Ian Bell held firm for England on Friday, as they looked to build a commanding lead on the third day of the first Test against Australia at Trent Bridge.
At tea, England were 230 for six in their second innings, 165 runs ahead, with Bell 56 not out and Stuart Broad one not out.
Given Australia had been 115 for nine in their first innings before teenage debutant Ashton Agar made 98 -- the highest score by a Test match No 11 -- and shared a record 10th-wicket partnership of 163 with Phil Hughes (81 not out), the question was how large a target would England need to set their arch-rivals?
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A criticism of the 31-year-old Warwickshire right-hander is that he has all too rarely scored runs when England most needed them. And after 35 innings without adding to his tally of 17 Test hundreds, England dearly wanted the stylish Bell to go on to three figures with this knock.
England resumed Friday on 80 for two, with captain Alastair Cook 37 not out and Kevin Pietersen 35 not out. But they lost both senior batsmen before lunch.
Pietersen looked in good touch while making 64 out of a third-wickets stand of 110, striking 12 fours, but fell when he played on to James Pattinson, the most threatening of Australia's seamers.
Left-handed opener Cook spent more than four painstaking hours compiling exactly 50 runs. But he became Agar's first Test wicket when he aimed leg side across the line of a delivery from the 19-year-old left-arm spinner that landed in the rough and bounced to take an edge brilliantly caught by leaping Australia captain Michael Clarke at slip.