Ashes History - 1921-1938
[1861-1914 |
1946-1970 |
1970-Present]
by Jeff Green and Dave Liverman
1920/21
The only 5-0 whitewash in Ashes history.
Warwick Armstrong
leads from the front with both bat and ball. Despite some great
batting by Hobbs,
Australia win all tests fairly comfortably. In
the 1st Test
Collins makes a century on debut, and Armstrong
another hundred to set England a massive 659 to win (they fail
by a wide margin). A century by Hobbs
is unable to prevent an
innings defeat in the second Test as Gregory's fast bowling is
too much for England. Centuries for Collins,
Kelleway,
Pellew,
Russell and Hobbs
in the Third Test, again won comfortably by
Australia as Mailey
takes 5 wickets in each innings).
Mailey
stars again in an 8 wicket fourth Test win, taking 9 wickets in
England's 2nd innings, and 13 in the match.
Macartney's
170 and
more wickets for
Mailey
complete a crushing 5-0 sweep.
Australia 5 England 0.
1921
Armstrong's Australian's are unbeaten until the festival games
at the end of the tour. Gregory
and Mcdonald destroy England in
the first 3 tests giving the Australians 8 wins on the trot. The
last two Tests are drawn. England were without the services of
Hobbs,
except in the 3rd Test when illness prevented him
batting. England might have won the 4th Test but for
Tennyson
(and the umpires) misunderstanding the declaration rules at the
time. Carter
(the Australian 'keeper) pointed out that the
attempted declaration was too late in the day under a law
introduced in 1914 but seemingly never used. In the confusion
Armstrong managed to bowl the first over of Englands resumed
innings, thus bowling 2 in a row. The tour will also be
remembered for Macartney
making 345* in less than 4 hours
against Notts - the highest by an Australian in England and the
most by one batsman in a day.
Woolley makes a ninety in each
innings of the Lord's test.
Australia 3 England 0.
1924/25
Debuts for Ponsford,
Sutcliffe,
Maurice Tate and the first
use of 8 ball overs in tests. Also the first radio commentary of
Tests. Australia win 4-1 though the games were closer than that
suggests. Hobbs
and Sutcliffe have 4 century opening stands,
the best 283 (taking more than a day) and Tate takes a then Ashes
record 38 wickets. After good opening stands England's batting
too often collapsed. The first three Tests go into a 7th
day- all Tests were played without time restrictions.
The first Test is won by Australia in a high scoring game, with
hundreds for
Hobbs,
Woolley,
Sutcliffe,
Collins,
JM Taylor and
Ponsford (and 98 for
Vic Richardson).
A century in each innings for
Sutcliffe
in the second Test (who is on the field for all but 86
minutes of this 7 day match), but Australia win comfortably
after a huge 1st innings total. The third Test is a close game,
as Ryder's
double century against a England attack weakened by
injuries proves enough as England's batting fails in the second
innings. England finally win the fourth Test against Australia
13 years after their last success. A fine opening partnership
from Hobbs
and Sutcliffe
is followed by good batting throughout
the order. Rain makes the wicket tricky, and England run out the
winner by an innings, following good bowling from Tate.
Clarrie
Grimmett destroys England with 11 cheap wickets in the 5th Test
in a fine demonstration of accurate and varied wrist spin.
Australia 4 England 1.
1926
1925 and 1926 were the years of
Hobbs' pomp.
He scored around
3000 runs each year with 26 hundreds and 17 fifties. If this
form was not quite shown in the Tests it was unthinkable in
England that Hobbs
would finish on the losing side. Nor did he,
as the Australians lack the penetrating attack of previous tours
and are not up to dismissing a strong batting side twice in 3
days, the English scarcely more so. However, after looking the
more likely to win in the earlier matches the extra day and a
rain affected pitch at the Oval, give England the chance to
regain the Ashes which, thanks to
Hobbs' and
Sutcliffe's batting
and the bowling of the veteran
Rhodes
they duly do. Only 50
minutes of play is possible in the 1st Test, and the 2nd is a
high scoring draw, with centuries for
Bardsley,
Hendren,
Hobbs
and Macartney.
