Published on 04:03 PM, December 10, 2021

England put up a fight

Captain Joe Root and Dawid Malan scored defiant half-centuries in a stirring, unbeaten partnership as England rallied from a position of peril to win their first day of the Ashes at the Gabba on Friday.

Coming together at 61 for two, Root and Malan pushed England to 220 for two at stumps on day three, having cut Australia's lead to 58 runs and raised a sliver of hope of saving a match that looked beyond them by the end of day two.

Root was 86 not out and number three Malan on 80 in a 159-run stand that thwarted Australia's bowlers for much of two sessions after the hosts were bowled out for 425 in the morning.

"Brilliant," said Malan. "We were staring down the barrel a bit after the first day and the way they batted was superb.

"So to get us into this position today has been fantastic, it gives us a little bit of hope that if we can bat through tomorrow we can post a score (then) we can potentially bowl them out."

Along the way Root set an England record for the most test runs in a calendar year, reaching 1,541 to eclipse former skipper Michael Vaughan's mark of 1,481 set in 2002.

The skipper now has three of the nation's top five calendar year totals, with 1,477 in 2016 and 1,385 in 2015.

On the cusp of his half-century, Root was all but bowled by Nathan Lyon after missing a sweep-shot but the Yorkshireman whacked the spinner to the fence on the next delivery to bring up his fifty.

Malan's heart was in his mouth entering the final hour when he pulled Australia captain Pat Cummins in the air to backward square leg but fielder Marcus Harris lost the ball in the sun and it fell just short.

Lyon put in a big 24-over shift but the spinner finished the day still wicketless for the match and one short of his milestone 400th victim.

There were other worries for Australia, with opener David Warner staying off-field with bruised ribs after taking blows during his first innings 94.