Joe Root Joins Ponting with 41st Test Century in Ashes Sydney Showdown

Joe Root scored his 41st Test century in the fifth Ashes Test in Sydney, drawing level with Australian legend Ricky Ponting. This was Root's second hundred of the series and his 24th since 2021, the most by any batter in that period. He now sits behind only Jacques Kallis and Sachin Tendulkar on the all-time list of Test century-makers. England reached a commanding 336/6 at Lunch on Day 2, with Root unbeaten on 138.

Key Points: Joe Root's 41st Test Hundred Matches Ricky Ponting Record

  • Root's 41st Test ton equals Ponting
  • Second century of the Ashes series
  • Nears 14,000 Test runs
  • England in strong position at 336/6
  • Trails only Kallis (45) and Tendulkar (51)
3 min read

Ashes: Joe Root equals Ricky Ponting with 41st Test Hundred against Australia in Sydney

Joe Root equals Ricky Ponting's 41 Test centuries in the Ashes. England's batter nears 14,000 runs, trailing only Kallis and Tendulkar.

"Root became the joint-third highest with the most Test hundreds in international cricket - ICC"

Sydney, January 5

England veteran batter Joe Root became the joint-third highest with the most Test hundreds in international cricket, according to the International Cricket Council.

The right-handed batter joined Australian legend Ricky Ponting after scoring his 41st Test century against Australia in the fifth and final Ashes Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground in Sydney on Monday.

Australian legend Ponting notched up 13378 runs in 168 Test matches at an outstanding average of 51.85, along with 41 centuries and 62 half-centuries.

Root reached his 41st Test century in 146 deliveries during the first innings of England on Day 2 of the Sydney Test. It was Root's second hundred in the ongoing Ashes series. Earlier, the veteran slammed a century during the pink-ball Test in Brisbane. Since 2021, this was Root's 24th Test hundred, the most by anyone.

In the elite list of Most Test hundreds, Root is just behind South African great Jacques Kallis (45) and Indian legend Sachin Tendulkar (51). The English batter, who is also approaching 14,000 runs in the Test format, currently has 13777 runs in 162 matches and 296 innings. Root has a superb average of 50.83.

Meanwhile, England reached a commanding position at Lunch on Day 2. The Three Lions scored 336/6 in 78 overs in their first innings with Will Jacks ( 3* off 11 deliveries) and Root (138* off 200 balls, including 14 fours) unbeaten at the crease. The partnership for the seventh wicket is 13 runs off 20 balls.

The second session started with Australian speedster Mitchell Starc breaking the mammoth 169-run stand for the fourth wicket, removing Brook for 84 runs off 97 deliveries, including six fours and one maximum during the fourth ball of the 48th over.

During the 75th over, Australia's Marnus Labuschagne ended the 94-run partnership for the sixth wicket after he removed Jamie Smith for 46 off 76 balls, including six fours and one six. At lunch on Day 2, England reached 336/6.

Earlier, England won the toss and decided to bat first. On Day 1, just 45 overs were bowled after the third session of the day, which allowed no play due to rain and bad light.

Openers Zak Crawley (16 off 29 balls, with the help of three fours) and Ben Duckett (27 off 24 balls, with the help of five boundaries) stitched a 35-run stand for the first wicket.

Jacob Bethell departed after scoring 10 runs off 23 deliveries, including two fours, before Root and Harry Brook steadied the ship and helped the visitors cross the 100-run mark in the first session.

For Australia, Mitchell Starc, Scott Boland, and Michael Neser picked one wicket apiece in the first session.

The second session saw England dominating the contest, with boundaries kept coming as they raced to 155/3 after the end of 33 overs. In the very next over, Root reached his well-deserved fifty in 65 deliveries, whereas Brook notched up his half-century after hitting a four against speedster Beau Webster.

The visitors crossed the 200-run mark in the 42nd over. Root and Brook notched up the 150-run stand for the fourth wicket during the 43rd over, putting the visitors in a commanding position as they went into tea without losing a single wicket in the second session, before the third session on Day 1 was washed out due to rain and bad light.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Amazing innings from Root. But reading this just reminds me of the real GOAT – Sachin's 51 centuries. That record still looks so far away for anyone. Root is a modern great, but Tendulkar's numbers in that era were something else.
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Aman W
England finally putting up a fight in this Ashes! Root is carrying the batting as usual. 24 hundreds since 2021 is insane form. Hope he can get close to Kallis's 45, but that Sachin record is probably safe for a long, long time.
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Sarah B
Respect to Root. He's been a rock for England through some tough phases. To average over 50 in this era of fast bowling and flat pitches is a testament to his skill. Glad to see a proper Test batter thriving.
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Karthik V
Great achievement, but let's be honest, the bowling attacks aren't what they used to be. Ponting faced McGrath, Warne, etc. Root is brilliant, but context matters. Still, 41 tons is 41 tons. Well played.
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Nisha Z
So many rain interruptions! Feel for the fans at the SCG. At least Root gave them something special to watch. England 336/6 is a good score, but Australia can chase this down on their home ground. The Ashes drama continues!

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