Flintoff bowls England to famous victory

LONDON, (Reuters) – Andrew Flintoff bowled with  furious pace and sustained hostility yesterday to propel England to their first Ashes win over Australia at Lord’s since 1934.

Flintoff bowled unchanged from the Pavilion end to finish on the honours’ board with five for 92 as England wrapped up the second Ashes test by 115 runs before lunch on the final day to take a 1-0 lead in the five-match series.

Only eight days ago England needed their last-wicket pair of James Anderson and Monty Panesar to bat through 11.3 overs to salvage the first test in Cardiff. Now they believe they can emulate the 2005 heroes who regained the Ashes from Australia in  the greatest series ever staged.

Three survivors from the fifth and final test at the Oval in 2005 played significant roles at Lord’s.

Captain Andrew Strauss seized the initiative after Cardiff  to score 161 in England’s first innings and Paul Collingwood  completed his third half-century of the series in the second.

Then there was Flintoff.

The giant Lancastrian announced last week he would retire  from test cricket at the end of the series after four  injury-ravaged years since he touched the heights as an  all-rounder in 2005.

Yesterday he showed no ill-effects from the troubled right  knee which required an operation this year to bowl as fast a spell as any in his career after dismissing both Australian openers on the previous day.

PONTING PROBLEMS

Australia needed 209 more runs with five wickets in hand at  the start of play yesterday to reach a record fourth-innings winning total of 522 with Michael Clarke (125) and Brad Haddin  (80) at the crease.

Flintoff beat Haddin for pace with his third delivery of the  morning and caught the edge of the bat with the fourth which  flew to Paul Collingwood at second slip.

Clarke, who had batted gloriously on Sunday, was bowled by a flighted delivery by Graeme Swann for 136 and the match was effectively over.

Strauss told a news conference Flintoff had said he would  like to keep bowling after taking Haddin’s wicket.

“It sounded like a good plan to me,” Strauss said.

Strauss added he had felt confident England could win at the start of the final day.
“But in an Ashes test match there are always twists and  turns. The way Michael Clarke and Brad Haddin played yesterday  made the Aussies think it was possible and made us realise we  had to start well today,” he said.

“The wicket in the first over calmed the nerves and allowed  us to push forward for the victory.”

Flintoff said he had been fully aware of England’s sorry  record at Lord’s, where they had not won since Yorkshire  left-arm spinner Hedley Verity took 15 wickets and dismissed Don  Bradman cheaply in each innings 75 years ago.

“To go up one-nil in an Ashes series is a big one,” he said.  “We’ll enjoy this moment, I know I will, but there are still  three test matches to go.

“There are a couple of twinges in my knee but it’s  encouraging that I can run in and bowl the number of overs that  I do and it bodes well for three more test matches. I want to  play a major part in them, I’m getting faster as I get older.”

Australia captain Ricky Ponting, who relinquished the Ashes four years ago before winning them back in the return series in Australia, said he still believed the teams were evenly matched.

“They grabbed the momentum on day one, a lot of test matches are won on what happens in the first hour,” he said.

Unlike Strauss, who could always turn to Flintoff for  penetration or control, Ponting’s spearhead Mitchell Johnson is  in woeful form, although he did score 63 with nine boundaries yesterday.

“He’s only played 20-odd tests,” Ponting said. “He’s pretty  new to tests and to fast bowling. It’s only a couple of games  ago that he was bowling as well as anybody in the world.”

At the moment, though, it is Flintoff who is rightly the  most feared bowler on either side.

“I know if you had to list the top three bowlers in world  cricket that batsmen don’t want to face, Fred (Flintoff) is  going to be on that list and probably the top of it,” Strauss  said.

“Nobody enjoys facing him and it was great to see him getting what he deserved in this game.”