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Tuesday, January 5, 1999 Published at 05:07 GMT
MacGill spins it Aussies' way ![]() Staurt MacGill (right): Twelve wickets in Shane Warne's return Australia have beaten England to win the fifth and final Ashes Test in Sydney and take the series 3-1.
And MacGill fittingly took the final wicket to ensure the Australians added a series win to their retention of the Ashes secured in the third Test.
The home side took five wickets before lunch as the tourists struggled to get anywhere near the unlikely victory target of 287.
England were still 112 short when Alex Tudor became the eighth man to go two balls after the break.
He was soon followed by Dean Headley, caught behind off the same bowler. That was at 180 for nine, and although Peter Such and Darren Gough managed to survive a few overs of the Australian leg spin duo, it was purely stubborn resistance.
The ball struck Waugh's foot and MacGill took a smart catch to end England's resistance. MacGill's performance confirmed his emergence as a genuine rival to Warne, who returned to Test cricket in this match with two wickets following his shoulder operation. The younger leg spinner's second innings figures of seven for 50 represented a career best performance, and even Warne has never claimed as many as 12 wickets in one Test. The dismissals also made him Australia's leading bowler in the series, with 27 wickets from just four matches, three clear of Glenn McGrath's 24 victims in five Tests. He was given the Sydney Man of the Match award, despite Michael Slater's superb second innings century and Gough's day one hat-trick.
He hit two centuries but his 498 runs came as he was only dismissed six times in ten innings. The Australian win also prevented England from making history twice over - they would have become only the second side in Ashes history to come from two down to draw a series. And a win would have been the highest final innings winning total in the history of the Sydney Cricket Ground. Hussain (407 runs) and Gough (21 wickets) were the tourists' leading players in a difficult series. Morning collapse The morning session had begun with English optimism after day three's fine performance, but the day was just five overs old when the first breakthrough was made. McGrath was the bowler as Mark Ramprakash was caught in the slips by Mark Taylor without adding to his overnight total of 14.
Next to go was Graeme Hick, MacGill's first victim of the day as he unwisely tried to sweep the leg spinner.
John Crawley then became Colin Miller's only victim of the day, given out leg before although the rising ball struck him on the thigh.
Hussain reached his half-century before becoming the fifth victim of a demoralising session for England.
Although Dean Headley and Alex Tudor saw England to lunch the tourist dined knowing that their fate was sealed. And so it proved as MacGill proved his class by polishing off the tail after lunch. Scorecard
England second innings
M Butcher st Healy b Warne 27 Total 188 all out (66.1 overs) Fall: 1-57, 2-77, 3-110, 4-131, 5-150, 6-157, 7-162, 8-175, 9-180 Bowling: McGrath 10-1-40-1 Miller 17-1-50-1, MacGill 20.1-4-50-7, Warne 19-3-43-1 Australia second innings:
M Slater c Hegg b Headley 123 Total (for all out, 64.5 overs) 184 Fall: 1-16, 2-25, 3-64, 4-73, 5-91, 6-110, 7-141, 8-180, 9-184 Bowling: Headley 19-7-40-4, Gough 15-3-51-1, Such 25.5-5-81-5, Tudor 5-2-8-0
England first innings:
M Butcher lbw b Warne 36 Total (80.1 overs) 220 Fall: 1-18, 2-56, 3-88, 4-137, 5-139, 6-171, 7-204, 8-213, 9-213 Bowling: McGrath 17-7-35-2, Miller 23-6-45-2, MacGill 20.1-2-57-5, Warne 20-4-67-1
Australia first innings:
M Taylor c Hick b Headley 2 Total (all out, 87.3 overs) 322 Fall: 1-4, 2-52, 3-52, 4-242, 5-284, 6-319, 7-321, 8-321, 9-321 Bowling: Gough 17-3-61-3, Headley 19.3-3-62-4, Tudor 12-1-64-2, Such 24-6-77-1, Ramprakash 15-0-56-0 Umpires: D Hair and R Dunne |
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