Beleaguered
England go in to second Test against odds
London,
July 17:
Injury-ridden England head forthe second Ashes test gambling on a
stand-in captain who had vowed never to go near the job again, a key
batsman who has not played for six weeks, a swing bowler who has
lost his swing and an emergency recruit accused of a suspect
temperament.
To make matters worse, they take on an Australian side regarded by
many as the best eleven ever to play the game and already 25-1 on to
win the series. And, worse still, the past offers little cause for
optimism, England having beaten Australia at Lord's just once in 105
years. Michael Atherton, who has agreed to step into the breach
after skipper Nasser Hussain broke a finger in the first Test, will
struggle to put together an inspirational pre-match teamtalk as
England fight to avoid going 2-0 down in the five-Test series.
It will clearly require some heroics sadly lacking in the innings
and 118-run defeat at Edgbaston. The spotlight will be on Graham
Thorpe and Mark Ramprakashin particular. Both seem certain to play
as part of a block of five Surrey batsmen in the top seven. The
left-handed Thorpe is England's premier batsman but, plagued by a
tight calf, he has not played since the second Ttest against
Pakistan in early June.
His inclusion, perhaps more than anything else, reflects how
desperate England have become over their lack of quality cover.
Ramprakash, meanwhile, returns after a 12-month absence and a
maddeningly frustrating career at the top level.
His solid technique has provided a counterpoint to a fragile
confidence which has been blamed for his failure to establish
himself as an automatic choice despite appearing in 42 Tests. Before
his recall as cover for Thorpe, many thought his International
career was already over.
He will need to steel himself against Steve Waugh's side, famed for
their ability to unsettle opponents with a fewwell-chosen taunts.
Perhaps they will greet Ramprakash to the crease by reminding him of
his test average at Lord's — 7.36 in 11 innings.
Dominic Cork, likely to act as back-up to pace bowlers Darren Gough
and Andrew Caddick, is another man who England are gambling on to
come good against the odds. The Derbyshire swing bowler has
struggled since returning from the tour to Pakistan last year with a
back problem but — unlike Ramprakash — he has been included
because of his love of Lord's, where he took seven for 43 on his
debut against West Indies in 1995.
"We are backing him totally, not least because of his record at
Lord's," England chairman of selectors David Graveney said.
Australia, meanwhile, roll on untroubled, the one hiccup provided by
forecasts of approaching wet weather.
Opening batsmen Michael Slater and Matthew Hayden are bothnursing
injuries — ironically meted out in the game against Somerset by
Pakistan pace bowler Shoaib Akhtar, the same man who gave Hussain
his first broken bone of the season — while Brett Lee has a
niggling rib problem.
Unlike England, though, they have the proven back-up of Justin
Langer and Damien Fleming waiting in the wings. With Slater and
Hayden likely to recover, Australia will boast a batting line-up in
which all of their top seven average over 40 — the benchmark of
top-class players — in Test cricket, with two even breaking the
50-mark.
England have just one player in the over 40 bracket in Thorpe. The
Australians are similarly superior in the bowling department and
will surely play leg-spinner Shane Warne while England may opt for
an all-seam attack. The home side cannot even take consolation in
the third of cricket’s main disciplines, fielding, after they
missed nine chances in the first test (Man-of-the-Match Adam
Gilchrist was dropped on 14 and ended on 152 not out).
Atherton, therefore, will probably be reduced to appeals for his
team to show pride, guts and spirit, while taking each games it
comes. All the time secretly praying for rain.
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