Jofra Archer's Adelaide Heroics: A 30-Year First for England in Australia

Jofra Archer has etched his name into the history books with a phenomenal all-round performance. He became the first English player in three decades to score a half-century and take a five-wicket haul in a Test match in Australia. His crucial partnership with captain Ben Stokes rescued England from a precarious position in their first innings. This rare feat highlights Archer's growing value as a genuine all-rounder in the Test arena.

Key Points: Jofra Archer Achieves Rare Test Feat for England in Adelaide

  • Archer scored a gritty 105-ball 51 and took 5/53 in the first innings
  • His all-round feat was last achieved by Darren Gough in 1995
  • Archer and Ben Stokes shared a crucial 103-run partnership for the ninth wicket
  • Australia ended day three at 17/1, holding a lead after bowling England out for 286
4 min read

Jofra Archer achieves 30-year-first by an English player in Australia during Adelaide Test

Jofra Archer becomes first England player in 30 years to score a fifty and take a five-wicket haul in a Test match in Australia during the Ashes.

"Archer displaying the grit missing from the top order. - Match Report"

Adelaide, December 19

England pacer Jofra Archer became the first England player in 30 years to take a five-wicket haul and score a half-century in a Test match in Australia on Friday.

The express quick achieved this feat during his side's do-or-die third Ashes clash against Australia at Adelaide Oval. While in the first innings, Archer took a five-wicket haul, returning with figures of 5/53, he also led a brilliant fightback for his side with the bat alongside his skipper Ben Stokes, scoring a 105-ball 51, with five fours and a six, with some shots befitting a top-order batter.

Previously, it was pacer Darren Gough who had taken a five-wicket haul and scored a fifty during a Test match in Australia, way back in 1995 at Sydney. The game ended in a draw, with Gough scoring 51, getting figures of 6/49 and 1/72 with the ball to get the 'Player of the Match' award.

So far in the Ashes series, Archer has taken eight wickets in three matches at an average of 29.25, with a five-wicket haul to his name. With the bat, he has chipped in 99 runs in five innings at an average of 33, with a best score of 51.

After England were bundled out for 286 runs in response to Australia's first innings total of 371, Australia ended the session at 17/1, with Travis Head (5*) and Marnus Labuschagne (4*) unbeaten.

England started their day three at 213/8, with skipper Stokes (45*) and Archer (30*) unbeaten.

Stokes started with a beautiful extra cover drive in the first over and eventually reached a valiant fifty in 159 balls, with four boundaries.

After Stokes reached his milestone, he and Archer took a slightly attacking route with a couple of hits against Nathan Lyon, with Archer displaying the grit missing from the top order.

With a single from Stokes, England reached the 250-run mark in 77.2 overs.

In the 82nd over, Stokes continued proving his worth as the ultimate miracle man, with two boundaries in a row against Aussie skipper Pat Cummins, bringing the century stand in 164 balls.

Archer's grind paid dividends as he reached his maiden Test fifty in 97 balls, with five fours and a six.

The partnership ended at 103 runs, with Mitchell Starc making a mess of Stokes's off stump with a wobble-seamed delivery. The skipper was gone for 83 in 198 balls, with eight fours. England was nine down for 274 runs in 84.1 overs.

With the lead finally under 100, Archer and Josh Tongue carried on for a while until Scott Boland cleaned up Archer for a 105-ball 51. England was all out for 286, trailing by 85 runs.

Boland (3/45) and skipper Cummins (3/69) were the top bowlers for the Aussies.

Starting off, Brydon Carse got England just what they wanted, removing Jake Weatherald for just one run. Aussies were down 8/1 in 1.3 overs. Jake was trapped lbw and given out despite the ball pitching outside the leg stump.

A boundary from Marnus Labuschagne took the Aussies' lead above 100. Labuschagne and Head ensured England did not take another wicket.

Earlier, England ended the day two at 213/8, courtesy of a 45-run stand between Stokes and Archer. Despite Ben Duckett (29 in 30 balls, with five fours), Joe Root (19 in 31 balls, with three fours), Harry Brook (45 in 63 balls, with two fours and a six) and Jamie Smith (23 in 26 balls, with three fours and a six) getting starts, they just could not make it count, with England at 168/8 at one point till Stokes-Archer started a rescue act.

Australia won the toss and opted to bat first. After being reduced to 94/4 courtesy some incredible bowling from Archer, a 91-run stand between Usman Khawaja (82 in 126 balls, with 10 fours) and Alex Carey brought the Aussies back in the game. Carey went on to get his first Ashes ton, scoring 106 in 143 balls, with eight fours and a six. Starc (54 in 75 balls, with eight fours) also continued a dream run with the bat as the Aussies piled on 371 runs.

Archer (5/53) was exceptional for England, while Brydon Carse and Tongue got a couple each.

Brief Scores: Australia: 371 and 17/1 vs England: 286 (Ben Stokes 83, Jofra Archer 51, Scott Boland 3/45).

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Fantastic achievement, but honestly, England's top order needs to step up. Relying on your number 8 and 9 batsmen to score fifties is not a sustainable strategy. Archer and Stokes saved them from complete embarrassment. The Indian batting lineup would have capitalized better on that start.
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Rohit P
Archer is pure class. 5 wickets and a fifty in Australia is no joke, yaar. The pace and the grit with the bat... reminds us why Test cricket is the ultimate format. Hope he stays fit. Would love to see him bowl against our batters in India someday!
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Sarah B
As a cricket fan living in India, I watched this session early morning. The Stokes-Archer partnership was thrilling! It's these gritty lower-order stands that make the Ashes so special. Respect to Archer for a historic performance. The game is beautifully poised now.
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Vikram M
Good for Archer, but let's be real—England are still way behind. Australia's batting is too deep. Carey getting a century at 7, Starc scoring 50+... that's the difference. England's tail wags, but Australia's tail roars. The series is still Australia's to lose.
K
Kavya N
So happy for Jofra! After all his injury troubles, this is a well-deserved moment. Shows his mental strength. Also, Ben Stokes is just a different breed altogether. The ultimate fighter. This is why we love Test cricket—it's a proper test of skill and character. 👏

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