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Cook thanked selectors for back post a daddy hundred
By Aditya Pratap - Dec 28, 2017 4:24 pm
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Alastair
Alastair Cook

Alastair Cook had managed only 83 runs in six innings before making 244 not out on the third day of the fourth Test.

“I always feel I have the backing of the selectors, but you have to deliver the good. I hadn’t done that on this tour. I would have been entitled to be dropped,” he said.

The opener, England’s all-time highest run scorer in Test cricket, had gone 10 innings without passing 50 since making a double century against West Indies in August. His 244 not out is the highest score by a visiting batsman at the MCG.

He reached a century in the final over of the second day and followed up by batting throughout Thursday to lead England to 491-9, an advantage of 164 runs over Australia.

“On Wednesday night, it felt like one of the more emotional hundreds I have made, especially from where I’d been on this tour. It meant a lot, then today I was quite proud to back it up. To get a real big one for the team was very important,” Cook added.

The tourists surrendered the Ashes in the third Test in Perth, the same match in which Cook became the first England player to reach 150 caps. Before the game at the Waca, the former captain said he had made no decisions on how long he would keep playing, while afterwards he admitted to being “embarrassed” by his form.

In Melbourne, he reversed his fortunes through 10 and a half hours at the crease, registering his fifth Test double century – only Wally Hammond has more for England.

“A few times in your career you get into a rhythm where time flies by. This tour, batting for half an hour has felt like two hours. [But] for some reason, the last 10 hours have gone quickly,” quoted the 33-year-old.

He also climbed above West Indies great Brian Lara into sixth on the all-time list of Test run scorers, taking his tally to 11,948.

“I feel a bit sorry for Brian Lara,” joked the Essex left-hander. “It’s a special moment to see your name up there.”

England have already surrendered the Ashes after losing the first three Tests. In each match, they have been in strong positions, only to end up well beaten.

On day three in Melbourne, they slipped to 307-6 and were in danger of handing the initiative to Australia, before Cook shared 59 with Chris Woakes and an entertaining partnership of 100 with Stuart Broad.

“In all three games we have put Australia under pressure in two or three sessions and we haven’t been able to back it up,” said Cook. “Here we were in danger of only getting a 60-run lead and I thought we needed more than that. Broady played really well. It was good to have bit of a partnership to get us up to a good lead.”

England now have an excellent opportunity to end an eight-Test losing streak in Australia.

And home coach Darren Lehmann admitted that his side’s chances of earning a second successive home Ashes whitewash have evaporated.

“We’re 164 runs behind, we’d have to get 450 in a day,” he said. “How could we do that? Slog? We have to worry about batting well. We’ll hopefully bat the day out and reassess after the fourth day. We didn’t go into the game looking far enough ahead to think about a whitewash. England have taken that opportunity away from us at the moment.”