Crawley hails "champion bloke" Root after veteran breaks Test century drought in Australia
Brisbane [Australia], December 4 (ANI): Following Joe Root's maiden Test ton in Australia, his teammate and opener Zak Crawley expressed happiness for the English superstar, calling him a "champion bloke" and calling him the best player he has ever played with.
Root, who had gone 15 Tests and 29 innings without a Test century in Australia, finally got the monkey off his back and registered a century that could do wonders to his Test legacy as the years roll on. Already the second-highest run-getter of all time chasing Indian icon Sachin Tendulkar's mark of 15,921 runs, Root finally secured the missing piece of the puzzle. Having scored effortlessly at home and elsewhere, Root has finally conquered his "final frontier" as a batter with this Test century, which happens to be his 40th in the format.
"He has not been speaking about it at all to us, that is just the outside noise. He is just very focused on just getting whatever score is needed on the day, and proved to be a hundred today."
"But he is the best player I have ever played with, or probably against as well. And he is a champion bloke. I am chuffed to bits for him," he concluded.
Crawley, who had been dismissed for a pair during the Perth Test and had become a victim of Mitchell Starc on both innings, was relieved to have played his hand in England's first innings success with a 70-odd knock.
During the innings, Crawley struck 11 fours and scored at a strike rate of 81.72 during his 93-ball 76, but he was just as watchful with the deliveries pitched outside his off-stump. He had put in a lot of work on this aspect of his games in the nets following a two-day loss at Perth courtesy of a devastating Travis Head century. But he was not pleased that he was dismissed, with a flatter pitch presenting before him a chance to go big in the Aussie land against the 'pink-ball wizards'.
After England was nine down for 264, Crawley said that there was "no talk of declaring" and putting Aussies to bat under the lights even when Root and Jofra Archer were going strong.
Coming to the match, England won the toss and opted to bat first. After Mitchell Starc (6/71) reduced England to 5/2, getting both Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope for a duck, Root put on a 117-run stand with Zak Crawley (76 in 93 balls, with 11 fours). Another half-century stand with Harry Brook (31 in 33 balls, with four boundaries) followed.