Get Involvedpublished at 10:40 British Summer Time 15 September 2019
#bbccricket
John Daniels: Would be interested to hear reactions, but what about Pietersen for England coach? Would be spectacular whichever way it goes.
England win at The Oval by 135 runs - series drawn 2-2
First drawn Ashes series for 47 years
Australia bowled out for 262 chasing 399 to win
Wade holds up England with 117; four wickets each for Broad & Leach
Jack Skelton and Matthew Henry
#bbccricket
John Daniels: Would be interested to hear reactions, but what about Pietersen for England coach? Would be spectacular whichever way it goes.
BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra
The Test Match Special team are on air from The Oval.
Tune in by clicking the play icon at the top of this page.
Overseas listeners can tune in via YouTube here., external
Hello and welcome to live coverage of day four of the final Ashes Test between England and Australia at The Oval.
Will this be the last day of the series? England will certainly hope so.
Or could we have one more twist in the mad summer?
Amy Lofthouse
BBC Sport at The Oval
They play the highlights of the previous day’s play on one of the huge screens at the ground, which means Joe Denly has just been treated to a widescreen version of himself getting smashed in the, er, unmentionables by Pat Cummins yesterday.
For more on Denly, Amy Lofthouse has the story of his special few days here.
Meanwhile, England will resume on 313-8 this morning, with Jofra Archer and Jack Leach at the crease, leading by 382 runs.
They'll want to increase that to 400, if only for the psychological barrier before Australia bat again.
And then we'll see if Steve Smith can pull off what would be his most miraculous act of his stupendous summer.
So the Daddy hundred wasn't to be.
But in compiling a superb 94 after returning from the birth of his daughter, Joe Denly has put England in prime position to win this final Test and draw the Ashes 2-2.
A very different version of this story could be being told right now, had Marcus Harris held on to that chance when Denly was on nought on Friday night.
Yet, in fine style, Denly made Australia pay. Who knows what the most fluent knock of his Test career means for his future at the age of 33 - an extended run as opener, a spot on the winter tours at least?
For now, his admirable knock should help ensure England avoid an Ashes defeat on home soil for the first time in 2001.