London: England pacer Jofra Archer bowled an exceptional spell in his very first Test match even though the other English pacer Chris Wokes took the vital wicket of Steve Smith, Archer played a key role in it. The spell has impressed former Australia captain Ricky Ponting and he has compared it to the one that he faced during the famous 2005 series.
The series, widely rated as one of the greatest in the longest format of the game, started off with a searing spell from England's Steve Harmison in which he hit Australian openers Matthew Hayden and Justin Langer before hitting Ponting which left him with a bloodied cheeck.
"That was a really fiery morning and last night brought back a few memories of what it was like," Ponting said.
"I remember when I got hit, I think 'Vaughny' (England captain Michael Vaughan) said to his players, ‘no-one go and say a word to him and check if he's OK'. Which was fine by me, because my eyes were going a bit as it was, so I reckon I would have told them to get away in no uncertain terms anyway!"
On Saturday, Steve Smith defied the England bowlers once again but he was stopped from scoring a third consecutive century in the series by debutant Archer, who regularly hit speeds north of 90mph on Day 4.
Archer first hit Smith on the forearm before send a hurling a bouncer flush on the prolific run scorer's neck while he was on 80. It forced Smith to retire hurt and the Australians were visibly shaken by that, considering the similarity to the blow that the late Phillip Hughes received which eventually led to his death in 2014. But Smith was good enough to walk off and resumed his innings as soon as the next wicket fell.