England 393 for 8 dec (Root 118*, Bairstow 78, Crawley 61, Lyon 4-149) and 26 for 2 lead Australia 386 (Khawaja 141, Carey 66, Robinson 3-55, Broad 3-68) by 35 runs
Birmingham: England were hit by a one-two punch from Australia in a devastating 21-minute spell before rain ruined the third day of the first Ashes Test.
Only 22 balls were possible after 14:15 BST at Edgbaston, but in that time Australia were rampant under slate skies and floodlights to claim two wickets for two runs.
Ben Duckett poked Pat Cummins to gully, where Cameron Green took a trademark catch, and a shuffling Zak Crawley edged Scott Boland behind.
Joe Root was also the subject of a review off Cummins before the second and final heavy shower of the day allowed England to escape on 28-2, 35 ahead.
All this came after England had much the better of the dry morning, running through the Australia lower order to claim a first-innings lead of seven runs.
After Usman Khawaja was out-thought by another ingenious plan from Ben Stokes and bowled by Ollie Robinson for 141, Australia lost their last four wickets for 14 runs to be dismissed for 386.
Robinson and Stuart Broad bounced out the tail, each ending with three wickets.
Overall, 47.3 overs were lost to rain, with more forecast for day five on Tuesday. The wet weather, wearing pitch and clash of styles add fuel to what could be a thrilling conclusion to an enthralling series opener.
England were superb in the morning session, taking advantage of Australia's lack of intent to perfectly execute some carefully laid plans and delight the riotous Hollies Stand.
But the Australian passiveness disappeared in the small window between the showers that arrived as forecast after lunch.
With the ball nibbling more than any time in the match, Australia made the benign surface look full of danger. England were lucky to get out only two down.
Monday is set to be dry, but the rain predicted for Tuesday will have an influence on any potential England declaration - if they bat long enough for that luxury.
There is the suspicion the pitch will deteriorate and turn, in theory helping Moeen Ali. However, the England off-spinner has a nasty cut on his spinning finger that affected his bowling on Sunday morning.