Carnage in Perth! First Ashes Test sees record-breaking opening day in 100 years

Sandy Verma

Tezzbuzz|21-11-2025

The drama at Perth Stadium added another remarkable chapter to the storied history of Ashes opening days. With 19 wickets tumbling, it became the most action-packed first day of an Ashes Test in a century, surpassing the chaotic scenes at Trent Bridge in 2001 and Lord’s in 2005. The pitch, offering bounce and unpredictable seam movement, kept both batting line-ups under constant threat as bowlers dictated every session.

For England, the collapse to ten wickets in barely two sessions highlighted their struggle to adapt to conditions that rewarded discipline over aggression. Australia weren’t spared either, losing nine wickets of their own as the evening light brought even sharper movement off the surface. What unfolded was a rare sight: both teams effectively bowled out on the same day, setting up a wildly unpredictable Test.

The individual brilliance, however, stood above the collective chaos. Mitchell Starc and Ben Stokes became the first pair of bowlers to claim five-wicket hauls on the opening day of a Test since Steve Harmison and Glenn McGrath at Lord’s in 2005. Starc’s left-arm pace extracted wicked angles that tormented England’s top order, while Stokes’ fiery spells ripped through Australia’s middle order with trademark hostility. Their performances rekindled memories of classic Ashes duels defined by fast bowling supremacy.

The extraordinary wicket tally also reignited discussions about the direction of modern Test pitches. Some experts praised the Perth surface for restoring the primacy of bowlers in an era dominated by batting, while others questioned whether the balance had tipped too far. Regardless, fans were treated to a spectacle that echoed the unpredictability and intensity that make the Ashes one of cricket’s greatest rivalries.

As the match moved into day two, the sense of anticipation was palpable. With both teams effectively starting afresh and the pitch still offering plenty for the bowlers, the contest promised more twists. Analysts noted that this kind of frenetic start often produces either a classic low-scoring epic or a sudden momentum swing where a single session can decide the match. For now, though, Perth 2025 stands as a reminder that in Test cricket, sometimes the first day alone is enough to etch a match into history.