1978-79 Ashes series | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Date | 3 November 1978–14 February 1979 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Location | Australia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Result | Six-match series won by England 5–1 (England retained The Ashes) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The England cricket team toured Australia in the 1978–79 season to play a six-match Test series against Australia for The Ashes. England won the series 5–1, thereby retaining The Ashes.
This series was often over shadowed by Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket which meant many players from both sides were absent, including Greg Chappell. Australia were more handicapped which opened the way for England and their captain Mike Brearley.[1] The side was managed by Doug Insole, Ken Barrington assistant-manager/coach and physiotherapist Bernard Thomas was given credit as the prime reason for England's supreme fitness.[2]
Note: Each over consists of 8 balls.
1–6 December 1978
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15–20 December 1978
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29 December 1978 - 3 January 1979
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6–11 January 1979
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27 January - 1 February 1979
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10–14 February 1979
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The ODI series was contested over five games, with innings of maximum 40 eight-ball overs. Australia won the series 2–1, with one match abandoned and one no result.
13 January 1979
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Only 40 minutes of play were possible before rain caused the match to be called off. During the brief action, Chris Old dismissed Graeme Wood caught behind for six.[3]
24 January 1979
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Australia chose to bat first on a pitch of variable bounce,[4] but from a position of 52 for two then collapsed to be all out for 101, with Man of the Match Mike Hendrick claiming 4/25 and Ian Botham 3/16. England reached the required target for the loss of only three wickets and with more than ten overs to spare; Mike Brearley fell early, bowled for a duck by Rodney Hogg, but Geoff Boycott anchored the innings with a patient 39 not out off 107 balls.
4 February 1979
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