In the 3rd Test. Macartney makes a hundred before
lunch on the first day, and after further hundreds from
Woodfull
and V Richardson,
England follow on. Another big opening stand by
Sutcliffe and Hobbs
ensures a draw. In the 4th game,
Hobbs
deputises as captain (the 1st professional since the 1880s to do
so) but with the first day all but lost to rain a draw was
always the likely result. The final Test is won by masterly
batting on a rain damaged wicket by
Hobbs
and Sutcliffe (aided
it was said by their deliberately playing and missing at
AJ Richardson's off spin to keep him on ). No other batsmen on
either side managed 50 in the 2nd innings and
Rhodes bowls
Australia all out for 125 with the assistance of a future
scourge of Australia,
Larwood.
England 1 Australia 0.
1928/29
Surely the strongest batting line ups two sides have ever had to
call on. England with
Hobbs,
Hendren,
Hammond
and Mead have the
4 batsmen with the most individual hundreds (each more than 150)
and only Mead
with an average of less than 50. Australia have
Bradman
and Ponsford
together with Woodfull,
Kippax
and Ryder.
Thus the scorers of the most hundreds
(Hobbs 197) most double
hundreds (Bradman 36
and Hammond 35),
most triple hundreds
(Bradman 6)
and quadruple hundreds (
Bradman 2) were in the same
place at the same time. With
Larwood, Tate and
Grimmett in the
teams bowling was scarcely weak. The series is at the start one
sidedly England's with the better bowling and the batting to
exploit timeless tests and the wonderful Australian wickets, but
Australia improve in each test. The 1st Test is the first ever
played at Brisbane and the first in Australia in which a captain
declared. It is also
Bradman's somewhat unremarkable debut, as
well as that of
Hammond and
Jardine.
England win overwhelmingly
(the largest Test win ever in terms of runs) after
Larwood in the first
innings and
White
in the second run through Australia's batting.
Bradman
is then dropped from the Australian team for the first and only time in his Test
career, and misses another large defeat, with a double century
for Hammond,
and wickets for Geary and
Tate.
Blackie debuts for
Australia at the age of 46, and is Australia's most successful
bowler. The 3rd Test features another
Hammond 200 replying to
hundreds from Ryder and
Kippax and a slow 79 from
Bradman.
Bradman's
first of 19 Test centuries and a hundred from Woodfull
enable Australia to set England a challenging target on an
increasingly difficult wicket, but a century from
Sutcliffe
supported by Hobbs
and Jardine is
enough for the win.
Hammond's
astonishing run of form continues with a hundred in each innings
in the 4th Test, and
Bradman
gets two 50s, the second ending when he is run
out by Hobbs
from cover (neatly reflecting
Hobbs dismissal in
the 1st Test).
Archie Jackson
makes a century on debut, but the
Australians cannot cope with the spin of
White (8 wickets in the
second innings, 12 in the match) and England gain a narrow
victory. The last Test has both England and Australia scoring
over 500 in their first innings, but England's batting is less
successful the second time round against the bowling of
Wall,
and Australia have little trouble reaching a modest target.
England 4 Australia 1.
1930
Bradman!
The Don finds himself in Test cricket on this tour. In
1928-9 he had been a successful batsman, but one of several; in
England he is incomparable. He makes the highest score yet by an
Australian in Test cricket, and follows this by making the highest
score yet by anyone in test cricket. He finishes with an almost
disappointing 232 at the Oval. During the last Ashes series his
runs had been scored at about the same rate as his team-mates,
here he scores quickly and assuredly. Almost never playing in
the air and eschewing any shots he deems unwise, this still
leaves him with a far greater range than that of any other
batsman. He easily passes
Hammond's
record for runs in a series
set two years ago, despite having only 7 innings and in 4 day
tests (other than the last).
Hammond
himself is relatively
unsuccessful and
Hobbs
at the age of 47 in his final series
averages 33 and hits no hundreds. In the 1st Test, England have
two steady innings but Australia's 1st was on a rain affected
pitch and Tate has them in serious trouble with the exception of
Kippax.
Bradman's first Test century in England looks like
ending Chapman's
winning streak until he fails to read Robins'
googly, and England win. The Lords test is a superb contest.
Duleepsinhji rescues the first England innings with a brilliant
century. Australia's reply is crushing, as
Bradman makes what he
later calls his best innings- 254, with scarcely a mis-hit.
Grimmett
takes 6 wickets, but
Chapman makes a heroic century in
England's second innings, and takes a stunning catch to dismiss
Bradman as Australia momentarily falter before winning easily.
