There was a point on the first day of the Ashes Test at Trent Bridge when it looked like England might as well just get on the team bus and head straight back to Loughborough. Test cricket: come rain or shine, across four or five days, there has of late been an inevitability to it – Ellyse Perry will score runs.
Alongside her, partner Tahlia McGrath was looking rock-solid; the pair added 78 runs in the first hour after lunch, McGrath tapping a single through point to bring up the century partnership. Then came Sophie Ecclestone, doing Sophie Ecclestone things. First, she turned one behind the bat of McGrath, whose textbook forward defensive was rendered utterly impotent as she fell for 61.
Then, after a rain shower washed out 90 minutes of play across the afternoon and evening sessions, Jess Jonassen foolishly tried to sweep the left-armer, succeeding only in gloving it into the hands of Tammy Beaumont at short leg. The umpire Anna Harris appeared unmoved, but Heather Knight at slip was convinced; DRS did the rest.
Two balls later, Ecclestone struck again: a quicker, fuller ball which turned away from Alyssa Healy, to knock out her off-stump and send her back to the pavilion for her third consecutive duck in Test cricket.
Australia were 226 for five but the biggest wicket of all – Perry – still eluded England. Mostly, she had proven content to duck under bouncers from the debutant Lauren Filer, steaming in from the Radcliffe Road End; on occasion, she chose to rock back and cut or pull her to the boundary. By the 60th over of the day – Filer’s twelfth – Perry had progressed to 99.
Then, in a flash, it was over: she swished her bat and found the hands of Nat Sciver-Brunt at gully, handing Filer her second wicket of the day. “I’d had a really great tussle with Filer the whole time,” Perry said at the close. “I thought she was extremely impressive on debut and brought the game alive. That ball just got my measure.”
Healy had said on the eve of the Test: “The next generation are banging on the door and giving us a glimpse of what Ashes cricket could look like for the next 10 years.” On day one, the morning session exemplified that.
With the toss going Australia’s way and Healy choosing to bat first, that gave two of the match’s four Test debutants a chance to do their thing.
As expected, the 20-year-old Phoebe Litchfield – who before Thursday had played just five matches for her country – was tasked with opening the batting. The experienced Beth Mooney was at the other end, but across the first 40 minutes of play, had you been asked which of them was batting in her maiden Test, you might well have guessed wrong. Mooney progressed to seven off her first 20 balls, almost sent a caught-and-bowled into the outstretched right hand of Kate Cross, and was put down four overs later by a diving Danni Wyatt at gully.
Litchfield, meanwhile, played two sumptuous square drives for four off first Lauren Bell and then Cross, while calmly defending the good-length balls.
As for Filer, brought into the attack in the 18th over, the first ball of her international career could scarcely have been more eventful – it jagged off the pitch and rapped none other than Perry on the pads, causing the umpire Sue Redfern to lift her finger.
Dream starts, of course, can quickly turn into nightmares. Litchfield’s relative inexperience finally became apparent in the ninth over of the morning, when she shouldered arms to Cross, was given out lbw when the ball moved back in, and marched off the pitch, ignoring Mooney’s plea to send the decision upstairs. It was a rookie error – Hawkeye demonstrating that the ball would have missed off stump.
Filer’s own celebrations were cruelly disrupted when Perry did, rightfully, bring DRS into the mix, having got an inside edge. Minutes later, though, there was no such mistake when Mooney edged to Cross at gully, and Filer was mobbed by her teammates.
“It was a bit of a surreal experience. Heather [Knight] said about short, sharp spells, so I knew I wasn’t going to be on for very long – I was just trying to take advantage of the balls that I did have,” Filer said at the close.
“When it hit Perry’s pads, I was screaming! It’s a shame it wasn’t given out but it was a good confidence boost to get into my spell.”
Of course, Filer did – eventually – get to celebrate the wicket of Perry. For England, the only problem was that 99 runs had come in-between times.
Ecclestone might have dragged them back into it but Australia being Australia, even her mammoth consecutive 28-over spell – which finally came to an end only because the new ball was due – was not enough to make this England’s day.
Bell did make good use of that new ball, having Ash Gardner caught behind with the swinging ball for 40 – but not before she had smashed the very part-time leg-spin of Sophia Dunkley over the top for six.
With Australia finishing on 328 for seven, and work left to do, England might already be ruing their decision to field just one frontline spinner in their XI.