![]() ![]() Easily the biggest threat from Centurions comes from the smoke grenades they often deploy.Centurions are also aggressive and adept at poking out from cover to fire bursts from their rifles while exposing themselves as little as possible to return fire.Their Mattocks enable Centurions to deal considerably more damage than Assault Troopers, and they are more durable with their shields making them immune to the crowd control effects of physics-based powers and freezing attacks while active.Their smoke grenades can temporarily obstruct the player's line of sight and targeting. They will frequently take cover during combat and they can perform combat rolls to avoid gunfire or projectile powers like Warp or Incinerate. Finally, they can attack their enemies in melee with electrified batons, which are more powerful than ones given to Assault Troopers.Ĭenturions have moderate health and shielding: the latter regenerates over time, with the speed depending on the difficulty. They're also equipped with Frag Grenades, which have low explosion radius but can instantly kill the player on harder difficulties. Each centurion carries an M-96 Mattock heavy rifle modified to launch smoke grenades, leaving enemies vulnerable to crossfire.Ĭenturions are equipped with M-96 Mattock assault rifles that are modified to fire smoke grenades. The only useful intelligence that the Alliance has gathered on centurions relates to their armament. They are meant to enact the Illusive Man's strategic goals, although it is clear that they have leeway to adapt as an encounter develops. India are leading the ongoing Test series 2-1 and are eying to clinch the final Test in order to register a historic Test series win in Australia.Mars, Omega, Sur'Kesh, Eden Prime, Jon Grissom Academy, Benning, Sanctum, Tuchanka, Citadel, Gellix, Noveria, Ontarom, Cronos Station Description Ĭenturions are Cerberus's front-line tacticians. Australian openers Marcus Harris and Usman Khawaja are holding the crease for Australia on respective scores of 19 and 5. Pant remained unbeaten at the score of 159 as India declared soon after Jadeja's dismissal. He departed back after being deceived by a flighted delivery of spinner Nathon Lyon. Jadeja (81) also completed his half-century but narrowly missed the 100-run mark. Moreover, Pant surpassed former Indian keeper Farokh Engineer's score of 89 runs at Adelaide in 1967-68 to become the highest run-getter for India against Australia as a wicket-keeper batsman. His centurion knock against Australia also made him the first Indian wicket-keeper to score two centuries at the age of 21 or before. In the process, Pant became the first Indian wicket-keeper to score a Test hundred in Australia. Following Pujara's dismissal, it was all about Pant and Jadeja on the field as they went on to pile up a huge score on the board for India. ![]() The batsman narrowly missed the double ton as he departed back at the score of 193 runs. Pujara spent a total of 9 hours, 8 minutes on the field and faced 373 balls before getting out off a Nathon Lyon delivery. Soon after the lunch, India lost their top-order batsman Cheteshwar Pujara, who was holding the crease for his side since Day One of the Test match. ![]() The post-lunch session saw Australian bowlers toiling hard on the field as Pant and Jadeja stitched a massive 204-run partnership for the sixth wicket. In reply, Australia made 24 runs without losing a wicket at Stumps. Sydney, Jan 4 (ANI): Indian wicket-keeper batsman Rishabh Pant and all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja played heroic knocks on Day Two of the ongoing fourth Test against Australia as the visitors declared their first innings after posting a mammoth total of 622 runs for the loss of seven wickets at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Friday. ![]()
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