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Attacking Moeen Ali bolsters England total in Ashes

Moeen Ali’s dashing 77 helped England to a first innings total of 430 on the second day of the first Test against Australia at Sophia Gardens on <g data-gr-id="38">Thursday .</g>

Batting at No 8, the off-spin bowling all-rounder posted his second-highest Test score, following his 108 not out against Sri Lanka at Headingley last year, and saw England past 400, which would have been the aim of captain Alastair Cook when he won the toss and batted on Wednesday.

Mitchell Starc led Australia’s attack with five for 114 in 24.1 overs -- his third five-wicket Test haul and first abroad.

But fellow left-arm fast bowler Mitchell Johnson -- whose 37 wickets were central to Australia’s 5-0 Ashes rout of England in 2013/14 -- bowled 25 <g data-gr-id="35">wicket-less</g> overs for 111 runs.

Australia openers Chris Rogers and David Warner then got through an awkward 38-minute spell before lunch to take the <g data-gr-id="36">Ashes-holders</g> to 26 without loss.

England resumed on their overnight 343 for seven after Joe Root’s well-made 134 had rescued them from the depths of 43 for three.

Ali was 26 not out and Stuart Broad unbeaten on nought, with blue skies on a sunny day promising good conditions for batting.

It was Broad, however, who took the attack to Australia by driving Josh Hazlewood for four and pulling him for six although the paceman’s first over of the day saw the batsman, who has struggled against the short ball, duck into a delivery that hit him on the badge of his helmet.

Australia thought they had Broad out for 11 when he gloved a rising delivery from Johnson to a diving Adam Voges at short leg. Broad, heavily criticised in Australia for not ‘walking’ during the first Ashes Test at Trent Bridge in 2013, appeared happy to go on this occasion. However, the on-field umpires told him to wait while they asked third umpire Chris Gaffaney to check if the catch was clean.

Replays indicated Voges, once a Nottinghamshire team-mate of Broad’s, had grassed the ball and the batsman was recalled.

Next over there was a suggestion that Ali, on 34, may have got the thinnest of edges to Starc but there was only a half-hearted appeal from and the batsman survived.

When Broad, who bats left-handed, drove Johnson past mid-off for four it meant the bowler had conceded 100 runs in the innings.

Having previously indicated to spectators that Broad was uncomfortable against fast bowling, Johnson was greeted by an ironic standing ovation from a packed stand as he returned to his fielding position at fine leg, with spectators rising to give him the reception normally accorded to a batsman who has scored a century. 

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