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Broad conjures one last burst of magic...

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England's seamers had struggled to create chances on the fourth day but a replacement ball - chosen 11 deliveries before Sunday's early close - and helpful overhead conditions meant they were in the game from the start of the fifth morning, with Broad almost immediately beating the bat.

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Woakes struck in the fourth over of the day, angling one across Warner to have him caught behind. Even if Broad is reputed to be Warner's tormentor-in-chief, Woakes has taken on that mantle in the last two weeks, dismissing him twice in the match in Manchester and twice more in South London.

England burned a review when Broad's nip-backer struck Marnus Labuschagne on the thigh, but outside the line of off stump, but the DRS could not save Usman Khawaja in Woakes' next over. He went full and straight, trapped him on the front pad and brought Khawaja's superb individual series to an end with a fourth-innings 72.

Labuschange had been the only frontline Australian batter to cope with Mark Wood's pace at both Headingley and Old Trafford, but was squared up to fall to him for the second time in the match for only 13. He was beaten by a length ball that moved away late, edging to second slip where Crawley held a good, low catch.

Smith and Head counter-punched, bringing up a 50-run stand in 62 balls. Head was repeatedly beaten on the outside edge by Broad but thumped backto-back boundaries off James Anderson, while Smith looked somewhere back to his best after two quiet Tests since his hundred at Lord's.

He was dramatically reprieved in the over before lunch, gloving Moeen's offbreak to Stokes at leg slip only for Stokes to lose control of the ball, brushing it against his thigh as he went to throw it up in celebration. England challenged the on-field decision and were frustrated to lose a review, but Smith survived and reached the interval on 40.

Rain wiped out the second session and delayed the third. Shortly after the resumption Smith brought up his second half-century of the match and his first in the fourth innings of a match in seven years - but Head fell to the very next ball, and England grasped their moment.

For Australia, defeat means that a generation of modern greats will leave the game without winning a series in England outright, despite going two-nil up after two Tests. Murphy is their only player who featured at The Oval under the age of 29; many others will not be back in four years' time.

And for England, this was validation for an extraordinary transformation in their approach to Test cricket. They hardly landed a punch in a miserable Ashes tour 18 months ago but had Australia on the ropes for much of this series. For Broad - and Moeen - it was a fitting send-off. (Cricinfo).

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