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Ashes series 2019: Aussie hopes fade as England reign
Stokes started his innings slowly but accelerated, reaching his fifty off 89 balls with a huge six
London: Ben Stokes and Joe Denly batted England into a potentially match-winning position in the fifth and final Ashes Test at the Oval on Saturday as Australia's hopes of a series win faded.
At tea the home side — desperate to finish their World Cup-winning season on a high by levelling the series at 2-2 — were 193-2, leading by 262 runs.
England captain Joe Root will be wary of declaring too soon though as India last year made 345 batting fourth at the Oval chasing 464. Denly was unbeaten on a Test-best score of 82 while Stokes, playing as a specialist batsman, was 57 not out after passing 400 runs for the series.
England enjoyed two slices of good fortune on a pitch offering little for the bowlers as the September sun beat down from a clear London sky. Steve Smith dropped Stokes in the slips when the batsman was on seven and Denly should have been out lbw on 54 but Australia failed to review.
Stokes started his innings slowly but accelerated, reaching his fifty off 89 balls with a huge six off leg-spinner Marcus Labusc-hagne over wide long-on. The left-handed batsman is second only to Smith in the combined run-scoring charts over the series, albeit more than 300 runs adrift of the Australian's total of 751. Off-spinner Nathan Lyon struck twice in the morning session, removing Rory Burns and Root but Australia failed to make a much-needed breakthrough after lunch.
England are aiming to restore pride even though Australia have already retained the Ashes urn.
The tourists came into the match hungry to wrap up their first series victory in England since 2001 after winning last week's fourth Test to take a 2-1 lead but that looks increasingly unlikely.
Burns and Denly put on 54 for the first wicket — the highest opening stand of the series for either side — after surviving a torrid four over on Friday evening during which they scratched nine without loss and had Denly dropped by Marcus Harris. The Australian opener split the webbing in his left hand in the drop and did not take the field on Saturday. He required stitches but is expected to bat.
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