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Women’s Ashes Test match, day two: Australia v England – live!

LIVE – Updated at 23:37

Over-by-over report: Who will take charge of the one-off Ashes Test on its second day? Find out with our writers.

Hello from Canberra. Day two awaits, after a highly entertaining day one: 327 runs, seven wickets, and 97 overs bowled. Catches dropped, screamers held, swing and seam, centuries denied, counterattacks launched.

The upshot is that Australia have a very strong position, with a good score racked up already. Annabel Sutherland and Jess Jonassen will resume with the bat, both of whom are capable of making plenty themselves. They are only down the order because of the team’s batting depth, but Sutherland has batted at No3 for Australia before and Jonassen nearly made a Test hundred on debut in 2015.

So England’s first order of business must be to get their heads back in the game and have the patience to dismiss some good players, instead of thinking that the job is nearly done by virtue of the wickets column.

Interesting moves all round, then. This is good positive stuff from Lanning. Anything over 300 is a great score, there was no need to push on to something massive. But a very good morning for England, they keep Australia to only 10 more runs added and pick up the final wickets.

Brunt finishes with 5 for 60. Sciver took 3 for 41. Shrubsole 1 for 38 from 18 overs, very economical as well.

As far as the keeping record goes, England’s early 90s keeper Lisa Nye was the only other player with six catches in an innings in a women’s Test. Jones joins her, and could have had a chance at a seventh had Australia batted on.

No desire for Darcie Brown to come out at 11 and bat. Both King and Jonassen turn and run for the sheds at the fall of the wicket, so the plan must have been for them to

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