Agar's near-ton a piece of sporting folklore

By Alexander Grant / Roar Pro

Ashton Agar, the man most of country had never heard of, became the talk of the nation overnight after his 98 runs saw him not only bring Australia back into the first Ashes test but create a story that could be remembered for generations to come.

That story starts with a 19-year-old who strolled to the crease with his team sitting at 9-117, a daunting 98 runs behind England, and lit up Trent Bridge with a flurry of shot making more befitting of an accomplished top order player.

Agar started out with a cool attitude and patience that seemed out of ordinary for a tail-ender. Was it by chance that the new kid had been defaulted to the bottom because of his lack of test experience?

As he refused to get out, it became apparent that was the case.

Suddenly boundaries started to flow. England’s short balls and attempts to give Agar a rough welcome into Test cricket were pushed aside. The home side persisted in striding away from the tight line they had demolished the upper order with and paid the price for it.

Ashton had his 50 in as many deliveries and there was now more than a hint of concern among the home crowd and team. Who is this young man? Why is he at the bottom when his refuses to put a foot wrong with the bat?

Turns out, many on the other side of the world were wondering the same thing, but with a much happier disposition.

Twitter blew up with #Ashtag and #Ashton making the rounds quicker than the youngster could find the boundary rope. That says a lot considering his golden innings consisted of 12 fours and a pair of sixes. Popularity stemmed not just from his surprisingly adept technique, but his demeanor and shot selection in an unfamiliar environment of big-stage cricket.

60. 70. 80. 90. The runs kept coming. It was only in an Graeme Swann over where Agar finally looked like he was being truly tested. But he made it through.

Then the unbreakable kid from Western Australia finally snapped. He had missed several tempting pull shots from the hands of Stuart Broad before finally bashing one into the mitts of Swann in the deep on-side. The tactics that had done nothing to him early in his innings had finally lured him into a simple mistake, off a solid shot regardless.

It had been a long time since I had watched a sporting event where I felt my heart physically sink. I felt like I had been robbed of a moment, along with millions of others, when Swann celebrated like he removed Sachin Tendulkar in his prime.

Then Agar removed his helmet and beamed with a smile that forced a similar one out of me. He didn’t care. He had helped lift a poor side into a winning position on cricket’s biggest stage, the Ashes. That’s what mattered to him. And suddenly I knew I had seen something that went beyond simply rewriting the record books.

Agar didn’t just change the history books, he wrote himself into Australian sporting folklore. He had joined an elite company whose tales are those we know we will end up sharing with future generations. That’s the importance of what many late-night viewers experienced on the 11th of July.

The man clearly knew how to make the most out of a situation, when he survived a stumping call with his team sitting at just 131. Turned out he thought sending that total to 280 would make a better story. That moment might have rattled a lesser player, but Agar clearly has a wonderful mental game that even his own selectors might not have been aware of.

Australia took of lead into the second innings of England. A lead. From 98 runs down on the last wicket. Let the enormity of that sink in, if you hadn’t already last night.

It would be criminal to forget the contribution of the man at the other end, Phil Hughes. Here’s a man that has consistently had so much pressure applied towards his game, yet his was able to remain composed enough to assist his young teammate (and himself) in finding history.

Hughes ended his innings on 81 not out, having watched six of his teammates walk back to the pavilion before him.

This was one of his finest moments in Test cricket since his South Africa century in his early test days, and the history books may mention only his partnership contribution but he deserves an equal share of the imminent truckload of praise about to be heaped on his fellow young countryman.

In an innings full of highlights, none stand out more than a graceful on-side shot where Agar lofted his back foot high into the air as he put his body through the motions.

It was clear from that moment that this kid had a future, and not just with the ball.

This is just a selection of the records that were broken on day 2 at Nottingham:

* Highest 10th wicket partnership in Test cricket history, 163

* Highest score by a number 11 in Test cricket history, beating last year’s 95 effort by Timo Best by 3 runs

* Highest score by a number 11 on debut. More than doubles Wawrick Armstrong’s 45 from 1902.

* second fastest test 50 on debut, behind Adam Gilchrist

* second debutant to finish with the highest test score at number 11

* The third time the 10th wicket pair have doubled their team’s score (remember Lyon/Siddle in South Africa? 47? Yep, that’s one of the others)

* fifth Australian 100-run 10th wicket partnership

Well played, young man. Well played.

