Even after retiring hurt having been felled by Archer, Smith still came back out to make 92 -- his lowest score of a series where he has now scored 589 runs at a colossal average of 147.25.
Steve
Smith is on course to enjoy one of the most productive series by
any batsman in Test history after he marked his return to Ashes
action with a double hundred at Old Trafford.
The
30-year-old's 211 was the centrepiece of Australia's 497-8 declared
on the second day of the fourth Test.
It
was his third century in four innings this series following scores of
144 and 142 in the opener at Edgbaston -- Smith's first Test since
completing a 12-month ball-tampering ban.
If
those hundreds erased doubts about whether he would be the same
stellar batsman after the traumatic events during a Test in Cape Town
that led to his being stripped of the Australia captaincy and a
lengthy suspension, Thursday's innings put to rest fears of any
lingering ill-effects after he was concussed by a Jofra Archer
bouncer.
That
blow to his then unprotected neck -- he is now batting with a 'stem
guard' -- during the drawn second Test at Lord's saw Smith ruled out
of England's dramatic one-wicket win at Headingley that levelled this
Ashes at 1-1 with two to play.
Even
after retiring hurt having been felled by Archer, Smith still came
back out to make 92 -- his lowest score of a series where he has now
scored 589 runs at a colossal average of 147.25.
The
most runs ever made by an individual in a Test
series is the 974 compiled by Australia's Don Bradman, widely
regarded as the format's greatest batsman, during the five matches of
the 1930 Ashes in England.
Vivian
Richards holds the corresponding record for four Tests, posting 829
runs during West Indies 3-0 win in England in 1976 where the 'Master
Blaster' missed one fixture out of five through illness.
Both
those marks may be beyond Smith.
But
if Australia do retain the urn -- and they were well-placed at the
close with England 23-1, a deficit of 474 -- this will undoubtedly be
'Smith's Ashes'.
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