The Leeds Test is remembered for
Bradman's
great innings. The
Don scores 309 of his 334 on the first day before passing
Sandham's test record score. England follow on, as
Grimmett
proves difficult to counter, but rain and bad light allow them
to salvage a draw.In the 4th Test, a slow rain affected pitch
sees the Australian batsmen struggle but eventually reach a fair
total. Sutcliffe and
Hobbs
make their last century opening
stand but the final day is abandoned to rain. Australia take
the Ashes at the Oval. H Sutcliffe's
century allows England to
build a reasonable total, but first
Ponsford and
Woodfull, and
then Bradman
and Jackson on a lively wicket take the game away
from England. Further rain washes out the 5th day but on the 6th
conditions are perfect for
Hornibrook's
left arm spin and
swing, and the result is inevitable.
Australia 2 England 1.
1932/33
The Bodyline tour - bodyline was short pitched bowling on leg
stump or aimed at the batsman, backed up by fields set all on
the leg side of the wicket. The tactic is devised by Jardine to
curtail
Bradman;
Jardine has studied
Bradman closely and
believes that his one weakness is that he does not get into position
well for hooking and pulling. The great speed and accuracy of
Larwood
makes this tactic very effective and with the support of
Voce
and WE Bowes, England regain the Ashes though at the expense of
Anglo-Australian relations.
Bradman misses the
first test through
illness but
Larwood
and Voce
start the Bodyline experiment with
5 short legs and 2 men deep behind them.
McCabe
is the only
batsman to suceed, hooking fearlessly, and playing one of the
great innings in Test history. Hundreds from
Sutcliffe,
Hammond
and Pataudi
(on debut, like his predecessors Ranji
and Duleep)
give England a big lead. Sutcliffe's
hundred is his 8th, his
highest and his last in Ashes tests.
Larwood takes 10 wickets
in the match (bowling conventionally in the second innings), and
England need only 1 to win in their second innings.
Bradman
returns for the 2nd Test but sensationally is out first ball,
pulling a ball from
Bill Bowes
onto his stumps. The pitch favours
spin, and England's attack is exclusively based on pace.
Following a
Bradman hundred in the second innings, and 10
wickets from
O'Reilly ably supported by
Wall and
Ironmonger
(playing in his 2nd Test at the age of 47), Australia win a low
scoring game.
In the 3rd Test, bodyline causes a complete
breakdown in relations between the sides, and a near riot.
England bat well in their first innings, and at the start of the
Australian innings, Woodfull recieves a severe blow over the
heart from a ball from
Larwood (bowling to a
conventional field).
When Woodfull
is able to bat again,
Jardine
signals the field to
the leg side, to the disgust and anger of the crowd. Only
Ponsford
sucessfully resists but mounted police are called to
control the crowd when
Oldfield
mishooks a short ball from
Larwood
onto his own head and has to retire. England's batting
is solid again and only
Bradman, using unconventional methods
against
Larwood
shows much resistance. The most successful
bowler is
Allen, who refuses to bowl bodyline throughout the
tour.
Australia's batting is more successful in the 4th Test,
and they look like obtaining a first innings lead until
Eddie
Paynter leaves his hospital bed to bat through the day in an
innings heroic by any standards. He returns to hospital
overnight but resumes in the morning to see England to a small
lead. Larwood,
Allen, and
Verity then dismiss Australia, leaving
a small target that is comfortably reached. In the final Test
poor fielding by England helps Australia to a good total
(Larwood 4 wickets)
but Australia in turn drop
Hammond
more than
once as he helps England to just pass them,
Larwood makes 98 as
nightwatchman and is cheered for the only time on the tour.
Verity this
time is the chief destroyer as he exploits a worn
pitch. Only a stand between
Bradman
and Woodfull stops a
complete rout. Ironmonger
cannot repeat
Verity's menace and
England run out easy winners.
Larwood's
bowling in this test is
"slowed by a splintered bone in his foot". He still finishes the
series with 33 wickets at 19.51, but never plays for England
again.
England 4 Australia 1.
1934
No
Larwood,
Voce or
Jardine
makes this a very different England team but the
batting and the spin bowling of both sides is still very strong.
Hammond
has a dreadful series and
Bradman
had 5 innings without a fifty before two of the best test innings ever played.
The first test shows the Australian spinners at their best on a dry, dusty wicket,
the English batting
never coming to terms with
Grimmett and
O'Reilly.
Chipperfield's
99 on his debut for Australia is the top score of the match and
England's bowling is lead by another debutant
Farnes of Essex
a tall fast left armer who has 10 wickets in the match
but Australia run out easy winners. The weather for the second test is
very different;
England make a good start with
Ames making the only century by a wicket keeper in Ashes tests
until Alan Knott in 1974-5 and
Leyland also making a hundred.
