🏏 Australia edge England in wild opening to Boxing Day Test
🏏 Over-by-over updates from Melbourne Cricket Ground
🏏 Live scorecard | Geoff Lemon on Australia’s bowlers
2nd over: Australia 9-0 (Boland 4, Head 1) A minor surprise to start the day: Brydon Carse takes the new ball once again. He has struggled early on in this series and many people expected Josh Tongue to be promoted to new-ball duty.
Head does well to repel a nasty short ball before flicking the first run of the day to long leg. Australia get four bonus runs when a poor ball from Carse deflects away off Boland’s thigh pad. England can’t afford a false start with the ball.
“Greetings from chilly Lübeck,” begins Sairam, “where the mercury level dropped below zero during the day for the second time this week but not enough to douse my spirits to follow proceedings of the Boxing Day Test.
“As a supporter of neither team but a keen follower of Test cricket, I can’t help but wonder how many teams have either makeshift No3 like South Africa with Mulder, India and Pakistan with a revolving door of players, or inexperienced players like Jacob Bethell. This is a far cry from even a decade ago when almost every top side had a stalwart at first drop. Do you think that this is due to top teams deploying the wobble seam more regularly or is it due to the advent of T20 franchise tournaments luring the next gen of players?”
That question deserves a four-page feature rather than a stream-of-consciousness answer. The stats support your hypothesis: in the 2020s, No3s average just under 35 in Tests, as compared to 40 in the 2010s and 43 in the 2000s.
Travis Head walks out to bat with his opening partner Scott Boland. Imagine if you had predicted, on the first morning at Perth, that Australia would use four openers in the first four Tests – and that Usman Khawaja would not be among them.
“Dear Rob,” writes Robert Wilson. “I’ve got skin in the game as I am trying to arrange an all-night viewing sesh for day (night) three in an unexpectedly swish Aussie backpacker hostel near Stalingrad (in Paris). Logistically, it’s quite a lot of ducks to get in a row and punters fagging all the way in from below-zero Versailles or somesuch only to catch four overs while nursing a lukewarm Newky Brown might have views.
“But seeing the highlights, I didn’t feel the pitch was as mega-jalapeno as some claimed. Yesterday’s turnstile innings seemed a perfect mix of often tack-sharp bowling, tasty pitch and Ballymena Academy Third Eleven batting (I watched the Duckett dismissal frame-by-frame and I still don’t even understand).
“I’m hoping it will settle down and I need you to agree. Tell me we’ll get at least three hours tomorrow. These ****ers will roast me sinon.”
Jo’burg 1999 it was not.
“Hi,” writes Ruth Purdue. “I don’t know if this was sent yesterday but I found it fascinating.”
“Yesterday was the like the first round of Hagler v Hearns from 1985,” writes Simon McMahon. “Both came out swinging and landing heavy blows, but already the outcome feels inevitable, it just being a matter of when the knockout punch will be delivered. Like in Nevada, early in round/day three seems likely…”
So much depends on the pitch. England could have the best batting conditions of the match in their second innings.
Twenty wickets fell at the MCG yesterday, the most on the first day of an Ashes Test since 1909. The great and the good were not impressed.
“G’day Rob,” writes Chris Paraskevas. “Merry Xmas to you and the OBOers – hope you’re well! I’m looking for a quick pick-me-up in the morning session, as I’ve been dealing with heart palpatations that are more pronounced than usual (it has nothing to do with my festive diet and everything to do with the Newcastle performance overnight).
“My daily routine at stumps during these Ashes has been to immerse myself English opinions on Bazball/Noosa booze-ups. I’ve been enjoying Steve Harmison’s views, which are generally pretty sensible, while James Anderson’s almost complete disinterest/emotional detachment is also refreshing.
“For what it’s worth, I think the ‘investigations’ into the Duckett / Bethell bender are way over the top:
It’s Australia.
It’s hot.
It’s XMAS.
“The batters can barely find off stump, let alone their hotel rooms. Let the boys have a bloody drink!”
Are we still talking about the England players here?
Guess who just got back today? Those wild-eyed boys that had been away. This was a day of brittle, over-caffeinated cricket, on an MCG pitch streaked with faint green ridges. But it was also a day when the boys were, however briefly, back in town.
Ben Duckett and Jacob Bethell have been the two protagonists in the grainy, Zapruder-style footage from England’s six-day, mid-series jig-about by the sea. True to apparent recent form, both were here for a good time not a long time as England were bowled out for 110 in 29.5 overs. Both batted like men groping for the light switch in the dark against a new ball that seamed the width of the bat at times.
For a while, Boxing Day 2025 felt like a re-enactment of Boxing Day 2010. We’re talking an amateur historical re-enactment, given the lower intensity and higher number of participants with private lives under investigation, but still, the broad shape of the thing was much the same. You had England choosing to bowl on a cloudy morning and finishing off the hosts in time for an early tea. The original instance lasted 42.5 overs, this repeat lasted 45.2, only 15 deliveries between them.
Yet this year’s edition felt different for more reasons than just a higher scoring rate that yielded 152 all out versus 98 all out last time around. In 2010, England owned the day, a Jimmy Anderson swing masterclass ripping out a paralysed middle order, Chris Tremlett lopping off top and tail like a légumier preparing string beans. The rehash was a less complete bowling effort that drew a strangely faltering batting response: chop-ons and leg-side nicks and run outs, occasionally the bowling team via Josh Tongue remembering to pitch the ball up before rocketing through someone’s defences.
A record 94,199 spectators turned up to the MCG on Boxing Day and none will forget what they witnessed. An extraordinary 20 wickets fell on a pitch offering lavish movement and it left Cricket Australia fearing a second multimillion-dollar loss in this Ashes series.
The first of these came in Perth, when a two-day bunfight triggered mass refunds and had visiting fans scrambling to book sightseeing trips. This fourth Test always had the ingredients for a repeat, not just a surface with 10mm of grass but also a touring side in England who, having lost the Ashes and with criticism flying, looked broken before the coin even went up.
It actually landed in their favour here, Ben Stokes calling correctly, inserting his opponents without hesitation, and watching Josh Tongue skittle Australia for 152 before tea. Tongue was full value for his figures of five for 45, with his natural angle in, fuller length, and wobble seam asking more questions than one of the University Challenge Christmas specials.
However, for all the echoes of England’s famous Boxing Day performance here in 2010, there was also a nagging sense that, this time, it was signposting an ordeal for the batters. That ordeal ultimately came to pass in a crazed final session when England fell to 16 for four inside eight overs and, courtesy of Michael Neser’s four for 45, ended up 110 all out in 29.5.
Hello and welcome to live, over-by-over coverage of the second and final day at the MCG. After a first day that was somehow both bonkers and kind of predictable, Australia will resume on 4 for 0 in their second innings, a lead of 46.
Nobody has a clue whether the spicy Melbourne pitch will get easier for batting on day two – or even tougher as the pitch quickens up. There are parallels with the first Test at Perth, when England took a first-innings lead of 40 and were hammered by eight wickets a few hours later. But precedents and logic don’t seem to count for much – not in a world where Will Jacks is England’s spinner, Scott Boland is opening the batting for Australia and England are under the pump due to a combination of Noosa and Neser.
The only guarantee is that today’s play will not be dull. Might as well just strap yourselves in and enjoy the ride.
Boxing Day Test 2025: Australia v England fourth Ashes Test, day two – live updates – The Guardian
Related articles




