Sixth one-day international, Trent Bridge:
Australia 296-8 beat England 185 by 111 runs
Match scorecard
By Pranav Soneji
**England’s batsmen failed again as Australia strolled to a 111-run win in the sixth one-day international to remain on course for a 7-0 whitewash.**Wicketkeeper Tim Paine struck 111 from 148 balls, sharing a 163-run third-wicket stand with Mike Hussey (65) in Australia’s 296-8 at Trent Bridge.
Andrew Strauss was given out to the second ball of the innings while two run-outs saw the hosts reduced to 60-4.
Tim Bresnan was the top scorer with 31 as England were all out for 185.
England’s abject display leaves them one defeat away from a 7-0 series whitewash, a feat which has never happened in international cricket.
England’s humiliation was encapsulated by two needless run-outs in the space of six deliveries thanks to two superb direct hits from captain Ricky Ponting, accounting for Matt Prior and Ravi Bopara.
Although captain Strauss can feel aggrieved to be given out to a poor umpiring decision, adjudged caught behind off his shoulder from the second ball of England’s response, he cannot justify his team’s poor performance just days before they begin their ICC Champions Trophy campaign in South Africa.
The ball from Brett Lee clearly brushed the outside of his shoulder, prompting an spirited appeal from the tourists, upheld by umpire Asad Rauf, much to the disbelief of the England skipper.
After yet another promising start, including a huge six off James Hopes to long-on, Joe Denly perished for 25 attempting a similar stroke.
Worse was to follow when two superb direct throws within six balls from Ponting ran out Matt Prior and Ravi Bopara to leave England languishing.
The first throw was breath-taking, picking up and turning in one motion from cover to catch the England wicketkeeper just millimetres out of his crease.
Owais Shah and Eoin Morgan took England to three figures before Morgan holed out to deep point, where Hussey took a simple catch.
Shah followed soon after, along with Dimitri Mascarenhas, as England collapsed to 125-7 and, despite a spirited knock from Bresnan, the humiliation was complete when Lee bowled James Anderson.
The afternoon began promisingly for the tourists when Ponting called correctly at the toss for only the second time this summer, opting to bat first on another batting-friendly deck.
Humid conditions and cloud cover allowed opening bowlers Anderson and Ryan Sidebottom to swing the new ball, with the former making the breakthrough in the fifth over as Shane Watson dragged on to his stumps attempting to cut a ball too close to his body.
Fresh from his match-winning 126 on Tuesday, Ponting perished after just 14 deliveries when he hooked a short Anderson ball straight into the hands of Sidebottom at deep square leg as the tourists wobbled at 40-2 from nine overs.
New man Mike Hussey had yet to get off the mark when he survived a sharp bat-pad chance off Mascarenhas in the 12th over, but the ball dropped agonisingly beyond wicketkeeper Prior’s sprawling dive.
That missed opportunity proved instrumental as Hussey and rookie Paine, batting with intelligence, manipulating simple singles and dispatching poor deliveries to the boundary, amassed 163 runs from 30 overs.
Paine, in particular, was impressive, unleashing a repertoire of subtle reverse sweeps and booming drives, dispatching one full-length Mascarenhas delivery straight back over the bowler’s head for six in the 16th over.
The 24-year-old opener brought up his second one-day half century soon after, while an adept reverse sweep from Hussey off Graeme Swann eluded short third man to bring up the 100-run stand in the 28th over.
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Paine smoothly made the transition to three figures with a driven boundary to long-on off Swann, joining Ponting and David Boon in an exclusive band of Tasmanians to score one-day centuries for Australia.
Hussey maintained his onslaught, reaching his 22nd one-day 50 before he was caught by Denly on the long-on boundary attempting to clear the ropes for a third time with a slog sweep.
Eight balls later and Paine’s excellent innings, which featured 14 fours and a six, was brought to a close courtesy of a very sharp, low catch by Prior standing up to Mascarenhas.
Cameron White, meanwhile, took full advantage at the start of the powerplay in the 43rd over, punching drives through the covers off Sidebottom along with new man Hopes as England’s bowlers began to lose the plot.
Bresnan was launched high into the stands by White, who thumped two successive leg-side boundaries to severely dent Anderson’s figures.
The all-rounder eventually perished for 35 attempting another huge swipe, top-edging into the hands of Denly at cover, with Hopes falling soon after, drilling a full-toss to Strauss for 38 from just 22 deliveries.
But sufficient damage had been caused to finish on 296-8.