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Sports / Cricket

Rogers ton revives Australia

Published: 11 Aug 2013 - 01:10 am | Last Updated: 30 Jan 2022 - 04:42 pm


Australia’s Chris Rogers waves his bat as he leaves the field for bad light on 101 not out during the fourth Ashes cricket Test match against England at the Riverside cricket ground in Chester-le-Street near Durham yesterday. Australia, replying to England’s first innings 238, were 222 for five at the close of play on the second day.


CHESTER-LE-STREET, United Kingdom: Chris Rogers’ maiden Test century took Australia to within sight of a first-innings lead when bad light forced an early close to the second day of the fourth Ashes Test, yesterday. 

Australia were 222 for five at stumps, 16 runs behind England’s first innings 238, with 35-year-old left-handed opener Rogers 101 not out and Brad Haddin unbeaten on 12 at Chester-le-Street.

Australia had been in trouble at 76 for four shortly after lunch, thanks mainly to paceman Stuart Broad, who took four wickets for 48 runs in 20 overs.

But a fifth-wicket stand of 129 between Rogers, dropped on 49, and all-rounder Shane Watson, reprieved on five before making 68, kept England, who at 2-0 up with two to play and had already retained the Ashes, at bay.

At 35 years and 344 days, Rogers was the second oldest Australian to score a maiden Test century after Arthur Richardson, 37 years and 353 days when he made exactly 100 against England at Leeds in 1926.

South Africa’s Dave Nourse (42 years, 295 days) is the oldest from any country.

And, in a sign of their recent problems, this was the first time in 12 Tests an Australian opener had scored a hundred, the longest sequence since they went 13 Tests without one at the top of the order between 1899 and 1902.

Rogers spent 30 minutes on 96, facing 19 balls, all from off-spinner Graeme Swann, without scoring. However, when he swept Swann for the 13th four of his innings it meant Rogers had completed a century, his 61st in first-class cricket, after more than five hours at the crease.

“It was a massive relief to get my first hundred. It was a nerve-wracking time for a while -- I couldn’t get the ball off the square,” Rogers told BBC Radio’s Test Match Special.

“Then I decided to take matters in my own hands by trying a sweep and I got there,” he added.

“It is the sweetest moment of my cricket career. After all this time to play and get a Test hundred is very satisfying.”

Meanwhile Broad said: “The wicket seamed around us this morning with the harder ball. We were disappointed not to get more wickets in that period. We put Rogers and Watson down which cost us a few runs but we stuck to our guns.”

Prior to Rogers’s innings, David Warner’s 119 against South Africa at Adelaide in November 2012 was the last Test century by an Australian opener.

Rogers, who started this season as captain of county side Middlesex, had waited five years since making his Australia debut in 2008 before playing his second Test at the start of this Ashes series after several years of heavy run-scoring in both Australian and English first-class cricket.

He came close to a Test ton with 84 in the drawn third match at Old Trafford and this was the third time Rogers had passed 50 in the series. AFP