‘Australia will have to admit he’s a great’ – how Root hit elusive century

“Even Australia will have to admit he’s a great now,” said his former team-mate Sir Alastair Cook.
Joe Root has, finally, done it.
In his 30th innings down under – 4,395 days after his first and after all of the pre-series talk – the England batter has his first Test century in Australia.
The 34-year-old came in with his side reeling at 5-2 in the third over, was dropped on two and saw wickets tumble from the other end but dug in to reach the 40th century of his illustrious Test career late in the evening session.
He got to the landmark with a flick to fine leg, removed his helmet and saluted the crowd with a shrug and a typically measured celebration.
“It is a brilliant innings and just what England needed,” Cook said on TNT Sports.
“He’s been superb under pressure as always. He is England’s best batsman ever. He just gets better and better.”
Before this innings, Root had made nine fifties and scored 900 runs in Australia, but his average of 33.33 was the lowest of any country in which he had batted more than twice.
It was why the West Australian newspaper labelled him “Average Joe”.
The century moves Root within one of Australia great Ricky Ponting, who sits third on the list of most hundreds in Test history.
More significantly, however, it ends any conversation about whether or not Root, already the second-highest run-scorer in Tests, can be considered an all-time great without a Test century in Australia – an opinion put forward by former Australia coach and batter Darren Lehmann.
“He’d [Joe Root] have arrived thinking I haven’t got a hundred here and he would have known for England to get back into the series he needs runs,” former England captain Michael Vaughan told BBC Sport’s Daily Ashes Debrief.
“To deliver here under that amount of pressure was remarkable.”



