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Second Ashes Test, Adelaide Oval (day five of five) Australia 442-8 dec (Marsh 126*) & 138 (Anderson 5-43, Woakes 4-36) England 227 (Lyon 4-60) & 233 (Root 67, Starc 5-88) Australia won by 120 runs; take lead 2-0 in series Scorecard

England's fightback in the second Test ultimately came to nothing as Australia powered to a 120-run win in Adelaide and a 2-0 Ashes lead.

Beginning the final day on 176-4 in pursuit of 354, the tourists lost nightwatchman Chris Woakes to the second ball and Joe Root for 67 in the third over, both to Josh Hazlewood.

If Root's departure all but confirmed England's fate, Moeen Ali fell six overs later to make the rest little more than a formality.

Jonny Bairstow gamely resisted for 36, but Mitchell Starc ruthlessly wrapped it up with the second new ball to finish with 5-88.

England lost six wickets in the first session and were bowled out for 233.

The hosts will regain the Ashes if they win the third Test in Perth, which begins on 14 December.

England have not won at the Waca since 1978 and must reverse an awful run in Australia - they have now lost seven consecutive Tests down under - to have any chance of retaining the urn.

Root's men only need a draw to keep the Ashes, but England have never come from 2-0 down to draw or win a series against Australia.

England's fight too little, too late

It is deflating for England that they failed on the final day but the truth is they lost this match - the first day-night Test in Ashes history - in the first half.

After winning the toss and putting Australia in, poor bowling allowed the home side to rack up 442-8 declared.

The tourists were reduced to 142-7 before the fightback began.

Woakes and Craig Overton dragged them past 200 and, when Australia opted against enforcing the follow-on, England utilised the pink ball under lights to set the home side on the way to being 138 all out.

Faced with completing their highest successful run-chase and looking to win after conceding a first-innings deficit in excess of 200 for the first time since Ian Botham's heroics at Headingley in 1981, England gave themselves a chance with a battling batting display on the fourth evening.

Australia extinguish England hope

Moeen Ali has been dismissed by Nathan Lyon in each of England's four innings this series

With a potentially historic fifth day in the offing and the warmest conditions of the match to enjoy, plenty of spectators made the gold coin donation to enter the Adelaide Oval.

The Barmy Army were singing before play began but if Woakes' dismissal gave Australia an ideal start, Root's departure was a mortal blow.

With the result all but assured, Starc needed only 14 deliveries with the second new ball to take the final three wickets for 13 runs.

England can take heart from the punches they landed on Australia - at times home captain Steve Smith was rattled, their bowlers were magnificent in the second innings and some of their batsmen showed they can stand up to the hosts' attack.

Still, England's highest total in four attempts in this series is 302 and Australia have followed up a 10-wicket win in Brisbane with another resounding victory.

That the next destination is Perth, an Australian Ashes fortress, could well mean that England's time holding the urn is running out.

Hazlewood & Starc lead rejuvenated Australia

Joe Root has converted only one of his 18 second-innings fifties into a century

Before the final day, Australia had been on the back foot for the majority of the previous four sessions.

On Tuesday evening, frustration was visible, catches went down and the wasting of both reviews in the space of three deliveries led to loud taunting from the travelling fans.

Smith's men returned refreshed on Wednesday and pace bowler Hazlewood all but guaranteed the outcome of the match with his first 11 deliveries of the day.

First he found movement back in to Woakes, who reviewed being given out caught behind for five and shook his head when the third umpire detected the finest of edges.

Root, so brave the previous night, fell in similar fashion in Hazlewood's next over without adding to his overnight score. He knew a review could not save him and dragged himself from the field.

From there, it was little more than a formality.

Moeen was lbw sweeping Nathan Lyon - in all four innings in the series Lyon has dismissed fellow off-spinner Moeen.

Bairstow and Overton, dropped at a short third slip by Cameron Bancroft off Pat Cummins, resisted for nine overs, but Overton was pinned leg before from Starc's first delivery with the second new ball.

In Starc's next over, Stuart Broad edged to wicketkeeper Tim Paine before Bairstow played on to his stumps.

Jonny Bairstow made 36 off 57 balls

I was a bit nervous - Smith

England captain Joe Root on BBC Test Match Special: "We came to the ground expecting. We were right in the game but losing early wickets hampered our chances.

"The way we went about it yesterday was exceptional and that has to be the benchmark going forward. That shows how we are still massively in this series."

On his decision to bowl first after winning the toss: "At the time I thought it was the right thing to do. It is easy to question now. I fully back our bowlers in those conditions to take 10 wickets."

Australia captain Smith, on BT Sport, on not enforcing the follow-on: "Would I do the same again? I'm not sure. It's played on my mind a bit over the last couple of days - have I made a mistake?

"My rationale was it's really long summer and I don't want to bowl my bowlers into the ground. England fought really hard with the ball and last night.

"I was a little bit nervous. On another day I might decide to go another way, but we've won the Test match, so it's irrelevant."

Australia pace bowler Josh Hazlewood on ABC: "We didn't expect England to collapse this morning. We expected them to dig in and fight hard for every run."