London - Tim Murtagh took five wickets as England suffered a dramatic collapse to 85 all out on the first morning of their one-off Test against Ireland at Lord's on Wednesday.
Murtagh, who plays county cricket at the ground for Middlesex, took five wickets for 13 runs in nine overs as Ireland made a sensational start to their first Test match at the 'home of cricket'.
In the process, the 37-year-old veteran became the first Ireland bowler to take five wickets in a Test innings in what is just his side's third match at this level.
England, on a ground where they won the 50-over World Cup just over a week ago, were bowled out in a mere 23.4 overs - and that after captain Joe Root won the toss.
It was the latest worrying batting collapse suffered by England ahead of the Ashes that start next week - the third time in three years they had lost all 10 wickets in a session, having not done so previously since 1938.
It was also their lowest score in a home Test innings since they were dismissed for 77 by Australia at Lord's in 1997 and came hot on the heels of their 77 all out away to the West Indies in Barbados in January.
Teams:
England
Jason Roy, Rory Burns, Joe Denly, Joe Root (captain), Jonny Bairstow (wicketkeeper), Moeen Ali, Chris Woakes, Sam Curran, Stuart Broad, Olly Stone, Jack Leach
Ireland
William Porterfield (captain), James McCollum, Andrew Balbirnie, Paul Stirling, Kevin O'Brien, Gary Wilson (wicketkeeper, Stuart Thompson, Mark Adair, Andy McBrine, Tim Murtagh, Boyd Rankin
Umpires: Ruchira Palliyaguruge (SRI), Aleem Dar (PAK)
TV umpire: Paul Wilson (AUS)
Match referee: Andy Pycroft (ZIM)