Warner became the first Australian since Bradman 87 years ago to make a century in the opening session of a Test, and the only batsman to achieve the feat in Australia

David Warner joined the illustrious company of Don Bradman and Victor Trumper with a Test century before lunch as rookie partner Matthew Renshaw hit his maiden hundred against Pakistan yesterday.
Warner smashed a whirlwind 18th Test hundred off 78 balls in just 117 minutes, while 20-year-old Renshaw blossomed after claiming his century in 282 minutes in the third Test in Sydney.
At the close, after winning the toss, Australia were 365 for three with Renshaw taking his score to 167 and fellow newcomer Peter Handscomb on 40 in an unbroken fourth-wicket stand of 121.
Warner became the first Australian since Bradman 87 years ago to make a century in the opening session of a Test, and the only batsman to achieve the feat in Australia.
Bradman made 105 in Leeds in 1930 on his way to 334, with fellow Australians Trumper hitting 103 in Manchester in 1902 and Charlie Macartney scoring 112 at Leeds in 1926.
Warner was finally out 20 minutes after lunch, caught behind by Sarfraz Ahmed off Wahab Riaz for 113 off 95 balls with 17 fours.
“That’s obviously an honour and privilege to be amongst the greats of the game,” Warner said. “It’s great to be out there with those guys. Hopefully I can continue with that great start and positive approach.
“I started last year with a hundred here (against the West Indies) and I started here with another hundred here and I’ve got to capitalise on that.”
The only other player to post a century before lunch on the first day of a Test was Pakistan’s Majid Khan (108) against New Zealand at Karachi in 1976.
Warner’s knock eclipsed his previous fastest century at the SCG — off 82 balls in last year’s Test against the West Indies.
Vice-captain Warner has now scored 5,206 runs in 60 Tests at an average of 49.11.
In contrast to Warner’s dazzling century, rookie Renshaw provided the steady foil, painstakingly taking almost five hours to bring up his maiden Test century.
Renshaw fought back from a head-rattling blow on the grille of his batting helmet from speedster Mohamed Amir on 91 to go on and claim his resilient hundred.
“That first session was all a bit of a whirlwind. He was absolutely smoking them and I was trudging along on not many,” Renshaw said of batting with Warner.
“I was trying to not keep up with him as I have in the past, apparently.”
Renshaw also successfully overturned a leg before wicket decision to leg spinner Yasir Shah on 137 when a review showed he had edged onto his pad.
It was a timely innings for the Yorkshire-born youngster ahead of next month’s demanding four-Test tour of India, where he faces a challenge for his opening spot from the fit-again and vastly more experienced Shaun Marsh.
There were precious few successes on a deflating first day for the tourists after their shattering innings defeat in last week’s second Melbourne Test to lose the series.

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