Alex Carey's Emotional Tribute: A Century for His Late Father Amid Ashes Drama

Alex Carey played a brilliant, emotional innings to steady Australia's ship on day one in Adelaide. He dedicated his century to his late father, who passed away just a few months ago. The knock wasn't without controversy, as Carey survived a tight DRS call that left England fuming. His partnership with a returning Usman Khawaja proved crucial in putting Australia in a strong position.

Key Points: Alex Carey Dedicates Adelaide Ashes Century to Late Father

  • Carey's century rescued Australia from 94/4, forming a key 91-run partnership with Usman Khawaja
  • He survived a controversial DRS review on 72, with England questioning Snickometer technology
  • The wicketkeeper-batter looked skyward in tribute to his father, who passed from cancer in September
  • Carey's knock made him Australia's leading Test run-scorer for the year, surpassing Steve Smith
5 min read

Ashes: It was obviously a really good feeling to score a hundred on home soil, says Alex Carey

Alex Carey scores an emotional 106 for Australia, dedicating it to his late father after a controversial DRS reprieve against England in the Adelaide Ashes Test.

"It was obviously a really good feeling to score a hundred on home soil. - Alex Carey"

Adelaide, Dec 17

Australia batter Alex Carey dedicated his century to his late father and family as he steered the hosts to a dominant position of 326/8 against England at the end of the opening day of the third Test at Adelaide Oval in Adelaide on Wednesday.

After a shaky start, which saw Australia slump to 94/4 soon after lunch, Carey, along with the last-minute addition of Usman Khawaja, added 91 runs for the fifth wicket to rescue Australia. Carey scored 106 off 143 balls. The South Australian, whose father Gordon died in September after a protracted battle with cancer, looked up to the sky after notching up his third Test century.

"You know the reasons why – I'm probably a bit emotional now," Carey, who survived a controversial caught-behind review on 72, told reporters. "It was obviously a really good feeling to score a hundred on home soil.

"Family and friends were here... they would have been proud. They love coming to the cricket and watching me play. My kids are here, Eloise and mum and nieces – it would have been a really nice moment for them.

"We were in a little bit of a sticky situation there straight after lunch as well. So to form a partnership with Uzzie and, I guess, keep us in the fixture … was great.

"I would have loved to have scored more runs and been there a bit longer. But to be able to take the helmet off and look up to the heavens, it was a really nice moment."

Steve Smith was ruled out of the third Test match with a potential vestibular issue. Smith's last-minute withdrawal sees veteran batter Usman Khawaja returning to Australia’s set-up, who missed the first two Tests due to a back spasm.

However, Carey believes Khawaja has more to offer with the bat. “I still think he’s got so much to give to this group,” he said. “We saw him again today, and he played really well.”

Even though the wickets continued to fall from the other end, the wicketkeeper batter stood his ground to notch up his third Test century and his first in front of his home crowd.

This achievement was significant for Carey, who looked skyward in tribute to his late father, who passed away in September from leukaemia. The 34-year-old also became Australia’s leading run-scorer in Tests this year, surpassing Steve Smith’s 618 runs to rank sixth in the world for runs in the format this year.

However, the century didn't come without controversy. Carey survived an early chance in the inning when he flashed at the first ball of the 63rd over of Josh Tongue as wicketkeeper Jamie Smith and fielder appealed and celebrated for the caught behind, but was dropped down by the standing umpire Ahsan Raza as England reviewed his decision almost immediately.

There was a spike shown in the snickometer, but it appeared two to three frames before the ball passed the bat. Chris Gaffaney, the TV umpire, said that the spike was "before the bat" and that the ball appeared to have "gone well under" the bat: "There's a clear gap, no spike."

"I thought there was a bit of a feather or some sort of noise when it passed the bat. It looked a bit funny on the replay, didn't it, with the noise coming early? If I were given out, I think I would have reviewed it -- probably not confidently, though. It was a nice sound as it passed the bat, yeah.

"Snicko obviously didn't line up, did it? That's just the way cricket goes sometimes, isn't it? You have a bit of luck, and maybe it went my way today," said Carey.

England's bowling coach, David Saker, was disappointed with the use of technology on the tour and said that the dressing room remains unhappy with the incident.

"The boys were pretty confident he hit it," Saker said at the close of play. "I think the calibration of the Snicko is out quite a bit, and that has probably been the case for the series. There have been some things that don't really measure up.

"At that stage, it was a pretty important decision. Those things hurt, but you get through them. In this day and age, you'd think the technology is good enough to pick things up like that."

Saker also confirmed that England will hand representation to Jeff Crowe, the match referee, regarding the incident.

"I don't think we've done anything about it so far, but after today, maybe that might go a bit further," he said. "There have been concerns about it for the whole series. We shouldn't be talking about this after a day's play; it should just be better than that. It is what it is."

hs/bsk/

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The DRS controversy is the real talking point here. If the technology isn't reliable, it undermines the spirit of the game. England have a right to feel hard done by, even if the emotional story is lovely.
P
Priya S
As an Indian cricket fan, I can appreciate a good comeback story. From 94/4 to 326/8 is solid teamwork. Khawaja's return was crucial. The Ashes intensity is something else! Hope our Indian team is taking notes on handling pressure.
R
Rohit P
The luck factor in cricket is undeniable. Sometimes it goes your way, sometimes it doesn't. England should focus on their bowling instead of complaining about one decision. Carey played a brilliant knock under pressure, full stop.
M
Michael C
Respectful criticism: While the emotional narrative is powerful, the article glosses over the technical debate too quickly. The calibration of Snicko has been questioned all series. This needs a proper investigation by the ICC, not just post-match comments.
K
Kavya N
Watching from India, Test cricket is the real test of character. Carey showed it today. The dedication to his father gave me goosebumps. This is why we love sports – it's about more than just runs and wickets.

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