Damp draw!

MANCHESTER, England, (Reuters) – Old Trafford’s famously fickle weather helped shaky England retain the Ashes after rain ruined the last day of the drawn third test  yesterday, destroying Australia’s slim hopes of winning the series.

 Ryan Harris has Jonathan Trott caught behind for two to leave England in a spot of bother before rain came to their rescue. (Cricket 365 photo)
Ryan Harris has Jonathan Trott caught behind for two to leave England in a spot of bother before rain came to their rescue. (Cricket 365 photo)

England, who have won the last two Ashes campaigns, lead the five-match encounter 2-0 and as holders will keep the urn in the event of a drawn series.

The hosts were looking for the draw but were in trouble at 37 for three when play was suspended after lunch and steady rain continued to fall until the end.

“It’s a bit of a strange day. Today we had a little bit of luck and it’s nice to retain the Ashes,” said England captain Alastair Cook at an indoor presentation.

“The feeling in the dressing room is a very pleasant one. Now we want to go on and win it (the series).”

Australia would have fancied their chances of taking the remaining seven wickets in the final two sessions had the rain not intervened.

Play was eventually called off at 1539 GMT to the cheers of a smattering of hardy fans still left inside the Manchester ground, who later greeted the celebrating England players on the team balcony.

The teams next face each other at Chester-le-Street in Durham from Friday for the fourth test which will be a slight anti-climax after the literal damp-squib finish at Old Trafford.

England will still want to win the Ashes outright for the third straight time while Australia will at least look to make it 2-2 and head home with some confidence for the next series between the two starting in November.

“It’s unfortunate. I certainly don’t want to take anything away from England. It’s the chance you take going 2-0 down,” Australia skipper Michael Clarke said of the weather.
“Our goal is to try to level the series.”

England’s Joe Root was unbeaten on 13 from 57 balls after the opener tried to leave every wide delivery he could. Ian Bell was four not out having been struck on the glove and seen the ball balloon over the slips just before the second rain break.

Bustling fast bowler Ryan Harris struck twice for Australia before lunch to give the tourists real hope they could drag themselves back into the series after a 14-run loss at Trent Bridge and a 347-run humbling at Lord’s.

Rain was in the air from the start and play began half an hour late, leading Australia to declare on 172 for seven in their second innings and set England 332 to win.

Cook’s team got off to a terrible start when the captain was trapped lbw by Harris for a duck, compounding his misery by wasting a review even though he was proved to be plumb in front.

Out-of-form Jonathan Trott (11) survived a scare when Australia reviewed a not-out call for another Harris lbw shout, technology showing it was the umpire’s call, but the tourists did not have to wait long before he edged the same bowler down the leg side to wicketkeeper Brad Haddin.

More decision review system (DRS) controversy followed when first-innings centurion Kevin Pietersen was adjudged to have nicked Peter Siddle behind for eight.

Pietersen called for a review and despite no hotspot showing on the video replay, the third umpire upheld the decision. Television’s snicko technology, not used by the officials, suggested the batsman was out.

It was almost a lot worse for England but Clarke dropped a routine edge off Root in the slips as the swinging ball moved around.

Showers during lunch meant the players came out 20 minutes late and heavier rain fell after three balls of the resumption, sending the teams off again with dark clouds hanging over traditionally wet Manchester.

The umpires’ decision to go off for bad light frustrated Australia in Sunday’s evening session but there was little they could do yesterday with standing water on the outfield.

SCOREBOARD
Australia first innings 527 for seven declared
second innings 172-7 declared
England first innings 368 all out

second innings
A.Cook lbw b Harris                                                               0
J.Root not out                                                                          13
J.Trott c Haddin b Harris                                                       11
K.Pietersen c Haddin b Siddle                                                8
I. Bell not out                                                                             4
Extras (w1)                                                                              1
Total (3 wickets; 20.3 overs)                                                     37
Fall of wicket: 1-0 2-15 3-27
Bowling: Harris 7-3-13-2, Starc 4-2-6-0 (1w), Watson 2-2-0-0, Lyon 3-0-8-0, Siddle 3.3-0-8-1, Clarke 1-0-2-0
Australia won the toss
England lead the five-match series 2-0 and retain the Ashes