A Quote by Steve Smith

It's the pinnacle of Australian cricket, playing in an Ashes series. — © Steve Smith
It's the pinnacle of Australian cricket, playing in an Ashes series.
A lot of the things we do in Test cricket revolves around planning for the Ashes series down under.
An Ashes series is huge for Australian cricketers - and English cricketers for that matter - and there's always that added pressure.
The Australian approach to playing cricket in general is quite an aggressive one.
Growing up, my education about Test cricket came from dad's video of the 1981 Ashes series - and Ian Botham's incredible match at Headingley.
I do love the Ashes and some of my best memories are from Ashes cricket. I just wish we'd played a few more Test matches.
For me, growing up and watching Test cricket and absolutely loving it, that's been the pinnacle for me with cricket.
One-day cricket is about the World Cup and Test cricket is about the Ashes.
I think any time you lose an Ashes series, especially with the hype and build-up surrounding it and the pride we have as Australians playing against England, that's always hard to take.
I was the ball boy during the Mumbai Test of the home series against South Africa in 2000. I was playing Under-14 cricket.
Cricket has a stigma of old men in white clothes playing cricket but readdressing that image to people who aren't necessarily cricket lovers may go some way to making it cooler.
All people seem to want to talk about is the current Ashes series, and whether England are going to reverse the trend of recent series.
I will keep playing domestic cricket. I feel I am good enough to get back into the Indian team, and playing domestic cricket is the only way out. So I will keep playing.
I worked on 'Line of Duty' with Vicky McClure after she'd just finished the last series of 'This Is EnglandI think the great thing about 'Ashes To Ashes' is that it is very much its own show. and I kept nagging her to find out how it ended.
T20 in international cricket can almost be paid lip-service at times, with one game tagged on to the end of an ODI series or a long tour - sometimes it can feel like there is no point in playing it.
I need to make one thing clear, the IIndian way of playing cricket is loved around the world. People love to watch an Indian batsman, because he is different from say an Australian one. That is why we are special, we play with our own kind of flair, our own style, and we shouldn't change that.
I was playing cricket first and my cricket coach was the one that introduced me to track and field.
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