Adelaide Ashes Drama: How Carey's Century Rescued Australia After Early Collapse

Australia had a rocky start to the third Ashes Test in Adelaide, losing early wickets to find themselves in trouble. Alex Carey and Usman Khawaja then staged a magnificent recovery with a 91-run partnership to steady the ship. Carey went on to score a brilliant, emotional century on his home ground, becoming Australia's leading run-scorer this year. The hosts finished a hard-fought first day on 326 for 8, setting up an intriguing contest.

Key Points: Alex Carey Century Leads Australia to 326-8 on Day 1 of Adelaide Test

  • Alex Carey scored a fighting 106, his third Test ton, after Australia slumped to 94/4 early on
  • Usman Khawaja, a last-minute replacement for Steve Smith, anchored the innings with a crucial 82-run knock
  • Jofra Archer was England's standout bowler, taking 3-29 including a two-wicket over
  • Carey's century held special significance as a tribute to his late father, who passed in September
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Ashes: Carey, Khawaja shine as Australia reach 326-8 at stumps on Day 1 of Adelaide Test

Alex Carey scores a heroic 106 on home soil, rescuing Australia from 94/4 with Usman Khawaja (82) after Steve Smith's late withdrawal. Full Day 1 report.

"This achievement was meaningful for Carey, who looked skywards in tribute to his late father, who died in September from leukaemia. - Article"

Adelaide, Dec 17

Australia wicketkeeper batter Alex Carey delivered a batting masterclass on his home ground to guide his team to a strong start on the opening day of the third Ashes Test, as the hosts reached 326-8 here at the Adelaide Oval.

After an early collapse where the hosts found themselves reeling at 94/4, Carey, along with last-minute addition Usman Khawaja, added 91 runs for the fifth wicket to rescue Australia. The 38-year-old left-hander was eventually out on 82 but delivered a fine performance, after being moved down the batting order, hitting several boundaries on the leg side to reach 41 by lunch.

Steve Smith was ruled out of the third Test match with a potential 'vestibular issue'. Smith's last-minute withdrawal saw veteran batter Usman Khawaja return to Australia’s XI after missing out on the first two Tests in Perth and Brisbane.

The stand-in captain for the first two Tests of this summer’s Ashes suffered from nausea and dizziness symptoms and missed training on Monday, but returned to bat in the nets on Tuesday morning ahead of the third Test.

He had a brief fitness test on Wednesday morning in the nets but was seen having an intense dialogue with Andrew McDonald and Pat Cummins on the same morning, where the trio appeared to have made a final call on his availability.

Khawaja set the stage for Australia with his 24th half-century at Test level, capitalising on a reprieve when Harry Brook dropped a catch when he was on five. The new No. 4 was eventually dismissed by Will Jacks while trying a sweep shot to deep square leg just before tea.

Although wickets continued to fall from the other end, the wicketkeeper-batter stood his ground to score his third Test century and his first in front of his home crowd. This achievement was meaningful for Carey, who looked skywards in tribute to his late father, who died in September from leukaemia. The 34-year-old also became Australia’s leading run-scorer in Tests this year, overtaking Steve Smith’s 618 runs to rank sixth worldwide for most runs in the format this year.

Josh Inglis looked aggressive but got chopped on his stumps on 32, which included four boundaries. He remains doubtful for the Boxing Day Test once Smith returns to the XI.

Carey was dismissed through an untimely top edge, finishing with a score of 106, but the lower order continues to challenge England as Mitchell Starc, the hero of the first two Tests, stamped his authority with an unbeaten 32 alongside spinner Nathan Lyon (0*), who kept his defence game strong.

Jake Weatherald and Travis Head provided Australia with a strong start, snelising to 0/29 after their first six overs, signalling ominous signs for the visitors. Head was caught spectacularly by Zak Crawley at the covers on 10, and Weatherald edged back to Smith on 18. Marnus Labuschagne, once again, got off to a good start, but Jofra Archer, who was England's most effective bowler, delivered a two-wicket over, dismissing the right-handed batter and Cameron Green, who recorded his second duck of the series.

Archer finished the day with figures of 3-29 after 16 overs, while Carse and Jacks took two wickets each as Josh Tongue got the wicket of Inglis.

Brief scores: Australia 326/8 (Alex Carey 106, Usman Khawaja 82; Jofra Archer 3-29) vs England

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As an Indian cricket fan, watching the Ashes is always a treat! 🇮🇳 Archer's bowling figures (3-29) are seriously impressive on that pitch. But Australia's lower order resilience is something our team can learn from—they never give up easy wickets.
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Rohit P
Khawaja proving his class yet again! At 38, scoring 82 after being out of the side is top stuff. Feel for Smith though, hope he recovers soon. 326/8 is a very good score, England's batting needs to be solid tomorrow.
S
Sarah B
Respectful criticism: The article mentions Harry Brook dropping Khawaja on 5, which was a massive moment. Sometimes these dropped catches change the entire match. England's fielding needs to be sharper if they want to win back the Ashes.
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Vikram M
Carey's tribute to his father had me emotional yaar. Cricket is more than just a game. 326 is a strong total, but with England's batting, this match is still very much open. Can't wait for Day 2!
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Michael C
The partnership between Carey and Khawaja was the turning point. From a potential 150 all out to 326/8 is a huge recovery. Jofra Archer was brilliant though, his pace and accuracy caused problems all day.

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