England on top as weather brings early end to first day of Sydney Test

The visitors appeared poised to convert a solid foundation into a commanding position before the elements intervened
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Joe Root and Harry Brook mounted a crucial rescue mission for England on the opening day of the final Ashes Test, constructing an unbeaten partnership of 154 runs at a packed Sydney Cricket Ground.
The Yorkshire pair came together with England wobbling at 57 for three following another shaky start from the top order.
Their stand carried the tourists to 211 for three before deteriorating weather conditions brought proceedings to a premature halt shortly before the scheduled tea interval.
Dark skies and rainfall meant only half of the planned 90 overs were bowled, with England firmly in control when play was suspended.
The visitors appeared poised to convert a solid foundation into a commanding position before the elements intervened.
England's familiar batting frailties resurfaced early in the innings after captain Ben Stokes elected to bat on a flat surface.
Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley began brightly, scampering quick singles and dispatching loose deliveries to the boundary.
Duckett struck four fours in nine balls from Mitchell Starc but perished to the tenth, poking at a delivery outside off stump that he could have left alone.

Joe Root and Harry Brook mounted a crucial rescue mission for England on the opening day of the final Ashes Test
|REUTERS
The dismissal handed Starc his 27th scalp of an exceptional series, while Duckett's struggles continued with a highest score of just 34 and an average of 17 for the tour.
Michael Neser trapped Crawley leg before after the opener had made 16, before Scott Boland removed Jacob Bethell for 10 with a well-directed short ball that found the edge.
Root demonstrated remarkable composure throughout his innings, reaching 72 not out from 65 balls while expertly manipulating gaps in the Australian field.
His controlled strokeplay featured deft placements behind square and crisp drives through the covers.
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Dark skies and rainfall meant only half of the planned 90 overs were bowled
|REUTERS
Brook's approach proved more adventurous, with the 25-year-old repeatedly challenging Australia's short-pitched bowling despite several near misses.
One thick edge flew over the slip cordon, while a mistimed pull dropped tantalisingly between three fielders converging on the ball.
Yet his audacious style also produced spectacular moments, including a towering six off Cameron Green that nearly struck the giant replay screen.
This marked the duo's sixth century partnership together and England's most productive stand of a low-scoring series.
Five things to know about the Ashes | PAAustralia's tactical gamble of fielding no specialist spinner at the SCG for the first time since 1888 failed to pay dividends.
Captain Steve Smith admitted he "hated" omitting Todd Murphy at a venue traditionally renowned for assisting slow bowlers, though recent years have seen pace bowling dominate at the ground.
The decision to rely on all-rounders proved costly, with Cameron Green and Beau Webster combining for 10 overs that yielded 67 runs without a breakthrough.
By the time inclement weather forced the players from the field, Australia appeared to be waiting for England to self-destruct in the manner that has characterised much of the tourists' campaign.
Root will resume on day two seeking his second century on Australian soil, while Brook pursues an elusive first Ashes hundred in his 18th innings.
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