The Ashes: Travis Head century punishes England in Hobart

The first day of the fifth Test is in Hobart.

Head 101, Green 74.

England is yet to bat.

The scorecard is a summary of what happened.

England's sloppy performance was punished by a swashbuckling century from Australia's Travis Head on the first day of the fifth Test.

England were excellent in reducing the home side to 12-3.

The mistake from Zak Crawley was crucial as Marnus Labuschagne was dropped on nought.

Labuschagne counter-attacked for 44 in a rapid stand of 71 with Head, who continued to climb into the England attack in a partnership of 121 with Cameron Green.

Head made his second century of the series from 112 deliveries, but was dismissed by the next ball for 101.

The rain ended the day with more than 30 overs unused and Australia on 241-6.

The conditions, the turn from the early wickets and the prospect of run- scoring being difficult in the remainder of the match probably means Australia have had the better of the day.

Robinson had a back spasm and only took eight overs.

It was a real debut for the Ashes.

This was an action-packed and, at times, strange day on which the 16th and seventh ground in Australia were to host the first Test.

Stuart Broad fell on his face while bowling the first ball of the match, followed by Labuschagne bowling England to a heavy defeat.

In the fifth and final Test in Australia, Ollie Pope replaced the injured Jonny Bairstow, while Haseeb Hameed was brought back in place of the returning Rory Burns. Ben Stokes isn't fit to bowl, leaving a four-man seam attack short.

That doesn't excuse England's poor bowling after the first hour or the drop of Labuschagne.

Mark Wood and Chriswoakes were expensive as Head emerged from Labuschagne's slipstream, leaving England captain Joe Root to rely on his own off-breaks.

Even though England had the late boost of removing Green, there will be concern when a fragile batting line-up is exposed to the home attack on the green pitch.

The boy is head boy.

Head had to watch his replacement for the fourth Test, Usman Khawaja, peel off two centuries.

Marcus Harris was sacrificed and Khawaja pushed up the order to accommodate Head, who repaid the faith shown in him.

The left-handed opener's effort was all the more impressive because of the perilous situation Australia were in when he arrived at the crease.

They added 103 runs for the loss of Labuschagne in the 20 overs that followed Australia's counter- attack.

It was a surprise when Head patted Woakes to mid-on after reaching his fourth Test hundred.

The powerful Green played nicely through the covers and seemed to have a maiden hundred at his mercy, only to fall into Wood's short-ball trap.

England have home comforts.

The state of county cricket and the preparation of players for Test cricket have been the focus of the post-mortem.

England were presented with a county green seamer in Hobart and looked to be taking full advantage, only to stray off course.

Broad and Robinson were superb with the new ball.

David Warner, Khawaja, and Steve Smith offered edges that were taken but, when Labuschagne and Robinson got away, second slip Crawley dived in front of Root to miss the chance.

Broad at least accounted for Labuschagne. Labuschagne lost his footing as he walked across his stumps, being struck by the middle stump around his legs.

England lost their way. When Robinson was out of action, Wood and Woakes leaked a combined 129 runs from 23.3 overs and the 10 overs of Root were useless.

One of England's worst days of the series.

Jonathan Agnew said that this has been one of the worst days of the series. England were let down by batting and the bowling was poor.

You don't want Australia to score too much more than 140 or 150, because you don't want them to lose. They have 100 more.

Jon Lewis, England's fast bowling coach, said that they didn't adapt fast enough.

The guys on the field talk brilliantly and communicate well, but sometimes we try to keep going with the same plan for too long.

The batter from Australia spoke to ABC Radio. I feel like we're in a good position despite not being out there.

It was enjoyable. You can't make a lot of mistakes. We were going to be very positive and try to enjoy it.