Test venues The three Ashes series tests took place at the following venues. ----
First test The first test was played at Sydney Cricket Ground on 17 June 1946. Queues to get into the ground started the previous evening and by 7:30am on the morning of the test the Australian authorities felt it necessary to open the gates to the ground several hours early and by 11:30am the ground was full. After the game Kitching said he had pushed Jorgenson away and claimed he had been bitten. With this Kitching and the English management wanted to forget the whole incident but Jorgenson wanted a hearing to clear his name, but the committee declined the request and reiterated that they had no evidence Jorgenson had bitten Kitching, Jorgenson was not guilty of any improper conduct and "his good name and the team record had not been impaired" and that there was no need for Jorgenson to appear before the committee.
Second test After the drawn test in Sydney, England only needed to win the second test to retain the Ashes as a tied series would result in the holders keeping the trophy. Australia made just one change to their side with
Jack Hutchinson replacing the injured
Noel Mulligan; the captaincy also changed as
Ron Bailey succeeded fellow centre
Joe Jorgenson. England made two changes with
Arthur Bassett replacing an injured
Eric Batten on the wing and
Ted Ward replacing the suspended
Jack Kitching. Also in the backs
Gus Risman and
Ernest Ward swapped positions to Ward at fullback and Risman at centre. The game was played at the
Brisbane Exhibition Ground on 6 July 1946. Despite a public transport strike and continuing restrictions on non-essential travel, huge queues had formed outside the ground by early morning and the gates were opened at 7 am, several hours before kick off. By 10 am the ground was full and the gates locked; this was unpopular with the thousands still outside the ground and the gates were crashed and an estimated additional 10,000 people broke into the ground. This still left many more outside the ground and the Australian team who had set off early for the ground had considerable trouble gaining entrance; the England side only got to the ground due to the police arranging an escort for the team cars and forcing their way through the crowds. When the match started it was a closely contested game for the first quarter before England opened scoring as debutant Arthur Bassett gained possession from a McCue kick to score a try on the wing. The only other points of the first half were from Ernest Ward's boot as he scored a penalty from outside the Australian 25-yard (20-metre) line. With England starting the second half with a 5–0 lead, Australia had to score first to get back into the game and minutes into the second half they did so as Jorgenson put a penalty over to make the score 5–2. Shortly afterwards though Bassett scored his second try to increase England's lead to six points. Australia came back with a try through captain
Ron Bailey before England scored two further tries to put the game beyond Australia's reach; the first was scored by
Albert Johnson and then Bassett completed his
hat trick to make the score 14–5. Just before the end England hooker
Joe Egan was sent off for hitting Australian second-rower
Arthur Clues after Clues made a heavy tackle on Ernest Ward which Egan thought should have been penalised by the referee. As he was leaving the pitch Egan was heard to say "If the referee won't do his job, then someone has to". Soon after the game ended and England had retained the Ashes. The attendance was officially recorded as 40,500 but estimates are that the number watching was closed to 60,000 when the gatecrashers and members of the
Royal National Agricultural and Industrial Association of Queensland (owners of the ground) are included.
Third test England came into the game making two changes from the previous test. Prop
Frank Whitcombe was replaced by
George Curran and
Eric Batten was recalled to the wing. Australia made five changes with
Trevor Eather,
Noel White and
Clem Kennedy being called up into the backs while
Jim Armstrong and
Noel Mulligan came into the forwards. With the Ashes already decided the game at Sydney Cricket Ground on 20 July was about pride for both teams and the match was hotly contested from the start. Almost a quarter of the game had gone before either side scored and it was Australia who took the lead as
Joe Jorgenson kicked a penalty. England equalised with a
Gus Risman field goal before another Jorgenson penalty restores Australia's lead. Australia then scored the game's first try;
George Watt collecting a wayward England kick and passing to
Clem Kennedy who scored the try. At half-time Australia led 7–2 but that was to be short-lived as the second half started with England scoring eight points in the first four minutes of the half. First was a Risman penalty, then tries from
Arthur Bassett and Curran to put England 12–8 ahead. Australis mounted pressure on the English line but lost momentum when
Arthur Clues was sent-off for attempting a dangerous swinging arm tackle on Risman. Clues actually missed Risman but the attempt was so blatant that the referee had to send Clues off. England made use of the one-man advantage and scored two further converted tries, the first by
Ike Owens and the second, right at the end of the game, by Bassett to win 20–7. ==New Zealand test==