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Warne captures 700th Test wicket
Julian Linden
December 26, 2006
Australian leg-spinner Shane Warne [Images] captured his 700th Test wicket on Tuesday as England [Images] slumped to 117 for four at tea on the opening day of the fourth Ashes Test.

Warne clean bowled England opener Andrew Strauss [Images] for 50 on the second ball of his fourth over to become the first player in history to reach the once-unimaginable milestone.

Warne's breakthrough triggered wild celebrations at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and breathed new life into a day marred by rain stoppages.

It also left Australia in a strong position after they lost the toss and were sent into the field first despite the overhead cover providing plenty of assistance to their seamers.

England limped to lunch on 36-1 after 45 minutes of the first session were lost to the weather and added 81 in the second session for the loss of another three wickets.

Alastair Cook [Images] was the only batsmen to go before lunch, departing for 11, nicking a catch off express paceman Brett Lee [Images] to wicketkeeper Adam Gilchrist [Images].

Ian Bell [Images] departed for seven just after the second session began when he was trapped lbw by Stuart Clark, who caused the tourists no end of trouble with his nagging accuracy.

CONFIDENT APPEAL

Clark should have had a second wicket when Strauss fended a catch straight to Matthew Hayden [Images] at gully only to see the chance put down.

Gilchrist also dropped a catch off Paul Collingwood [Images], from Glenn McGrath's bowling, when he was on two but the miss did not prove costly.

Collingwood and Strauss both survived a series of confident appeals from the Australians before their luck ran out in successive overs.

Collingwood fell for 28 when Lee found the edge and Ricky Ponting [Images] took a sharp catch at second slip, then Strauss went for 50 when Warne deceived him with a leg break that cannoned into his middle stump.

England captain Andrew Flintoff [Images] was unbeaten on 13 with Kevin Pietersen [Images] not out on three when tea was taken half an hour late to make up for some of the lost time.

The umpires announced that the final session would be extended by up to 45 minutes to fit in the full quota of overs.

A massive crowd approaching 90,000 had filed into the MCG in the hope of seeing Warne capture his 700th in his final Test at home after he announced last week he was retiring after the Ashes.

Warne's landmark wickets:

WktVictimOpponentsVenueSeasonTest No.
1stRavi ShastriIndiaSydney1991-921st
50thNasser HussainEnglandNottingham199314th
100thBrian McMillanSouth AfricaAdelaide1993-9423rd
150thAlec StewartEnglandMelbourne1994-9531st
200thChaminda Vaas [Images]Sri Lanka [Images]Perth1995-9642nd
250thAlec StewartEnglandManchester199755th
300thJacques Kallis [Images]South AfricaSydney1997-9863rd
350thHrishikesh KanitkarIndiaMelbourne1999-0080th
400thAlec StewartEnglandThe Oval200191st
450thAshwell PrinceSouth AfricaDurban2001-02101st
500thHashan TillekeratneSri LankaGalle2003-04108th
550thJames FranklinNew Zealand [Images]Adelaide2004-05117th
600thMarcus Trescothick [Images]EnglandManchester2005126th
650thAshwell PrinceSouth AfricaPerth2005-06133rd

Note: The wicket of Irfan Pathan [Images] at Chennai in 2004-05 (in his 114th Test) was 533rd for Warne, which made him the most successful bowler in Test history.

Statistics: Rajneesh Gupta
Photograph: Getty Images



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