Slick Smith equals Bradman’s 29 test centuries
Steve Smith scored an unbeaten 189 to equal Donald Bradman’s 29 test centuries and help Australia tighten their grip on the opening cricket test against the West Indies yesterday.
Marnus Labuschagne (204) fell to the last ball before lunch on the second day as Australia went into the break on 402-3, ending a 251-run stand for the third wicket in Perth.
Australia then kept up the onslaught after the interval, with Smith moving from 114 to 189, while Travis Head contributed a run-a-ball unbeaten 80 as the pair added 166 runs in 29.5 overs to leave the hosts at 568-3 at tea.
Labuschagne, who smashed fast bowler Jayden Seales for his 20th boundary to bring up the milestone, fell when he edged part-time offspinner Kraigg Brathwaite as wicketkeeper Joshua Da Silva finally held onto a catch having dropped Labuschagne twice on 132 and 194.
Australia resumed the second day on 293-2 with Labuschagne on 154 and Smith on 59, and the West Indies desperate for a breakthrough in cloudy conditions conducive for swing bowling.
Instead, Labuschagne and Smith continued from where they left off overnight and stubbornly piled up the misery on the tourists, taking the game away with each run.
Smith batted flawlessly to equal the former Australia batting legend Bradman in his 88th test appearance. Only Ricky Ponting (41), Steve Waugh (32) and Matthew Hayden (30) have scored more hundreds for Australia.
“He was the greatest to play,” Smith said of Bradman. “I’m happy with 29. Hopefully a few more to come.”
Smith was more circumspect and hit just nine boundaries in his century that came off 179 balls. It was Smith’s second century in the space of three innings following his 145 not out against Sri Lanka in Galle in July.
Labuschagne’s double century is his second, after his 215 against New Zealand in Sydney in January 2020. He batted for 483 minutes and hit a six and 20 fours of 350 balls.
After losing opener David Warner cheaply on day one, Labuschagne partnered opener Usman Khawaja (65) in a 142-run second-wicket stand to set up the innings.
Australia won the toss and elected to bat first in the first of two tests. The second test, a day-night game, will be played in Adelaide beginning next Thursday.