|
Click here for full scorecards
Chris Rogers' maiden double-century took the gloss off his compatriots' Ashes
well-being as he dominated a record opening stand of 247 to ease Leicestershire
to a draw against Australia at Grace Road.
The hosts began the final day as major outsiders to prevent the tourists
wrapping up a quick victory to prepare in style for this week's first Test at
Lord's and cheer them on the way to London - but Western Australia
batsman Rogers' 209 transformed them into a team of near equal standing as their
second-innings 363 for five put them close to credit by stumps.
The Aussies therefore had to set off for the capital in the mood for a regroup
rather than their planned satisfied reflection on a job well done in their only
first-class match before the start of their five-Test series against England.
Rogers was aided and abetted on his home debut for his new employers by the
stoic presence of Darren Robinson (81), who was near faultless in his capacity
as foil for a starring role - riding his luck a little before lunch to keep near
even pace with his first-wicket partner and then taking a back seat to the
left-hander's fluent afternoon strokeplay.
The truth was that Australia simply ran into a very good player at the top of
his form as Rogers hit 32 fours and three sixes from 219 balls - a strike rate
comfortably in advance of that achieved by any of three fully-fledged Australia
centurions on Saturday.
His innings will be widely welcomed in this country as an embarrassing and
untimely setback for the tourists - although there is another way to view
Rogers' performance, given that the Sydney-born 27-year-old has never yet been
close to an Australia team packed with batsmen whose international records
suggest they are capable of inflicting much more damage on England this summer.
Leicestershire's opening stand was the best ever recorded by a county against
Australia in England.
The pair finished the morning - after Australia had declared overnight on 582
for seven with a first-innings lead of 365 - within eight runs of one another
out of 142. But Rogers upped the ante, particularly when hitting Stuart
MacGill's loopy leg-spin over the top, adding 50 runs in the first hour after
lunch - while Robinson managed nine.
The openers had initially profited past attacking Australia fields, a large
proportion of boundaries coming either down to third-man or through Robinson's
favourite midwicket area.
Robinson, lbw to Brett Lee off the first ball of the match two days ago, this
time began by clipping the same bowler to the leg-side boundary.
He survived a loud Lee appeal off his second ball as the fast bowler sought a
repeat of his Friday success and he should have gone when he mis-hooked at Jason
Gillespie on eight and was reprieved by a comical mix-up which saw Matthew
Hayden and Simon Katich end up close enough to shake hands yet somehow allow the
ball to fall to ground between them at backward point.
Rogers also twice edged Gillespie for four between the slips early on but
otherwise looked more secure throughout in perfect batting conditions under warm
sunshine and on a pitch still behaving well.
With an obvious point to prove against his native country, when he went on the
offensive after lunch his footwork and lofted driving down the ground off
MacGill was impressive - and his accumulation in a wider arc off the pace
bowlers was equally confident and effective.
Robinson had almost ground himself to a halt, meanwhile, by the time Lee
ripped out his middle stump with a yorker shortly before tea for Australia's
belated first success of a frustrating day.
The tourists - MacGill in particular - fared much better in the evening
session, to the point that their victory hopes were briefly rekindled as in a
passage of play which saw Rogers' wicket finally fall as one of three for the
addition of only 16 runs in the space of four overs.
MacGill (four for 122) had already had John Maunders edging a drive to slip by
the time he at last got his revenge on Rogers, who mistimed another attempted
big hit to be caught in the ring at midwicket. Then home captain HD Ackerman
poked back a tame return catch - and off the last ball of the match Jason Krejza
fell lbw as the leg-spinner's day took a tardy turn for the better.
In the end, though, it was too little too late to keep the tourists on the
upward curve they established in the NatWest Challenge and over the first two
days here.
|