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ESPNcricinfo staff
January 28, 2013
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England tour of New Zealand
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Ashley Giles, England's limited-overs coach, has admitted being taken by surprise at how quickly Joe Root has settled into the international arena. Root, the Yorkshire batsman, was one of the players to significantly enhance his reputation during the ODI series against India that finished on Sunday.
A mark of Root's swift rise is that he will now be involved in all three formats on the tour to New Zealand, having previously been expected to only be a fringe player this winter. First, he was given a Test debut in Nagpur, then he was added to the Twenty20 squad before Christmas when Jonny Bairstow was ruled out, and the same situation emerged for the one-dayers when Bairstow remained unavailable.
His success in India then prompted the selectors to remove him from the Lions tour to Australia, where he was due to be captain, and send him for the ODIs in New Zealand, while Danny Briggs' injury opened up a spot in the Twenty20 squad.
Root's standout performance came in the fourth match, when he struck 57 off 45 balls and then followed that with 31 in England's successful run chase in Dharamsala. However, he also impressed in the field and with the ball, and his offspin became a useful option for Alastair Cook.
"I didn't know he could bat as well as he has," Giles said. "He had all the ingredients to show that he could bat really well. He just looks at home and he's the sort of player with which English cricket is in good hands.
"Joe's had a fantastic first tour and has developed game on game into someone who is playing all forms of the game."
The other player to shine consistently through the one-day tour was offspinner James Tredwell, who claimed 11 wickets at 18.18 in the five matches. His success has been enough for Giles to suggest that England could consider playing both him and Graeme Swann in the same team, although the likelihood is that Tredwell will be back as the reserve for the ODIs against New Zealand next month.
"It just gives us great options - I don't see at some point why you couldn't play two offspinners in the same side," Giles said. "Tredders has been fantastic this trip."
The five-match series was also a steep learning curve for Giles in his first assignment as the limited-overs coach, having taken over from Andy Flower in the new England coaching structure. Giles now takes the squad to New Zealand for three Twenty20s and three ODIs, the latter will provide more fine-tuning ahead of the Champions Trophy, and he is feeling more at home with each match.
"Certainly I have learned a lot about this level and as the tour has gone on I have become more and more myself," he said. "It has been an enjoyable tour, playing cricket in these beautiful arenas, and while we are disappointed to lose, we have learned a lot."
England have a couple of days off after arriving in Auckland before starting their preparations for the warm-up matches ahead of the Twenty20 series. They play two matches against a New Zealand XI that will include former captain Ross Taylor, as he continues the process of returning to the national side following his self-imposed break during the South Africa tour after his controversial sacking.
© ESPN EMEA Ltd.
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As a 73 year old cricket lover ( irrespective of which player or which country displays beautiful cricket), boys like Joe Root of England, Kane Williamson of NZ and Cheteswar Pujara of India gives me the satisfaction that Cricket's future is in good hands
I am surprised that Ashley is surprised at Joe Root's fast and tremendous success. Even before Root was selected to represent England, and even before Staruss retired, from the liited number of County matches I could see as an Indian, located in India, I have been telling every one ( including posting in Cricinfo), that "here is a boy to watch out for". I had even mentioned that he should be groomed to replace Strauss as the future England opener. I still feel, that both Root and England will benefit a lot more, if Root is groomed as an opener. Bell at No 3 & KP at No 4.
Joe Root has shown that he belongs at international level. Everyone associated with England cricket knew he was going to be a good one, the surprise is that he has come on so fast and is able to adapt his game so well. His grinding 73 in his first test and his 57* off 45 balls couldn't have been more different and for a player who turned 22 a month ago to be so mature is amazing. I hope England will not ask too much of him. He should NOT be asked to open at this stage, even though he does for Yorkshire. He's done well in the middle order, so keep him there- we needed a middle order batsman anyway.
It's a pity Giles didn't realise a game or two earlier that Dernbach couldn't cut it- if England had played a second spinner in the 4th ODI we might have won. However, the side does look stronger now; the only problem is that none of the regular top 5 (Cook, Bell, Trott, KP, Morgan) can bowl, which leaves the side unbalanced. One of them probably has to go.
What does Sachin and Pakistan have to do in an article about a young and upcoming England cricketer?
Posted by Fast_Track_Bully on (January 31, 2013, 4:31 GMT)OMG! Some cricket Pundits do not know the statics of own players!!! Saeed Ajmal got 10 wickets in India in his 4 ODI matches and he got 5 of them in the last match. (But Pakistan lost it.) He never played test in India. Saqlain Mushtaq played 3 ODIs and got 6 wikets only! In 6 innings he got 24 in test which is decent. Is it called called 'DID WELL' in India!!! Similarly, someone say that Balaji and Pathan gone thru your 'strong' batting lineup several times in the last series when India played against you. Even if there were pathetic Pakistan umpires, they 'did well' to earn it.
Posted by sachin_vvsfan on (January 30, 2013, 14:05 GMT)@lesslowe Sachin has already retired from ODIS and he did not block pujara in ODIs (nor in tests) . So be at peace and forget sachin for a while.
Posted by lesslowe on (January 30, 2013, 3:30 GMT)Kudos to Joe Root for performing so well in India. The youth has a very very long way to go in International cricket. The game needs more youngsters like him and Pujara. Which is why Sachin Tendulkar needs to hang up his gloves. The man has overstayed his welcome.....BY A LONG WAY. Go Mr. Sachin. Make way for a youth like Root who impresses.
Posted by RodStark on (January 29, 2013, 18:20 GMT)I see no reason why Tredwell should not play alongside Swann in ODIs even if they are very similar. In fact, their similarity is a disadvantage in a sense because I'm sure England wish the laws allowed Swann to bowl more than the allotted ten overs. With Tredwell, you can have up to 20 Swann-like overs, leaving only 30 to be bowled by the generally less talented seamers.
Posted by Jay.Raj on (January 29, 2013, 17:51 GMT)1. Cook 2. pietersen 3. Bell 4. Morgan 5. Root 6. Patel 7. Prior 8. Tredwell 9. Broad 10. Finn 11. Anderson 12th man. Swann FOR ODI!!!!!!!
Posted by Apocalypse_EX on (January 29, 2013, 16:48 GMT)His domestic stats aren't great but he is sure to improve the numbers & go all the way. Has a neat temperament and seemed responsible enough in the middle. England will do well to give him as many chances as he can get.