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Michael Vaughan exploited a succession of Australian lapses in the field to
make his first significant contribution to the Ashes series and guide England
into a strong position at Old Trafford.
The England captain has struggled to assert himself with a bat during this
summer's series with bowlers becoming the dominant force in the dramatic opening
two Tests at Lord's and Edgbaston.
But their spell was broken today by Vaughan, who even stole the limelight from
Shane Warne on the day of his record-breaking 600th Test wicket, firstly by
winning the toss to exploit batsman-friendly conditions and then by making the
most of a series of errors to score a superb 166 and guide England to a 341 for
five by the close of the opening day.
Vaughan had entered this third Test desperately short of form after passing 50
only four times in his last 12 Tests with little sign of improvement despite
one-on-one sessions with coach Duncan Fletcher.
This time, though, he enjoyed his fair share of good fortunes to spearhead
England's innings with a superb display only tarnished by the loss of two
wickets in four balls to fast bowler Brett Lee shortly before the close to give
Australia belated encouragement.
England's hopes of gaining momentum from their dramatic two-run victory at
Edgbaston on Sunday appeared to be lost by the phenomenal comebacks of Lee and
Glenn McGrath, who were both rated as extremely doubtful to feature in this Test
just days previously.
Whatever lift Australia took from their inclusion in the line-up was deflated
by a sub-standard display in the field which resulted in four dropped catches, a
wicket off a no-ball and a series of mis-fields similar to England's shoddy
display during the opening Test at Lord's.
It took just five overs for that to manifest itself with Adam Gilchrist
foiling a dream return for McGrath by missing a regulation chance diving
one-handed to his left and allowing Marcus Trescothick to escape on 13.
That miss did not appear costly at the time with Andrew Strauss, already dazed
after being hit under the right ear by a Lee bouncer, losing his off-stump to
the same bowler in his next over to bring the England captain to the crease.
Perhaps it was the return to the ground where he made the first of his Test
centuries - against Pakistan four years ago - which settled Vaughan down, but he
looked a more composed and controlled figure at the crease than he has done
scoring 32 in his previous four innings in the series.
With Trescothick seemingly determined to exploit his early reprieve and
Vaughan looking more like the player who hit three centuries during the last
Ashes series in Australia two years ago, the pair began to dominate Australia's
attack.
They had their share of good fortune, though, with Vaughan moving on to 41
when he pushed hard at McGrath and edged behind where Warne appeared set to take
the catch above his head before Gilchrist intervened at the last minute and
managed to tip the ball beyond his reach and to the boundary.
McGrath, who had made a Lazarus-like return to play in this Test after
suffering ankle ligament damage treading on a cricket ball during the warm-up to
the Edgbaston match, must have wondered whether all his efforts were worthwhile
after removing Vaughan's off-stump with the next ball only for Steve Bucknor to
rule a no-ball and England to run two from the deflection.
The double escape seemed to galvanise England and for another 12 overs Vaughan
and Trescothick dominated Australia, who finally turned to legendary leg-spinner
Warne in a desperate attempt to end the partnership in the 34th over of the
innings.
Warne, back at the ground where his legend began with his "ball of the
century" to Mike Gatting in 1993, took five overs but finally ended the 137-run
stand when Trescothick mis-timed an attempted sweep and was caught behind off
the back of his bat.
That triggered a spontaneous standing ovation from the sell-out Old Trafford
crowd in recognition at Warne's achievement at becoming the first bowler in
history to claim 600 Test wickets, while Vaughan walked down the wicket to shake
his hand.
It was Vaughan's last act of charity for some time and with Ian Bell providing
determined resistance at the other end, the batsman who brilliantly dominated
Australia two winters ago began to emerge and he became the first player of the
series to reach three figures.
Perhaps fearing Vaughan could go on and on, Australia's fielding took a
further turn for the worst with Bell being missed on 18 when he spooned up a
return catch to McGrath after he had outwitted him with a slower ball, but once
again the chance was missed.
Vaughan was also given another life on 141 when he pushed forward to Warne and
was missed at slip by Matthew Hayden, which enabled him to pass 150 and keep the
first double century of his career in his sights.
Just 14 overs before the close, however, Vaughan's impeccable shot selection
deserted him briefly when he strode down the wicket and launched Simon Katich
straight to McGrath at long on having hit a six and 19 fours in his brilliant
innings.
Kevin Pietersen played an equally ill-timed shot with the second delivery with
the new ball from Lee and was caught on the mid-wicket boundary and the decision
to send in Matthew Hoggard as nightwatchman lasted 10 balls before it backfired,
with Lee removing his off-stump in the final over of the day.
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