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Australian batsman David Warner in the top 10 highest scores in Test cricket history.

Historian David Warner

Australian batsman David Warner on Saturday broke the main 10 most elevated scores in Test cricket history.

The left-gave opener scored an unbeaten 335 off 418 balls bound with 39 limits and a six.

His thump comes at number 10 in the rundown ever most noteworthy scores in Test cricket.

It is relevant to make reference to here that had he been permitted to score six additional runs, he would have moved up three additional spots and completed at number seven.

In any case, Australian skipper chose to announce the innings at 589-3, finishing a thump that was splendid yet additionally supported by some shoddy Pakistan exertion in the field.

Here is the overhauled rundown of top 10 individual scores ever in Test cricket:

400* - Brian Lara (WIS), West Non mainstream players v Britain, St John's, 2004

380 - Matthew Hayden (AUS), Australia v Zimbabwe, Perth, 2003

375 - Brian Lara (WIS), West Non mainstream players v Britain, St John's, 1994

374 - DPMD Jayawardene (SRI), Sri Lanka v South Africa, Colombo, 2006

365* - Gary Calms (WIS), West Non mainstream players v Pakistan, Kingston, 1958

364 - Len Hutton (ENG), Britain v Australia, The Oval, 1938

340 - Sanath Jayasuriya (SRI), Sri Lanka v India, Colombo, 1997

337 - Hanif Mohammad (PAK), Pakistan v West Non mainstream players, Bridgetown, 1958

336 - Wally Hammond (ENG), Britain v New Zealand, Auckland, 1933

335* - David Warner (AUS), Australia v Pakistan, Adelaide, 2019


On the off chance that that enticed you to censure the pitch an unremarkable street, the last session would have made them go after the crisis brake. Mitchell Starc was one wicket away from a five-fer, while Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins swarmed all over Pakistan early. Standard achievements implied there was never any opportunity of an organization constructing that to such an extent as indicated Pakistan may move Australia's 589 enough to constrain them in to bat again eventually this Test. At the point when the time had come to wrap up, Pakistan were 493 runs behind, with the tail previously uncovered. Babar Azam, typically, was the solitary wellspring of opposition from the opposite end, however when the umpires called stumps, they should have been demanding the cessation of a fight.

Pakistan were as yet seven overs from the new ball turning out to be accessible when the day started, however the signs were unpropitious in that early half hour. Rather than having the option to get control Australia over during that underlying spell, Yasir Shah and Iftikhar Ahmed worked insufficiently, with Australia heaping on 65 of every nine overs of the old ball, scoring more uninhibitedly than they had over the aggregate of the principal day. Any weight they may have felt toward the beginning was at that point wealthy when the new pink ball was called for, and the records were rapidly piling up.

The 361-run organization among Warner and Marnus Labuschagne was the second-most noteworthy second-wicket represent Australia in Test cricket, with the pair joining a tip top gathering to have scored 150 in back to back innings. When Shaheen Afridi - again Pakistan's best bowler - castled Labuschagne's offstump with a truly magnificent inswinger, he had amassed 162. Australia were 2 for 369, with Steven Smith strolling in. Scarcely a sight for sore bowling shoulders.

Warner would keep on raising achievements. He arrived at 200 and celebrated with the steel of a man just part of the way through his adventure. Minutes after the fact, it appeared, he was raising his bat for 250, which is the point at which he truly slice free as Australia hoped to wring each and every come up short on their innings. Pakistan didn't help themselves when debutant Muhammad Musa had Warner gotten at fourth slip from a no-ball, the second time a Pakistan debutant reprieved Warner along these lines this arrangement after Naseem Shah's violate in Brisbane.


Pakistan's bowling may have been reliably lazy, however the degree of Yasir's bad dream may yet have profession influencing ramifications for him. His battles in the southern side of the equator are well-archived, especially his record in Australia. In any case, here it nearly appeared to be more secure to have Iftikhar bowling. He was, all things considered, "just" going at five for every finished, while Yasir yielded 197 in his 32 at in excess of a run-a-ball, unfit to shield himself from hauling the ball down a few times each finished, or encouraging them reliably into the left-handers' hitting bends. On the off chance that, in these previous three years, Yasir chipped away at how to deal with a game where wickets come including some built-in costs, it didn't show today.

After Smith edged a wild hack, Warner and Matthew Swim joined for a blustery 99-run organization which saw Warner raise 300 with a draw off Mohammad Abbas - who still wasn't focusing on the stumps - and drew out a festival so emotive it moved his better half, sitting in the stands, to tears. After that he was much increasingly unconfined, and when he took Abbas for 17 out of an over, it truly gave the idea that 400 would have been given a shot. Be that as it may, when a solitary to additional spread took him past 334 - to stand second behind Matthew Hayden's 380 for Australia - Paine rose up out of the changing area and called them in, a sign for Adelaide to remain as one as its most productive scorer strolled off.

It is maybe no fortuitous event that was the exact minute when the wicket chose to change character as the lights grabbed hold. Shan Masood was given out in the first finished, and however he had it toppled, the leap forward was rarely far away. Imam-ul Haq scratched off to Warner - who else? - in the slips in the fifth over, and it wasn't well before Cummins discovered Azhar Ali's outside edge after the supper break, enabling Smith to take a sharp find jumping forward at second slip.

It was, pretty much, the manner in which each Pakistan batsman was expelled. Every last one of the six that fell would have their outside edge tickled, with Starc doing a significant part of the harm in the last 30 minutes. Asad Shafiq tumbled to one he could do minimal about, while poor shot choice from Iftikhar and Mohammad Rizwan implied Pakistan were making Australia's errand a lot simpler than it should have been. Sunday may be influenced by downpour, however it shows up little can affect the result of this match.

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