Australia's poor catching cost them 111 runs on day one of the final Ashes Test at The Oval, but a starring hand from Pat Cummins helped arrest the slide.
Here are five things you missed from The Oval overnight.
1. David Warner drops a sitter
After winning the toss for the first time this series, Pat Cummins might have felt that the luck was with him.
It took just one ball of his spell to realise that might not be the case.
England had raced to 0-41 after eight overs, so when Ben Duckett got a thick edge to the first ball of Cummins' spell outside off, he must have felt he had the Midas touch.
That did not account for David Warner though, who shelled a sitter at second slip.
Duckett was on 30 at the time and only made another 11 before punching the ball to Alex Carey off the bowling of Marsh.
The very next over, Zak Crawley was also given a life when he edged to Smith, who put down a much tougher chance.
It was not an auspicious start to Australia's fielding effort at The Oval — and it didn't get much better.
2. Carey's clanger
The narrative early in the series was that no matter what happened, Australia absolutely, undeniably, unequivocally had an edge in the wicketkeeping stakes.
But since the fallout of the stumping that shall not be named, Alex Carey has not looked the same player and that was on full display on the first morning at the Oval, when his usually pristine glovework left him.
After failing to mop up some wild deliveries as cleanly as he tends to, he went with one hand for a catch that he likely could have gotten both gloves to.
The catch went down. Harry Brook survived. He was on five.
"That's a bad miss," former England skipper Michael Vaughan said on Test Match Special.
"Carey's legs just flattened, he didn't have any power to go across. It was a straight forward edge, he would've seen that the whole way."
It ended up costing Australia momentum and 80 vital middle-order runs.
3. Woakes's lucky over
Re-starting after a break is always tough for batters, so a bit of luck could come in handy on occasion.
Chris Woakes was the beneficiary twice in three balls in the very first over after tea.
Mitch Starc had him rapped on the pads in the second ball of his over.
Woakes conferred with Mark Wood up the other end, and then reluctantly reviewed.
Good job he did, because it turns out that he got a decent edge on the ball to overturn the decision.
Woakes smashed the next ball to cover point for a boundary, making the most of his life — but then edged the next ball straight to gully.
Unfortunately for Australia, it was Mitch Marsh in that position, not Cameron Green, and the West Australian all rounder shelled a simple chance to give Woakes his second life of the over.
4. Cummins answers the critics
Pat Cummins looked mentally and physically fried at Old Trafford. His pace was down, his tactics were questionable and when he emerged from the sheds for the rainy post-match presentation, he looked relieved more than anything else.
His figures of 1-66 off 13 overs in the first innings of the final Test don't look like much in a vacuum, but in context, they were pretty immense.
After being sent in under cloudy skies, Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett looked in good nick through the first eight overs, at one stage scoring off 16 successive deliveries in what is supposed to be one of the hardest times to score in a Test.
When Cummins brought himself on for the ninth over, he immediately had an impact, getting the openers to play and miss, finding edges, and going at under four an over, which seems nigh on impossible against England at the moment.
He got Crawley in his third over and should have had Brook in his fifth, which would have been just rewards for the decision to bowling, the time to change and his own bowling.
Cummins also used young spinner Todd Murphy well after putting him on ice in Headingley, and didn't get carried away with any one approach for too long; ticking both the captaincy and the bowling columns.
5. Warner gets in and gets out
There has been, as usual, so much talk about Warner's position in the Australian line-up during another lean series in England.
But unlike the diabolical 2019 series where he averaged under 10, 2023 has been a more frustrating experience in a way, with Warner repeatedly making starts but failing to go on with.
It happened again late on day one at The Oval, with Australia's pugnacious opener looking up for the fight and ready to dig in, before it all came undone out of nowhere.
After looking pretty comfortable for 51 balls, the 52nd from Woakes was a classic length ball that left Warner unsure whether to play or leave, opting to hang the bat out at it and nicking off for 24.
With one innings left to make his mark on the series, Warner has now reached 24 in six of nine digs, but has only passed 50 once, in the first innings at Lord's.
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