STEVE Smith’s prolific Ashes exploits are earning him rare statistical comparisons with Don Bradman and rave reviews from Australia coach Darren Lehmann.
Smith’s series tally of 426 runs at an average of 142 has elevated him to joint-second in the all-time list of the world’s greatest batsmen, according to the International Cricket Council, alongside former England captain Len Hutton and behind only his own peerless compatriot Bradman.
It is not only the number-crunchers who are impressed by the Ashes-winning Australia captain’s prolonged run of brilliant form, though.
Coach Lehmann, speaking after Australia regained the urn with an innings win in Perth to go 3-0 up with two to play, mentions Smith in the same breath as highly-successful former captains such as Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke.
The ICC’s rankings system, backdated to include such historical greats as Hutton, Bradman, Ponting and others, has Smith level on 945 with Hutton – who famously holds England’s national-record Test score of 364, against Australia in 1938.
Smith still trails Bradman by 16 ranking points on the ICC table, and the small matter of slightly more than 37 runs per innings in Test averages.
Nonetheless, Lehmann is impressed with the 28-year-old’s career progression.
“He’s running pretty hot, isn’t he?” he said. “I’ve been lucky enough to see all of his Test hundreds.
“For him to keep delivering what he needs to do is exceptional under the pressure of an Ashes series.”
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