Ashes 2019,1st Test: Steve Smith Rescues Australia With 144 After Collapse On Day 1
Steve Smith starred on his Test comeback with an impressive knock of 144 and rescued Australia after a batting collapse on Day 1 of the first Ashes Test.
- Posted by Prakash Kumar Rai
- Updated: August 02, 2019 12:13 AM IST
Highlights
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Steve Smith rescued Australia after a batting collapse
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Steve Smith marked his return to Test cricket with a hundred
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Stuart Broad picked up a five-wicket haul to bowl out Australia for 284
Steve Smith starred on his Test comeback with an impressive knock of 144 and rescued Australia after a batting collapse on the first day of the first Ashes Test against England at Edgbaston in Birmingham on Thursday. For England, Stuart Broad picked up a five-wicket haul to bowl out Australia for 284 in 80.4 overs. The opening pair of Rory Burns (4*) and Jason Roy (6*) survived two overs as England reached 10 without any loss of wickets at stumps on Day 1.
Australia were in dire straits against England in Birmingham at 122/8 but their last two wickets more than doubled the score and Smith was last man out for 144 in a total of 284.
Rory Burns and Jason Roy then survived two overs as the hosts ended the day on 10/0.
Former captain Smith, who returned to international cricket during the recent World Cup that England won, was subjected to repeated jeers by a partisan crowd.
But he answered the boos in style with his 24th Test century and ninth against England.
"It hasn't really sunk in yet," Smith told BBC Radio. "Obviously been a while since I've been able to put on the whites and the baggy green (cap).Â
"I'm really proud of the way I was able to stand up today. We were in a bit of trouble there and we had to dig deep on a wicket that wasn't easy."
Australia had slumped to 17/2 when Smith came in to bat after current skipper Tim Paine had won the toss.
Wickets fell steadily but Smith found the ally he needed in Peter Siddle, with the recalled number 10 making a valuable 44 -- the second-best score of the innings -- in a ninth-wicket partnership of 88.
Up until that point it seemed England would not suffer from the absence of James Anderson, England's all-time leading Test wicket-taker, who had only bowled four overs before suffering a right calf injury.
Longtime new-ball partner Stuart Broad took 5/86 in 22.4 overs and fellow paceman Chris Woakes chipped in with 3/58 on his Warwickshire home ground.
But Australia's total may yet be enough to embarrass an England side who collapsed to 85 all out before beating Ireland at Lord's last week.Â
The fans booed the visitors when they walked out for the pre-match anthem ceremony with Australia's XI containing Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft -- the three players banned following the ball-tampering incident that took place during a Test against South Africa in Cape Town in March 2018.
Dangerous left-handed opener Warner was lbw to Broad for two and did not bother with a review, even though technology suggested the ball would have missed leg stump.
As the cheers from the crowd at an early wicket died down, Warner was subjected to a prolonged chorus of boos on his walk back to the pavilion, with spectators waving strips of sandpaper and shouting "cheerio".
Fellow opener Bancroft, who actually applied sandpaper to the ball at Newlands, then fell for eight when he edged an excellent Broad delivery to England captain Joe Root at first slip.
The combination of Bancroft departing and Smith walking in to bat prompted even louder jeers from what has long been England's most raucous home crowd.
(With AFP inputs)