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1954–55 Ashes series

1954–55 Ashes series
Ashes Urn.jpg
The Ashes were retained by England, who won a Test series in Australia for the first time in twenty years.
Date 26 November 1954 – 3 March 1955
Location Australia
Result England won the 5-Test series 3–1 and retained the Ashes.
Teams
Flag of Australia.svg Australia Flag of England.svg England
Captains
I.W.G. Johnson (4 Tests) and A.R. Morris (1 Test) Hutton, L.
Most runs
R.N. Harvey 354 (44.25) P.B.H. May 351 (39.00)
Most wickets
W.A. Johnston 19 (22.26)
R.R. Lindwall 14 (27.21)
Tyson, F.H. 28 (20.82)
Statham, J.B. 18 (27.72)
Teams
Flag of Australia.svg Australia Flag of England.svg England
Captains
I.W.G. Johnson (4 Tests) and A.R. Morris (1 Test) Hutton, L.
Most runs
R.N. Harvey 354 (44.25) P.B.H. May 351 (39.00)
Most wickets
W.A. Johnston 19 (22.26)
R.R. Lindwall 14 (27.21)
Tyson, F.H. 28 (20.82)
Statham, J.B. 18 (27.72)

The 1954–55 Ashes series consisted of five cricket Test matches, each of six days with five hours play each day and eight ball overs. It formed part of the MCC tour of Australia in 1954–55 and the matches outside the Tests were played in the name of the Marylebone Cricket Club. The England team was captained by Len Hutton, the first professional cricketer to lead an MCC tour of Australia. The Australian team under Ian Johnson was confident of victory, but despite losing the First Test by an innings England won the series 3–1 and retained the Ashes. They were the only touring team to win a series in Australia between 1932–33 and 1970–71 and only the second of three touring teams to win a series in Australia from behind (the other two being England in 1911–12 and the West Indies in 1992–93). The tour is best remembered for the bowling of Frank "Typhoon" Tyson, who was at the time regarded as the fastest, most frightening bowler ever seen in Australia. The series saw a phenomenal concentration of bowling prowess on both sides – four of the bowlers had career Test averages under 21, another five under 25 and the remaining four under 30. Unsurprisingly therefore, the ball dominated the bat for most of the series and each side only topped 300 in an innings twice. Unlike the following series in 1958–59 there were rarely any umpiring disputes and Keith Miller wrote "Mel McInnes, Colin Hoy and Ron Wright were our leading umpires in the 1954–55 M.C.C. tour of Australia, and I have no hesitation in saying that McInnes gave the finest exhibition of umpiring in a Test series that I have experienced".


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