Joe Root snaps at Steve Smith over headbutt laugh, Aus skipper slams James Anderson
Adelaide: Steve Smith returned fire Friday after a taunt by James Anderson that Australia are bullies, calling the England paceman one of the biggest sledgers in cricket as insults flew ahead of the second Test.
Smith also denied laughing at England over the Jonny Bairstow headbutt incident in what has become a fiery build-up to the first day-night Ashes Test, at Adelaide Oval from Saturday.
Fast bowler Anderson called the Australian team "bullies" in a newspaper column as the tourists fume over the reaction to the Bairstow controversy, following their 10-wicket defeat in Brisbane.
The Australians used the incident, described by Bancroft as "weird" greeting by Bairstow, to get under the wicketkeeper's skin as England collapsed in their second innings.
Anderson declared in his column: "A bully waits until they are in the ascendancy to pounce on people. That is what Australian teams do."
Smith didn't hold back when asked for his response to England's all-time leading Test wicket-taker.
"I read the article. I think it's interesting coming from Jimmy calling us bullies and big sledgers," Smith told reporters.
"I think he's one of the biggest sledgers in the game to be perfectly honest with you."
Smith recounted times in his career when he was targeted by Anderson.
"I remember back in 2010 when I first started and wasn't any good, he was pretty happy to get stuck into me then," he said. "Interesting coming from Jimmy."
Joe Root "very disappointed":
England skipper Joe Root on Friday said he was "very disappointed" at Smith's reaction and that his team would use it as motivation.
Asked at Friday's media conference if he would use the Bairstow banter as motivation, Root fired back: "Absolutely.
"You look at the pictures from that press conference and I think it's very important you be very careful how you interpret that," he said.
"I'd like to think that Steve Smith has a good amount of humility about him and that he's laughing at the scenario and the comments rather than the situation of things."
Root was more strident while talking to the travelling English cricket media, saying he was "very disappointed" in Australia's reaction.
"Well, if that's not motivation to the players I don't know what is," he said.
"At the end of the game you are obviously very disappointed but to see a reaction like that in a press conference is... I mean if that can't get you up for the next game then I don't know what can."
"I think there's a place for a bit of banter out on the field, as long as it stays as banter and doesn't become more than that," Root said.
"And if it does, the umpires need to make sure it has a line that stops at the same place for both sides.
"You want there to be a bit of niggle and a bit of banter flying around. It's good for the game, it's good to watch, it's good to be involved in.
"But there are certain things that people know they shouldn't say on the field and I think it's important that both sides, not just one side, get that right and don't overstep any more."
Smith clears 'mocking' claims:
Smith also said he wasn't mocking the England team when he laughed along as Bancroft recounted Bairstow's headbutt in a Perth bar earlier in the tour.
"I certainly wasn't mocking his team. I was laughing at Cameron and the way he delivered the events of what had happened," Smith said.
"He was very dry and different in the way things came across. You guys got a good laugh out of it as much as I did.
"I'm happy to clarify that with Joe Root, no problem there at all."
'Hard, aggressive cricket':
Smith, who announced an unchanged team, said despite all the noise he didn't believe the Ashes series would boil over.
"I don't think so. It's an Ashes series, there's always that banter on and off the field," he said.
"I think it's just about playing the game, getting out there and playing cricket and getting on with it."
The Australia skipper said it was up to the umpires and match referee to keep a lid on things on the field.
"From my point of view it's about playing good, hard, aggressive cricket," he said.
Smith said he "out-performed" England's bowlers in Brisbane, but expected them to come back hard under the Adelaide lights.
"You're only as good as your last game. I out-performed them last game, there's no doubt they'll come out hard again," he said.
"They're good bowlers, they've got good skills. As a collective batting group we'll have to be at our best to score runs against them."
Smith was the point of difference in the Brisbane Test victory with his match-turning unbeaten 141 off a marathon 326 balls.
He said he was prepared to do it all over again in Adelaide.
"That's cool. I'm happy with that, I love batting so I'm happy to stay out there for as long as I can to be perfectly honest," he said.
"If it takes me 300 balls to get a 100, then it'll take me 300 balls.
"That'll also tire the bowlers quite a bit too, so it's a bit of a win-win, if that's the case."