David Warner slams 164 as Australia take control against Pakistan in first Test
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 at Perth 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 have never won a Test series in Australia and have failed to win a Test in the country since 1995, with the team again facing a daunting task.
Pakistan bowlers showed flashes of brilliance and were rewarded with the wickets of Usman Khawaja (41), Marnus Labuschagne (16), Steve Smith (31) and Travis Head (40).
But until Jamal struck, they 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, former Australian paceman Mitchell Johnson questioned whether Warner deserved a hero’s farewell given his recent poor red-ball form and involvement in the 2018 ball-tampering scandal.
With his back against the wall in his 110th Test, Warner responded in typically swashbuckling fashion.
“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. “I don’t feel any extra pressure, any other points I have to prove.
“If people are out to get you or make a headline out of your name, so be it. I can’t worry about that, I’ve got to worry about what I do for the team.”
After Pat Cummins won the toss and opted to bat, Warner took a confident single off his first ball in an opening over from Shaheen Shah Afridi that leaked 14 runs and never looked back.
On a pitch offering bounce, he quickly settled in to bring up his half-century off just 41 balls with a boundary from Faheem Ashraf.
His strike rate slowed after lunch as he moved towards a 26th Test ton, reaching three figures 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, referring to the criticism.
It was his first century since a battling 200 against South Africa at the Melbourne Cricket Ground a year ago.
Solidarity
He was dropped by Khurram Shahzad soon after bringing up his milestone but was otherwise in command until Jamal tempted him with a short ball and he was caught near the ropes by Imamul Haq.
Khawaja, wearing a black armband in solidarity with the people of Gaza, was happy to play second fiddle in a 126-run opening stand.
He had a massive let-off on 25 when dropped but departed when Pakistan’s bowlers picked up their game after lunch, caught by wicketkeeper Sarfaraz Ahmed off Afridi’s bowling.
Labuschagne looked in good nick, racing to 16 when he was beaten by a ball pitched up by Ashraf and given out lbw.
Smith clattered a four through midwicket off his second ball to signal his intent but, after effortlessly making 31, he was deceived by a delivery from Shahzad and got a faint edge to the diving Ahmed.
It was a maiden Test wicket for the debutant.
Head cashed in with a quick 40 before top-edging straight to Agha Salman, ensuring Jamal too earned a first Test wicket.
“I still believe we are in the game,” said Jamal. “We are planning to get them out in the first hour tomorrow morning. “