4th Test, Australia tour of England and Ireland at Leeds, Aug 16-20 2001

Few cricketers play a Test innings that will become an Ashes legend.
Mark Butcher joined this elite when he struck an exhilarating 173 not
out to ensure single-handedly that there would be no "greenwash", and
show that, for a day at least, McGrath, Gillespie and Warne could be
tamed.
Butcher's score matched that of Don Bradman in 1948, when Australia made
404 for three here on the last day to win against the odds. But the
immediate comparison was with Ian Botham's 149 not out in 1981, when his
hitting transformed not only a match but a whole summer, and a whole
sport. Butcher's knock was not as important as that. A fairer parallel
would be the fabled 1902 innings of Gilbert Jessop, whose attacking
shots and endless verve inspired a remarkable Test victory no one
thought possible. As here, it was England's only win of the series.
Butcher's innings, entirely out of character with the rest of a
one-sided Ashes contest, was Jessopian in vein: he cut anything short of
a length with exquisite power and timing, stepped forward to drive
McGrath through the covers, and clipped sweet boundaries off his legs
when the bowlers erred in line. The Australians could not contain him
and, though it was the only such day of the summer, his innings will
never be forgotten.
Australia's stand-in captain, Gilchrist, had not thought anything like
it possible when he closed his team's second innings on the fourth
evening with a lead of 314 runs and 110 overs still to play. Rain had
seriously disrupted his game plan, taking maybe two sessions of
Australian batting time. But Gilchrist's decision spoke volumes for the
tourists' aura of invincibility, and their desire to win the series 5-0.
Few in England gave the home side hope of victory either: only once, at
Melbourne in 1928-29, had England scored as many in the fourth innings
to win. Yet, by conventional cricketing logic, the target was attainable
even after bad light and further rain removed 17.3 overs that Sunday
evening, revising England's task to 311 from 90 overs.
When openers Atherton and Trescothick fell cheaply on the fifth morning,
it seemed that a routine humbling of the English batting would occur.
Butcher's early overs were spent evading a wonderful spell from McGrath -
but, at 60 for two, restored England captain Hussain hooked Gillespie
out of the ground. Many thought this the turning-point, not for the
bravura shot itself but for the fact that the ball was lost. Its
replacement didn't help the bowlers as much and, on a pitch that was
never the minefield predicted, batting became less of an ordeal.
Still, it needed a miraculous performance, and Butcher, whose technique
had been modified the previous winter with help from his father, Alan,
produced it. He was particularly severe in the overs just after lunch,
when it dawned on the capacity crowd that they were witnessing an epic
day of cricket. Butcher reached his hundred to a seemingly endless
ovation, and when Hussain went, England's sole loss in a session worth
104, their partnership had added 181. McGrath and Warne had one last
attempt to turn the screw, bowling with economy and menace, but, thanks
to the generous declaration, Butcher could afford to be patient.
After tea the outcome was not in doubt. Ramprakash succumbed within
sight of the finishing line, leaving Butcher to complete the task. He
carved Gillespie for a crackerjack six behind point in an over that
brought 19 runs. Finally, he steered Warne away for three and England
were home with 20 overs to spare. At their rate of scoring they could
have chased 400 and still won, illustrating the extraordinary nature of
Butcher's innings, and its entertainment value. He batted five and a
quarter hours, faced 227 balls, and hit 23 fours as well as that six.
Gilchrist and all the Australian players shook the English hero's hand.
Their sportsmanship was welcome, and genuine. Even though they had
dominated the first four days and were superior in class and attitude,
their smiles were not forced. On the first day, they had opted to bat
after winning the toss and scorched to 288 for four. It may not sound
much, but rain had delayed the start until 2.15 p.m. Hussain later
lambasted his side's lackadaisical approach. Ponting batted with rare
panache, his 144 from just 154 halls laced with three sixes and 20
fours, while Martyn had 18 fours when last out for 118 shortly after
lunch next day. Simon Katich, Australia's first debutant specialist
batsman for over three years, compiled a nervous 15, but a total of 447
looked a good score on a Headingley pitch with a worryingly dry top.
England responded with general competence, all the top-order batsmen
starting well but failing to reach 50. Stewart, starting at No. 7 for
the first time in 114 Tests, and unhappy at the demotion, responded with
a bizarre innings of 76 not out, throwing the bat with daredevil
irresponsibility. But his luck held, the follow-on was averted and,
after a two-hour interruption either side of tea on Saturday, England
reached 309, even making Australia take the second new ball for the
first time in the series. McGrath's figures of seven for 76, which took
him to 351 Test wickets, were those of a maestro and, in a normal Test, a
match-winner. But this was no normal game.
When Ponting flew to 30 in 35 balls, before the light deteriorated, and
increased his momentum with wonderful batting next morning, everything
pointed to Australia taking the game beyond England's reach. Instead,
the weather permitted only 30 runs between lunch and Gilchrist's
declaration at 5.35 p.m., as well as limiting the day's play to just 25
overs. It was frustrating for the big crowd, but many would be back on
Monday, little realising that Sunday's conditions had provided the stage
on which Butcher would storm into Ashes history.
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