Australia lead England by 94 runs at Headingley, with six wickets remaining
From Tom Wald in Leeds, England
August 08, 2009 Australia revitalised their Ashes campaign on the first day of the fourth Test at Headingley, claiming a 94-run lead, with six wickets remaining, after dismissing England for 102.
Peter Siddle and recalled Stuart Clark exploited England's brittle batting line-up in favourable bowling conditions, as the hosts posted their equal-lowest total at the Leeds ground in a century.
Australia captain Ricky Ponting then topped off the tourists' assault on the opening day, lashing the bowlers as he made 78 before being dismissed leg before.
Australia vice-captain Michael Clarke and Marcus North were unbeaten at the close, and they will resume on 34 and 7 respectively as the tourists pursue a series-levelling victory against a home side missing the services of both Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff.
Clarke, however, is perhaps lucky to still be at the crease.
Late in the day, he copped a nasty short ball from returning quick Steve Harmison that cannoned into the back of his helmet and really shook the batsman up.
He needed some time to regather himself, and he then survived a close shout in the same over with another short ball appearing to hit the outside of his inner gloves and popping up in the air.
England couldn't believe Clarke, who carried an abdominal injury into the match, was allowed to survive.
Siddle earlier collected career-best figures, blitzing the tail after Clark had exposed England's middle order in his first Test in nine months.
"It was a good day," Siddle said.
"I got into a good rhythm and was more consistent with my line.
"I always want to do well and contribute to the team as I was a little off earlier in the series."
Australia's decision to pick a four-man pace attack paid off handsomely as Matt Prior was left stranded on 37 not out.
England were under the pump from ball one after opting to bat first against an Australia side sparked to life with the Ashes on the line.
Ben Hilfenhaus produced a sharp inswinger with the first ball of the day that struck Andrew Strauss plumb in front, but umpire Billy Bowden turned down the appeal.
The skipper departed three overs later, a disappointing end after a traumatic 24 hours in which he had to tell Flintoff that he had been ruled out and then having to cope with the drama surrounding wicketkeeper Prior's back problems before the start of play.
Prior, in chaotic scenes before play, suffered back spasms in the warm-up playing football with his teammates, before proving his fitness as the toss was delayed by 10 minutes.
"I was on so many drugs I probably won't remember today on Saturday," Prior joked of his injury.
Strauss lasted only 17 balls before edging a drive off Siddle, with North clinging onto a reflex catch high to his right at third slip.
That dismissal set the tone as the home side's batsmen failed to settle.
Clark, the leading wicket-taker in the 2006-2007 Ashes series, showed what Australia had been missing by applying the squeeze before Siddle created a procession of batsmen after the lunch break.
But Clark said the prospect of victory was far from the minds of the Australians.
"Don't think we've even talked about retaining the Ashes at this point," he said.
"We've talked about getting well in front in this game, were in a good position in this game, given that we bat well tomorrow, that's probably the furthest thing from our mind."
England had a multitude of distractions before the match, starting with inspirational allrounder Andrew Flintoff being ruled out with injury.
"It would have been a distraction, a lot of talk about Andrew yesterday, the fire alarm (in their team hotel at 5am), Matt Prior (suffering back spasms in the warm-ups), we hit one of their coaching staff with a ball during high balls, it all went in favour of us today," he said.
"Maybe it was one of those days when things do happen. Tough for captain (Andrew Strauss), who has to open the batting as well, and make decisions.
"I imagine his thoughts may have been a touch scrambled."
Shane Watson then ignited Australia's innings by smacking James Anderson for consecutive boundaries off the opening two balls of the innings.
Harmison captured the wicket of Simon Katich with the fourth ball of the second over, but Ponting then started teeing off as Australia looked to chase down England's first innings total quickly.
The skipper creamed Graham Onions for 17 runs in the seventh over, opening the onslaught by pulling the quick's first ball over the square-leg boundary.
Ponting has been booed and abused since arriving in the United Kingdom, but he has always felt right at home at the Yorkshire ground, having scored centuries in his two previous visits.
Ian Bell had a chance to run the skipper out on 32, and his miss hurt England as Ponting and Watson put on 119 runs in total for the second wicket.
Watson hit Stuart Broad to the boundary as Australia passed England's total for the loss of one wicket before suffering a mini-collapse of 3-18.
Onions captured Watson's just after the opening batsman had brought up his third successive half-century, and Ponting was trapped in front by Broad soon afterwards.
Mike Hussey then fell in Broad's next over as Australia slipped to 4-151 before Clarke and North negotiated their way to the close.