Brisbane: Openers David Warner and Cameron Bancroft took just 16 more overs to knock off the remaining 56 runs as Australia breezed to a 10-wicket victory to go one up in the Ashes.


Debutant Cameron Bancroft hit the winning runs as he and Warner stitched the highest ever opening partnership in fourth innings in a Test win.


Warner remained unbeaten on 87 and his young opening partner scored 82 while the duo put on an unbroken 173 runs.






The script for victory was written on Day 4 itself with the tourists getting skittled out for 195 off 71.4 overs, losing their last six wickets for 82, as the Test tilted Australia's way on the fourth day at the Gabba.


The Australians, unbeaten at their Gabba fortress since 1988, were chasing down 170 runs to win and made easy work of the 34 overs to the close.


At stumps, they were 114 without loss with Warner unbeaten on 60 and Bancroft not out 51.


Bancroft, playing in his first Test match, showed the flinty side of his character when he took a direct throwback from bowler Jimmy Anderson near his groin without flinching.


It was 50-50 between the traditional rivals over the first three days, raising England's hopes of a first win at the ground in 31 years.


But Steve Smith's match-turning unbeaten 141 over eight and a half hours and Josh Hazlewood's two late wickets on Saturday swung the momentum firmly Australia's way.


Much depended on Joe Root's producing a captain's knock after senior batsman Alastair Cook failed again, but once Root was out on Sunday England dissolved.


Hazlewood trapped Root leg before wicket with a delivery that nicked back off the seam to the back-slapping jubilation of the Australians.


Root was rapped on the knee roll of his pad but surprisingly did not seek a review given the vital importance of his wicket.


Hazlewood, who removed Cook and James Vince late on Saturday's third day, finished with three for 46 off 16 overs.


Off-spinner Nathan Lyon started the ball rolling for the Australians on day four when he dismissed in-form opener Mark Stoneman (27) and Dawid Malan (4), both caught by Steve Smith at slip.


Lyon also removed Moeen Ali with a contentious stumping by wicketkeeper Tim Paine for 40. The TV umpire needed repeated replays before deciding that the Englishman's back foot was not behind the crease.


Lyon finished with three for 67 and has now taken 274 wickets in 70 Tests, the highest number of wickets by an Australian off-spinner.


Mitchell Starc chipped in with the wickets of Jonny Bairstow, Chris Woakes (17) and Stuart Broad to finish with three for 51.


Bairstow hit 42 off 75 balls before he ramped one over the slips and gave a regulation catch to Peter Handscomb at third man.


Broad was out caught behind for two to a faint speck detected on the infrared "Hot Spot" technology on review, while Woakes was Smith's fourth catch of the innings.


The third paceman Pat Cummins mopped up the England innings when he had Jake Ball caught behind the wicket off a vicious short ball for one.


The action will now shift to Adelaide Oval for the first ever Day/Night Ashes Test.