Australia reach 192/2 before heavy rain on the rest day turns the
pitch into a typical English slow turner.
Verity
is in his element and Australia follow on.
As the pitch dries it became still more spiteful and
Verity duly wraps up what, with 7/61 and 8/43,
becomes known as Verity's match.
In the 3rd Test,
O'Reilly
again takes seven English wickets in a innings
(including 3 wickets in 4 balls,
Hammond
edging the hattrick ball for 4)
but concedes 189 runs out of England's huge total.
England cannot quite enforce the follow on after
McCabe's century and
though
Sutcliffe and
Walters
put on quick runs to set a target Australia have no problems playing out time.
In the 4th test after England bat very badly,
Bradman
renews his love affair with Headingley. He joins
comes in with Australia at 39/3 and when Ponsford
is out Australia are 427/4.
Although the rest of the side is dismissed quite cheaply
England are 384 behind and seemingly sure of defeat.
Batting little better in the second innings England struggle
until rain save them. On to the Oval, the best batting pitch in England and,
with the series undecided, extra days available.
The English are delighted when Australia were 21/1 but
the next wicket falls after 451 runs are added.
Bradman and
Ponsford
both with double centuries better
their mammoth stand at Headingley with ease.
Ponsford
makes more runs in the end in this,
his final, test. The rest of the team contribute and
Australia better 700 for only the second time.
Sutcliffe and
Walters
start with a century stand but few others look like staying until
Leyland is joined by
Ames. When
Ames is unable to
continue, due to crippling lumbago,
the end was clear. Australia's second innings is just better than England's first,
Bowes and
Clarke
each take 5 wickets. England need 708 to win on a worn pitch,
an impossible task even if
Ames were fit.
Grimmett
with 5 wickets completes a rout and England lose by a huge margin.
Woolley
had been recalled for this, his last test, at 47 and he keeps wicket after
Ames
withdraws (conceding a record number of byes).
Australia 2 England 1.
1936/37
One of the most competitive series in Ashes history.
Bradman
takes over the Australian captaincy and
Allen
England's. England have little reason to believe they would reverse
the result of the last series but the weather plays a part throughout
and superb competitive cricket is evident in all the tests.
The first test -
Worthington
is out hooking the first ball and
McCormick
has England on the rack until lumbago
forces him out of the attack as Leyland leads a recovery.
Australia start well with a century for Fingleton
before
Voce
takes the new ball and 6 wickets.
Ward
held England down in the 2nd innings with 6 wickets and
Australia seem to have a chance with 380 to win.
Fingleton
is out to the first ball of the innings before overnight
rain produces a real sticky dog of a wicket.
From 16/5 their final total of 58 almost looks like a recovery
but this was still probably the lowest total ever by a side including
Bradman.
The second test is played at Sydney, which was as dear to
Hammond as Headingley was to the
Don.
To prove the point he returns to form with a majestic unbeaten
double century bringing his average in tests on the ground to an unlikely 250+.
After each rain interruption during the England innings
the pitch becomes increasingly difficult. A thunderstorm on the 3rd morning
completes the transformation and Australia are in serious trouble.
3 wickets fell on 1 including
Bradman
for a second successive duck, and for the second time in a row they
are shot out for under 100.
Allen
then has to decide whether to enforce the
follow on, a rare occurrence in Australia's timeless matches, or to bat.
His decision to put Australia back in looks a mistake as on a still very
treacherous pitch
Bradman and
Fingleton
put together a second wicket
century partnership. After a
Sims googly dismisses the
Don only
McCabe held up the English.
He was out lbw to a ball he appeared to have hit and an
England innings victory was duly recorded.
On to Melbourne
Australia appeared to be about to hand over the Ashes losing 6 wickets cheaply,
but a late order recovery on a worsening pitch gives something for their
bowlers to aim at. Bradman declares to force England to bat
when conditions were at their worst.
Hammond's 32 is described as one of the best innings of his life as
O'Reilly and the medium pacer
Sievers
make the ball rear and
shoot from a good length. Most pundits feel that England should
declare and put Australia back in while the pitch was still almost
unplayable, but
Allen
delays and when the declaration finally comes the pitch is already easing.
Bradman
sends in the tail ahead of himself to give still more time for
improvement and he with a double century batting at 7 and Fingleton
take Australia to the
score of 564. The pitch is still poor for most of the innings
perhaps shown by
Bradman
taking 110 in singles and only 88 in boundaries.