The Crowd Says:

2013-07-12T03:29:28+00:00

Macca

Guest


Rogers seemed a little unlucky to the naked eye (what went on with the review there), Clarke got a beauty, Watson was typical Watson get in then get out, Cowan played a terrible shot (especially first ball), as the commentator said last night, he did well to reach it. TO me the issue is simply resolved, let Agar bat 3!

2013-07-12T03:14:18+00:00

Michael

Guest


is there any comment on the top order batsmen in the team? Simon Katich scores a double hundred in a first class county game down the road

2013-07-12T03:12:15+00:00

Macca

Guest


Very true Mango - Ian Botham said as much in the commentary when he queried how anyone could think test cricket is boring. To me T@) is rather tedious as there is only one speed.

2013-07-12T02:54:14+00:00

Mango Jack

Guest


True, Colvin. Let's hope those around him keep him grounded and focussed on his game. Apart from his shot making, 2 things impressed most. Firstly, how calm he seemed to be, even in the 90s. Also, his smile and shrug of the shoulders when caught out. Well played, son.

2013-07-12T02:50:39+00:00

Mango Jack

Guest


My 14yo son, who thought the only worthwhile form of cricket was T20, stayed up watching with us last night. I told him this is the reason that test cricket is the ultimate form of the game. Only in a test match, without the artificial restrictions of limited over games, can you get to witness a memorable innings like that. I think he's starting to get it.

2013-07-12T02:33:09+00:00

colvin

Guest


Now here's hoping the Aus. media don't turn him into the next James O'Connor. Luckily Ashton's parents seem both down to earth and pretty involved and it doesn't seem that establishing a brand is high on his agenda.

2013-07-12T01:55:33+00:00

Macca

Guest


Thank ALexander - Did he threaten at all or just bowl tighter?

AUTHOR

2013-07-12T01:54:11+00:00

Alexander Grant

Roar Pro


He's not quite getting the variation and turn that Swann is, but that's only to be expected. Keeping the runs down a bit more compared to the first innings and bowling a little neater. Give him time.

AUTHOR

2013-07-12T01:51:06+00:00

Alexander Grant

Roar Pro


I certainly have, like quite a number of cricket followers. It was more a reference to the general public

2013-07-12T01:30:41+00:00

Macca

Guest


For those of us who did stay up all night (very unAustralian I know) how did he bowl - while watching his brilliant batting I was constanlty thinking - this will have to help his bowling, knowing he is a test level cricketer.

2013-07-12T01:24:54+00:00

Jak

Guest


If he was english he'd have a knighthood by now.

2013-07-12T00:54:10+00:00

bill

Guest


Perfect summary of the moment you realised the catch had been taken... and then him still beaming with a smile - amazing moment

2013-07-12T00:50:17+00:00

Jermayn

Guest


What is good about him is that he can also occupy the crease. In a state game against Tasmania he scored a 70 odd off about 200 balls to help win them the game. He can play this kid - now lets hope he can get 3-4 wickets and write himself into more history books as the kid that won the game.

2013-07-11T23:30:31+00:00

Macca

Guest


Looks like we have solved the who bats at 3 question;)

2013-07-11T23:05:23+00:00

Freddie

Guest


Well done to the young convict. He played brilliantly.

2013-07-11T22:12:37+00:00

Worlds Biggest

Guest


It was simply captivating to watch his innings and just couldn't go to bed. He played so well I couldn't believe what I was watching. I thought he was going to be given out with the stumping. Then he pushed on past Hughes in scoring towards a 50, no way was I going to bed. Half century rolls around and then lunch. Could he make a ton, he didn't look troubled at all. He eased into his 80's and then 90's and he was destined for a 100. I was on the edge of my seat about to leap in celebration when my heart sank. Swann snaffled a great catch. He so deserved it. What a knock though, those of us who watched it will never forget. Well played son !

2013-07-11T21:14:45+00:00

A Mans Not A Camel

Guest


Great article, thanks! It helped relive the reason why I could just not find it in myself to go to bed, despite starting work before the sun today :)

2013-07-11T20:34:19+00:00

Broken-hearted Toy

Guest


I probably should have said most domestic cricket fans have heard of him.

2013-07-11T20:25:46+00:00

Ian

Guest


Great article. I am a cricket lover and had never heard of him!

2013-07-11T20:16:58+00:00

Daveski

Guest


Oh yeah Broken Hearted Toy, he was absolutely famous last week !! Great article and captures exactly how I felt watching.

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