The following is taken from bbc.co.uk - you can find the full report here
Kevin Pietersen smashed his first ever Test century to earn the draw that
gave England a 2-1 series win and the Ashes for the first time since 1987.
Pietersen, who was dropped twice, hit 158 and Ashley Giles 59 before England
were bowled out for 335 at The Oval, to snuff out Australian hopes of victory.
Australia batted for just four balls before bad light intervened, and a draw
was eventually declared by the umpires.
The result brings to an end a series many have dubbed the "best
ever".
The Queen and Prime Minister Tony Blair led the tributes to captain Michael
Vaughan and his victorious team after the match.
London will stage a victory parade for them on Tuesday, but the champagne
flowed as soon as Vaughan lifted the tiny brown Ashes urn aloft and they were
showered in ticker tape and streamers.
The players then completed a victory lap of the Oval pitch to salute the
23,000-strong crowd that had roared them on all day.
Fans had spread onto the roofs and balconies of houses around the south
London ground, and also celebrated in style, as did the country at large.
Yet England had been in trouble early on the final day of the fifth Test,
losing four wickets before lunch, and leading by just 133 with five hours left.
But Pietersen's super knock, which saw him named man of the match, guided
them home.
In his final Test in England, Shane Warne took the last two wickets to finish
with 6-124 and 12 wickets for the match, taking his career haul of England
wickets to a record 172.
However, he had little to celebrate as Australia's batsmen faced just four
balls before play was stopped in confused circumstances and then abandoned after
a 15-minute stand-off.
McGrath had Michael Vaughan caught behind for 45 and saw Ian Bell edge to
slip in the ninth over of the day.
Pietersen survived the hat-trick ball, which reared up to bounce off his
shoulder and into the hands of Aussie skipper Ricky Ponting.
There was another sharp intake of breath before he got off the mark, when an
edge caught keeper Adam Gilchrist's glove and was then missed by Matthew Hayden
at slip.
But the easiest chance came with his score on 15, when Warne put down a
simple head high chance at first slip.
Soon afterwards, an emboldened Pietersen slog-swept the veteran leg-spinner
for two sixes in a single over to bring up the England 100.
Warne bowled 32 consecutive overs from the Vauxhall End and was dazzling
early on as he ripped a leg-break out of the footholds to trap Marcus
Trescothick lbw for 33.
Andrew Flintoff did not last long either as he was lured into a loose
straight drive which Warne collected at shin height.
But Pietersen's aggression, combined with some gritty batting from Paul
Collingwood and then Giles wore the veteran leg-spinner down.
Collingwood contributed 10 to a sixth-wicket stand of 60 that began to shift
the momentum in England's direction, before Giles contributed a vital knock.
He ended a sterling series with the bat with a career-best score, putting on
a further 27 with Matthew Hoggard.
Pietersen hit seven sixes in all, beating Ian Botham's Ashes record of six in
an innings, set at Old Trafford in 1981.
But it was the fifth, a hook over square leg off Brett Lee, which hammered in
the final nail, taking the England lead past the 250 mark with 39 overs left to
Australia.
By the time he was bowled by McGrath, England were 314 ahead and the teams
were left to go through the motions until the stalemate, which sparked England
celebrations, was finally agreed.