Rory Burns takes Jofra Archer's knuckle ball, a blinder and the breaking return of Sam Curran. Here are the very best pieces from the Oval... Steve Smith missed out on a hundred of their Ashes series as Jofra Archer's six wickets aided England skittle Australia for 225 and take control of the Test on day 2. Scorecard | Commentary Smith (80) notched his 10th fifty-plus score in a row at Ashes cricket however was not able to complete his 27th Test hundred when, was dropped on 66 by Joe Root off Sam Curranthat he was trapped lbw by Chris Woakes. Archer (6-62) eliminated four of Australia's best six after which repaint Nathan Lyon (25) along with Peter Siddle (18) following a meaty ninth-wicket stand of 37 - Siddle into a super one-handed catch at gully from Rory Burns - as he claimed his next six-wicket haul of the series. The remarkable Curran (3-46), meanwhile, had been at one point on a hat-trick in his home ground since the vacationers - save for one guy - stuttered in reply to England's 294 out to trail from 69 on first innings. Jofra Archer's knuckle ball was a delivery of attractiveness. Executed it pegged back off-stump but stopped a partnership with Peter Siddle in its tracks. Archer was also earned his second five-for during Tests by it. However, the moment of the day was still to come Rory Burns diving to his left at the gully to grab a low grab one-handed after Siddle ran Archer towards person from the face. The opener extended superbly before observing with a few timeless Surrey swagger while diving to pouch the ball from fashion. Did England get their discipline wrong to Smith? 'The new Don' looked so at ease at times that the attention fell on Joe Root strategies. To be honest, most of the plans deployed from Smith in this series have come up brief - in the event of Stuart Broad bowling from well behind the stumps, very literally! But with Smith already past fifty, England persisted to attempt to hide the ball off while having square that was heavy and a leg set up. That allowed Smith shed the ball leg-side and canter through, or to pick off functions as you like through a enormous gap point. By moving to a 6-3 one from a field that was 5-4 and shifting fine leg to profound stage, England's chances of massaging up Smith improved his frustration is obvious to see. England's Sam Curran:"As a group of bowlers I believe we're pretty great. The wicket is pretty flat. To exactly what we did, to bowl them out was a wonderful hard work and the sun will be shining tomorrow and then we can find some runs on the board. I have been working on attempting to bend the ball consistently back to the right-handers and luckily a few did now." Sir Andrew Strauss on Curran:"I really like what I saw. He brings another dimension to the bowling attack with this distinct angle. He attracts the stumps into play a lot by bowling full. Meaning so that you have to accept this he is going to go for a few runs, but he has that bubbly excitement . He would like to become part of the match and can be a very, very talented cricketer and I believe we are going to see a great deal more of him over the years." Nasser Hussain on England's selection:"Will Joe Root along with the new coach be happy that Jos Buttler ends up a cricketer who bats using the tail or does Jos find a much better cricketer in there batting at five? In the moment he strikes me as somebody who's pretty good with the his technique could be a tiny bit vulnerable before." Kevin Roberts, CEO of Cricket Australia:"I'm not sure there is anybody in Australian cricket that could have headed this turnaround [since sandpaper-gate] in addition to Tim Paine has. Ironically, having four decades out of this match with a smashed finger gave him the lifetime experience that he is now using to lead our team." See every day three of the fifth Ashes Test live on Sky Sports The Ashes and Sky Sports Main Event from 10.30am on Saturday. You can even follow over-by-over comment and in-play clips onto our rolling blog on skysports.com and the Sky Sports program. Read more here: http://my-oja.net