My thoughts on the day:
It was very much a passage of play for the purists - long grind, hard work and discipline were required rather than flash shots and impetuosness. On a very long (and poorly navigated) walk to the ground, I couldn't decide whether I would be batting or bowling first on winning the toss: something just seemed to be missing in terms of swing that had been present a week before in Melbourne. I settled on bowling first, on the grounds that I am by nature tactically conservative, and the prospect of 3/30 is never an appetising one: I wasn't disappointed to see Clarke take first use.
Hughes looks technically sounder than 18 months ago: his back foot seems to be doing more of what it ought to be doing, and less running away - his intent was good in terms of capitalising on the few loose balls that England offered, and it was a farily good nut from Tremlett that got him off balance and following the ball. I think that he has a future at the top of the innings on this showing: things weren't easy first up, but he and Watson rode the storm well. As for Watto himself, well, I still can't get my head around how he can get to 40/50, leave the ball well, be selective with what he's doing, and then get out, but it keeps on happening, and no one in the SCG looked surprised when he nicked off.
About 30 seconds before Clarke got himself out, I turned to one of my mates and said "I think Clarke's still giving us a good chance here - he's going hard at the ball, and playing away from his body" - cue smug mode as he played some flash/waft thing that can only loosely be termed a shot. Khawaja looked pretty solid: he defended well and pulled majestically, however I'm unconvinced about him on the front foot on the off side. He hit a few drives that rather skewed to mid-off as the bat turned in his hands, and then slashed uppishly through backward point: it felt as if he was rather overly keen to get on with proceedings at times... as showed by what was very much a debutant's dismissal.
Otherwise, Hussey was Hussey and I'm not surprised to see Haddin coming in ahead of Schofield Smith. England fielded well as per usual (how good does it feel to write that?) and caught everything that came their way: I do feel as if we were just a fraction short on too regular a basis - beating the edge or allowing a batsman to leave, Hilfenhaus-style, rather than asking the probing questions, though this was much improved as the day wore on. Another thought was that there really wasn't much pace in the wicket - the ball died on the slips several times, and a number short balls sat up to be pulled, hard. When the clouds go - and they have to, don't they? - I can see this being a very good batting track for a couple of days.
If we can split the two best batsmen in the Aussie side early on tomorrow, I think it's very much the box seats.