15 December,2023 06:05 AM IST | Perth | AFP
David Warner celebrates his century v Pakistan at Perth. Pic/AFP
Veteran opener David Warner hammered a gritty 164 to silence the critics and steer Australia to 346-5 against an inconsistent Pakistan attack in the first Test on Thursday.
The 37-year-old batted for much of Day One before finally departing to Aamer Jamal, two balls after smashing the debutant for six. At stumps, Mitchell Marsh was unbeaten on 15 and Alex Carey not out 14.
Pakistan, who have never won a Test series in Australia and have failed to win a Test in the country since 1995, had no answer to a near-flawless Warner who smashed 16 fours and four sixes in a majestic 211-ball innings. He padded up under pressure to score runs with an emotional goodbye from Test cricket at the third Test in Sydney in front of his hometown fans his stated goal. In the lead-up, ex-Australian pacer Mitchell Johnson questioned whether Warner deserved a hero's farewell given his recent poor red-ball form and involvement in the ball-tampering scandal. "People make comments, but you get one with it. You have to just go out there and score runs and today I did that," said Warner.
Also Read: Rabada picks up a 'heel niggle', Bavuma pulls out of domestic fixtures
ALSO READ
"It's fantastic that Nathan gets his opportunity": Matthew Hayden
BGT: Australia picks this uncapped player to open alongside Usman Khawaja
David Warner says Cricket Australia ‘squashed’ ball change issue ‘as fast as they could’
"I’m not expecting them to come out and be easy beats": Adam Gilchrist on India
"He wasn't dead serious": Paine on David Warner's possible retirement reversal
Warner reached the three figure-mark with an uppercut boundary off Jamal, celebrating with his trademark leap and putting his finger to his mouth. "It was a nice, little quiet shush," Warner said of his celebration.
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever