Home » The Ashes 2025 LIVE updates: Scott Boland sends Ben Duckett packing as England chase massive deficit under lights

The Ashes 2025 LIVE updates: Scott Boland sends Ben Duckett packing as England chase massive deficit under lights

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Scott Boland looking oh so ominous. And remember, this is a man with 6-7 against England in his kit bag. He’s a classic of doing just enough to bring a batsman undone. And Ollie Pope looks very susceptible.

Boland starts his second over with a big shout against Zak Crawley - seemingly for caught behind - but seemed to be all pad. Then an LBW appeal against Pope. Bat in there and possibly hitting outside the line. The next ball rears off a length. Settle in. This could be some spell.

And just for some light relief, Mitchell Starc is coming back into the attack.

England 1-50: Crawley 28*, Pope 1* trail Australia by 127 runs

Scott Boland, angling in from around the wicket, rattles Ben Duckett and claims the first scalp. Gone for 15, bowled middle and leg.

That stayed low on Duckett but he didn’t move his feet either.

Duckett never looked comfortable and this looks a different pink ball to the one being sent down before the break. Figuratively speaking. They haven’t changed the ball. Calm down.

Both Boland and Doggett looking very good early on under lights.

England 1-46: Crawley 27*, Duckett 15 trail Australia by 129 runs

The third and final session of the day is upon us. Australia with a chance to recalibrate after those first six overs went for plenty and didn’t find much swing. Maybe a touch shorter this time round. Zak Crawley looking good.

The Ashes 2025 LIVE updates: Scott Boland sends Ben Duckett packing as England chase massive deficit under lights

The Gabba scene.Credit: Getty Images

Brendan Doggett into the attack accordingly. Duckett on strike. Two slips and a gully, men in the deep at point and backward square leg.

First ball: Back of a length and across the left hander. Defended to cover.

Second ball: Tad shorter again and a bit of movement away. Duckett plays and misses. That was promising.

Third ball: A touch fuller and looking for the same movement. Duckett rides the angle with a single through the big gap wide of gully.

Fourth ball: Full on sixth stump. Crawley leaves, that dies on the way through to Carey despite air speed of 136.8km/hr.

Fifth ball: A touch tighter, good length and Crawley is cautiously defending. Beats the bat.

Brendan Doggett gets into his work.

Brendan Doggett gets into his work.Credit: Getty Images

Sixth ball: Straight and coming back. Hits Crawley on the front pad. Good shout but turned down. Height was the issue there, hit him above the knee roll and would’ve bounced over leg stump.

Good start from Doggett. Scott Boland from the other end.

England 0-46: Crawley 26*, Duckett 14* trail Australia by 131 runs

England make it through the six twilight overs unscathed. Zak Crawley suddenly looks in great touch. Ben Duckett less, Michael Neser caused him a few issues when he pitched up.

Mitch Starc understandably looking a bit knackered in his three overs - taken for 24 with Crawley cracking a couple of lovely front-foot boundaries.

Not a hell of a lot of a swing so far, we go again in 20 minutes well and truly under lights.

England 0-45: Crawley 26*, Duckett 13* trail Australia by 132 runs

Dropped. As tough as it gets for Michael Neser, though he did well to get two hands to a full-blooded swipe from Ben Duckett that sent the pink ball hurtling straight back at him.

Neser was dirty on missing that, Fox Cricket calculates that was going back at him at 91km/hr. Zak Crawley has made a bright start with 12 off as many balls at the other end. Eight minutes until the second 20-minute break.

England 0-26: Crawley 12*, Duckett 10* trail Australia by 151 runs

Oh to be an English batsman. Australia have raced out to the middle well ahead of Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett - can’t imagine why.

England have 25 minutes to bat before the break in twilight, Mitchell Starc happy to take the new ball - can’t keep him out of the match.

First things first for Ben Duckett. He’s dropped two catches and faced one ball so far this Test. Crawley on strike.

Mitchell Starc rips in.

Mitchell Starc rips in.Credit: Getty Images

First ball: Starc is right on the money. Good length, a bit of shape back toward Crawley’s off stump and he defends well on the front foot.

Second ball: A little shorter, angled across. Crawley handles it well. Bunts into the off-side and pinches a single. Duckett faces up on a king pair.

Third ball: Starc right at Duckett, squares him up at 141.6km/hr. Good length and forced to play, defends awkwardly with little footwork.

Fourth ball: Tossed up for Duckett, swinging away from him and Duckett threw the bat at it. Squeezes to point, dangerous shot to be playing.

Fifth ball: That’s better from Duckett, picks three off his pads as Starc strays full to the leg-side. Wobble seam ball, well-played.

Sixth ball: Crawley clips a straight ball - 141.5km/hr - to square leg for a single.

The first time in four innings Starc hasn’t taken a wicket in the first over. Everyone has an off day now and then.

England 0-5: Crawley 2*, Duckett 3* trail Australia by 172 runs

Brendan Doggett edges Will Jacks to slip. That’s it for Australia after 511 runs and 117 overs, Harry Brook snaffles it.

Partnerships of 54, 33, 75 and 20 from Australia’s tail could have effectively batted England out of this match, and possibly the Ashes. Incredible given the way the game started this afternoon, let alone how things were poised last night when Steve Smith and Cameron Green were knocked over in quick succession.

Australia pass 500 as Scott Boland and Brendan Doggett continue to drag England around the field. Doggett - batting at No.11 - has cracked double-figures, making this just the third time every batsman in an Australian line-up has done so.

The late, great Shane Warne.

The late, great Shane Warne.Credit: Reuters

The last time? Shane Warne’s third Test back in 1992 in Sri Lanka, when he first put himself on the map as a spinner. Australia turned a first-innings deficit of almost 300 runs into a famous 16-run win that day.

No Australian hit a hundred in Colombo either, before the locals crumbled for 164 (from 2-127) when a famous first-ever win over Australia loomed. Warne took three late wickets when Allan Border threw him the ball in hope.

Australia 9-509: Boland 20* Doggett 12* lead England by 175 runs

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