West Indies in Grenada – the game which triggered his resignation as captain – has he batted twice in a Test for a lower aggregate than his eight here. That first Ashes hundred in Australia looks as far away as ever.

And Australia were beside themselves when Starc removed Ben Stokes for two, adding a beauty that left him to the beauty that bowled him a little over 24 hours earlier.

If England’s collapse to 88 for six was clear-cut, the dismissal of Jamie Smith after a brief rally was anything but. When Australia reviewed a rejected appeal for caught behind down the leg side off Brendan Doggett, Smith began to walk off the moment DRS showed a small tremor as the ball passed his gloves and bat.

Earlier in the day, England had collapsed from 64-1 to 164 all out

Mitchell Starc claimed three wickets in the second innings to make it ten for the match

But TV umpire Sharfuddoula Saikat was less certain, spending an agonising few minutes trying to decide if the apparent gap visible to the naked eye could be overruled by the activity on Ultra-Edge. DRS protocol won the day: a snick one frame after the ball has passed the bat is considered ‘conclusive’, and Smith had to go.

Atkinson and Carse gave England hope, each clobbering a couple of sixes as Australia spread the field in expectation of a miscue, and the target had passed 200 by the time Doggett and Boland wrapped up the tail: all out 164.

If Australia felt uncomfortable at the prospect of chasing the highest score in the match, Head settled nerves almost immediately, dominating an opening stand of 75 inside 12 overs with Jake Weatherald, who made 23 before miscuing Carse to short extra, and moving to a 36-ball half-century as England fell to pieces.

Harry Brook fell for a three-ball duck in the second innings

His innings contained every trick in the bag, and more, making England’s bowlers look as powerless as they had been potent the day before. If the pitch had flattened out a touch, then that took nothing away from Head’s brilliance.

By the time he heaved Carse to Pope at deep midwicket, and walked off to a standing ovation, Australia needed only 13. Labuschagne’s unbeaten 51 eased them over the line, a pulsating chase complete within just 28.2 overs.

Only twice have England won in Australia after losing the first Test, and the more recent instance took place as long ago as 1954-55. There are defeats, and there are knockout blows. How England dust themselves off from here is anyone’s guess.

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