Shane Warne crowned his international farewell with a brilliant half-century to put Australia in control of the final Ashes Test against England on Thursday.
The world's greatest wicket-taker showed his prowess with the bat by cracking an explosive 71 off only 65 balls to help Australia reach 393 in reply to England's 291.
Wicketkeeper Adam Gilchrist made 62, Andrew Symonds 48 and Stuart Clark 35 as the Australian lower-order piled on the runs to give their team a handy 102-run lead before tea on the third day at the Sydney Cricket Ground.
Warne, playing in his last Test, delivered on his pledge to go out with a bang by belting nine fours and two sixes to post his 12th Test half-century.
He shared a 58-run partnership with Gilchrist to put Australia in front; then a 68-run stand with Clark to stretch the advantage and keep Australia on course for their first Ashes clean sweep in 86 years.
Warne, who has scored more runs than any player in history without making a Test hundred, was foiled in possibly his final chance when he was last man out, stumped by wicketkeeper Chris Read off spinner Monty Panesar.
Read also caught Gilchrist, Mike Hussey and Brett Lee to become the first Englishman to twice take six dismissals in an innings after his success in Melbourne last week.
Gilchrist provided another demonstration of his awesome power, cracking eight boundaries and passing 10,000 first-class runs, before he was unluckily given out caught behind off James Anderson, with television replays showing he had failed to make contact with the ball.
Australia's prospects of leading on the first innings had looked bleak when Hussey was dismissed in the second over of the day without adding to his overnight score of 37 and Symonds then threw his wicket away.
Hussey edged a simple catch behind off Anderson while Symonds, who completed his maiden Test hundred in Melbourne last week, wasted his chance of another big score when he was bowled by Panesar following a wild swipe.