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Ashes 2023: Endless bouncers, Glenn McGrath's anger & Rehan Ahmed's dive

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Media caption,

England clinging on after bizarre day

England's chances of winning the second men's Ashes Test at Lord's are hanging by a thread.

On an extraordinary day of Test cricket, Australia were bowled out for 279 before tea, setting England a Lord's record target of 371.

A flurry of wickets in the evening session reduced England to 45-4 before they ended day four on 114-4, needing 257 more runs to level the series.

There was also further disappointment for England in the women's Ashes as a four-wicket win for Australia in the opening T20 saw them open up a 6-0 lead in the multi-format series.

Stat of the day - England's record short balls

In a day dominated by England bowling more than 50 overs of short balls, the hosts created two unusual pieces of Test match history.

As per CricViz's data, in the morning session, their average bowling length of 9.71m from the batter was the shortest length of any session in Test cricket since those records began in 2006.

England then smashed that record in the afternoon session, bowling an average length of 11.05m.

Considering a cricket pitch is just 20.12m long, a whole session averaging 11.05m will take some beating.

Essential day four reading

Quote of the day - 'That is a disgrace'

Media caption,

Starc catch overturned - but was TV umpire right?

"I'm sorry, that is the biggest load of rubbish I've ever seen. He's got that under control, the ball is under control. I'm sorry, I've seen everything this game has to offer, if that is not out, then every other catch that has ever been taken should not be out. That is a disgrace. I'm sorry, that is a disgrace. I've seen everything now. I cannot believe that. That is ridiculous. If that ball is not under control, that is ridiculous."

Former Australia fast bowler Glenn McGrath was left perplexed in the closing minutes of the day when the tourists thought they had dismissed Ben Duckett for 50.

Mitchell Starc caught Duckett's attempted ramp shot off Cameron Green on the boundary, but as he slid after making the catch, he scraped the ball along the turf before stopping.

Duckett was virtually off the field when the decision went to the third umpire.

Starc shrugged off boos from the crowd when the replays were first shown at Lord's, raising his finger to signal it was out, but his smiles soon faded when Duckett was adjudged not out.

Australia legend McGrath, commentating on Test Match Special, labelled the decision a disgrace, arguing with any notion that the right decision was made.

Video of the day - 'Who has put those stumps together">