Postpublished at 14:36 British Summer Time 14 August 2015
Melinda Farrell
Journalist
"There's no-one other than Charlotte Edwards who's going to make runs for England. There's a feeling that once she goes, they're so fragile."
Career-best 6-32 for Perry
Elwiss 46, Greenway 16 off 137 balls
England need Test record 263 to win
Australia lead 8-2 in multi-format series
Marc Higginson and Chris Osborne
Melinda Farrell
Journalist
"There's no-one other than Charlotte Edwards who's going to make runs for England. There's a feeling that once she goes, they're so fragile."
Jonassen has not only been stingy, but she's getting through her overs at a decent pace which is giving Australia more balls to torture England with. Elwiss collects a single off Schutt. Greenway is briefly worried by an inside edge that is safe.
Charles Dagnall
BBC Test Match Special
"England haven't learnt from the first innings. They should have watched how Jess Jonassen batted. But why are they not adapting to the situation?"
Jonassen will be furious. Her last ball of the over is dinked into mid-wicket by Greenway for two. They're the first runs she's conceded in five overs.
Charles Dagnall
BBC Test Match Special
"England are now fully professional and you have to ask where the accountability is. Where does the buck stop? Is it the captain? Is it the coaching staff? Since the first match of the series, they have been woeful."
Elwiss is getting a little bit excited, clipping one to fine leg for two. And then an absolute ripper from Schutt that swings a hair's breadth past the edge of Elwiss's bat and off stump. Elwiss is marching along though, relative o her team-mates, and takes a further three runs.
Charles Dagnall
BBC Test Match Special
"This is desperate by England - playing at balls they don't have to, playing across the line..."
If you don't have plans this afternoon, you can probably start making some. England have to hold on for the rest of the day with five wickets in the bank.
Jonassen, Australia's batting hero, flies through her fourth over without conceding a run.
A side note: England's lowest Test score is 35.
Jim Maxwell
BBC Test Match Special
"England have been completely outplayed. It's turning into a horrible batting performance."
Sciver could well have just caught the ground rather than the ball. That's possibly what the umpires are discussing but they can't overrule this anyway, so Sciver has to go. Georgia Elwiss collects a boundary from the second delivery she faces.
Melinda Farrell
Journalist
"It looked like she played over it - that was a really unlucky decision."
Hmm. Sciver has been given out caught behind. Or has she? The umpires are having a chat and Sciver has stopped in the outfield, looking very bemused.
Normal service is resumed as Greenway defends her way to a maiden over from Jonassen. England need to scrap.
Jim Maxwell
BBC Test Match Special
"England are plummeting towards defeat if they just keep poking away at good bowling."
Natalie Sciver is the next England batter and she snaffles a pair off her first ball. Just a few more hours to do that for...
Ebony Rainford-Brent
Ex-England batter on BBC Test Match Special
"That was gone, gone, gone. Brilliant ball from Schutt - it swung quite late. Winfield is walking off so slowly, she's is still on the pitch."
Jim Maxwell
BBC Test Match Special
"This is what happens when you get bogged down. England in a hole that's turning into a big mine.
Megan Schutt has her woman and England are peering down the precipice of defeat. Schutt has found plenty of swing and a bit of inward movement off the seam and this one has a straighter line. It's on Winfield's pad and she's off.
Jim Maxwell
BBC Test Match Special
"This is a dangerous method from Greenway, if you're not hitting it. You're leaving yourself wide open for the lbw."
Left-hander Greenway is happy to come across and anchor her pad outside off stump to deal with Jonassen. I'm going to copy and paste the words 'maiden over' to save myself time.