The Ashes mixed-bag, and the Trans-Tasman highWarner’s Ashes record largely mirrors his overall record – good at home, mediocre away. In Australia he made 1237 runs at an average of 51.54. He crossed fifty ten times in just 26 innings in the home Ashes, including three hundreds. Playing away, he was half the batter he was at home – he made 936 runs at an average of 26.74. The 2019 Ashes in England was a forgettable one for Warner as he could manage just 95 runs from ten innings. Stuart Broad had the wood on him in that series, and subsequently, dismissing him seven times for 5 runs apiece.Warner’s best in England came early in 2015 when he made five fifties in nine innings in the Ashes series. An achievement worthy of note given how difficult it is to open in England. Only five other openers have made five or more fifty-plus scores in an Ashes series in England. Overall, Warner ended up being the third most prolific opener for Australia in terms of runs in the Ashes. He made 2168 runs and 19 fifty-plus scores. Only Mark Taylor and Bill Lawry made more runs than him as openers.

Warner’s record against Australia’s other traditional rival was exemplary. He made 1081 runs at an average of 67.56 against New Zealand including five hundreds from 19 innings. Three of them – including a 253 at the WACA – came in the 2015-16 Trans-Tasman Trophy when he made 592 runs at an average of 98.66. No Australia batter has scored more runs in a series of three or fewer matches.Opening mainstay without a stable partnerIt isn’t often highlighted that Warner opened for Australia without a stable partner for long stretches of his career. He had 13 different opening partners over the course of his career. Talk to openers and they’ll tell you the importance of walking out with the same partner time and again. Chris Rogers was Warner’s most frequent partner having opened with him 41 times (Khawaja will equal that should he open with Warner twice at the SCG). The average number of innings Warner had with each of his partner was 15.5, and the runs he added was 661.38. Among Australia’s six most prolific openers in terms of runs, the average runs Warner added with his partners was the lowest. And Warner was clearly not the weaker half. He averaged almost seven runs higher than his partners and scored 11 more centuries than them.!function(){“use strict”;window.addEventListener(“message”,(function(a){if(void 0!==a.data[“datawrapper-height”]){var e=document.querySelectorAll(“iframe”);for(var t in a.data[“datawrapper-height”])for(var r=0;r<e.length;r++)if(e[r].contentWindow===a.source){var i=a.data["datawrapper-height"][t]+"px";e[r].style.height=i}}}))}();

Warner made it his habit to answer his critics throughout his career, which hit rock bottom post the ball-tampering ban and the 2019 Ashes that followed. He could manage just 95 runs from ten innings in that series. Yet in his next series he roared back by making 489 runs against Pakistan in just two innings. In one of them he made Australia’s second-highest Test score of 335*. There haven’t been too many comeback stories like that in cricket. Only 11 batters in the history of Test cricket have scored more runs in a series after averaging less than ten in their preivous one. None of them had as many failures as Warner did in the 2019 Ashes. None of them had to endure what had come before that.

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