Bradman
had been unwell for much of his innings and
McCabe
captains Australia as England set about getting almost 700 with a relish.
Runs come at a good rate with
Leyland
recording his 6th Ashes century
but wickets fall all the while and England do not even reach half way.
A record 350,534 watch the game.
At Adelaide England bowl and field well to dismiss their opponents for under 300
on a good pitch. When the visitors seem set for a big lead
O'Reilly
and Fleetwood-Smith
spin the Australians back into the game.
The deficit is quickly wiped out as
Bradman makes a double hundred with
Hammond leading the bowlers with 5 wickets.
Fleetwood-Smith
teases and spins England to defeat and the series is level.
England start the 5th test well again
but
Bradman and
McCabe turn things around before
Badcock and
Gregory
take Australia to an imposing total.
The English openers start at over 2 runs a minute but
Barnett
is soon out before rain deadens the pitch making fast scoring impossible.
As the pitch dries it becomes spiteful and the result becomes inevitable.
O'Reilly and
Nash
run through the batting and England follow on almost 400 behind.
The pitch is still worsening and only
Hammond and
Barnett's
partnership allows England to achieve respectability as the Ashes are
retained with an innings and 200 run win.
Australia 3 England 2.
1938
Another year of impossible batting exploits.
Hammond
is now England captain.
Bradman
is now settled as a confident captain of Australia.
He passes
Hobbs'
Ashes records of 12 centuries and makes 3636 runs during the series.
Names that were to become legends made debuts during the summer and
finally at the Oval all sorts of batting records are demolished
in what is for many years the one set of numbers that every
English schoolboy could remember. In the end the batting is too
good, 4 day matches too short and with the Manchester test abandoned
without a ball being bowled only 2 results are achieved.
A win apiece and the Ashes retained by the Australians.
In the first test
Hammond
wins the toss and bats.
Barnett and
Hutton
in his first Ashes game have a big opening stand.
Paynter
keeps up the pace and is joined by
Compton,
also new to the Ashes, who angers his captain by getting out to a
loose shot when quick runs are needed.
Hammond
declares with 658 runs were on the board. The rest of the
second day is England's but the third belongs to
McCabe.
His 232 runs include 213 on that day, out of 273 while he is at the
wicket.
When the 7th wicket falls he is on 105.
His second hundred takes 84 minutes, its second half just 24.
Six fielders are on the
boundary as he scores 72 of Australia's last 77 runs with
number 11
Fleetwood-Smith an admiring spectator.
Nonetheless Australia follow on with
Bradman making a
defensive century and with
Brown
helping sees out the last day.
The second Test at Lord's could have gone any of three ways but ends as a draw.
Hammond,
in his most imperious form is helped by
Paynter and
Ames
as England recover after early problems against
McCormick
who exploits a lively pitch and the oft denied Lord's ridge.
Brown
carries his bat, making
the 100th century for Australia against England.
Compton
drops
Fleetwood-Smith to deprive
Farnes
of a hat-trick.
McCormick
almost gives Australia a chance to win but
Compton and
Wellard allow
Hammond
to declare with a safe lead.
Bradman
for once does not really try for the win, but scores
up the 200th century in these matches, establishing a new record
aggregate in the process.
Headingley was always
Bradman's
favourite ground but in relative terms he fails this time,
only managing 103.
McCormick's
pace,
Fleetwood-Smith and especially
O'Reilly's
spin are too much for all the English apart from
Hammond.
In reply
Bradman
plays one of his best bad wicket innings and Australia have
a small lead. In the second innings no Englishman withstands
O'Reilly and
Fleetwood-Smith
for long.
Hassett
is missed at slip before he has scored and a 5 wicket win is achieved.
That game at the Oval.
Hammond
tells his men that no total is too high and they believe him.
Compton
makes 1 and
Paynter
0 but all the rest contribute on a placid wicket.
Leyland
completes a century in his last test as he had in his first.
Hutton
of course dominates. He reaches 200 in 468 minutes before picking up the
pace. He is in the nervous 330s for a while before a square cut 4
takes him past
Bradman's
record. When he is eventually out
he has batted for 797 minutes while 770 runs were added.
Bradman
falls whilst bowling and breaks his shinbone.
With
Fingleton
also injured the match is a foregone conclusion.
Bowes
in the first innings and
Farnes
on the follow on run through the remaining batting. Only
Brown
shows much resistance.
Australia 1 England 1.
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