Sri Lanka's batting worries continue to mount
Paul Coupar reports on the second day of the Sri Lankans' tour match against England A at Worcester
Paul Coupar at Worcester
05-May-2006
Sri Lankans 179 and 68 for 5 trail England A 259 (Key 63, Joyce 49, Kulasekara 4-83) by 12 runs
Scorecard
Scorecard
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Last September, the names of the Ashes-winning XII were not so much inked
into future team sheets as engraved. But they have not played together
since; there is a good chance they will never do so again. Simon Jones is
out for at least six weeks with a dodgy knee. Ashley Giles has recently
admitted that his creaking hip could end his career. Michael Vaughan has a
chronic knee problem. (He recently compared the frequent tidying up of his
cartilage - the shock absorber in the knee - to trips to the barber's. But
unlike hair, cartilage doesn't grow back.) Harmison's shins are still too
sore for cricket.
Barring miracles none will play at Lord's next week. Paul Collingwood
looks likely to slot in at No. 5, leaving space for one new batsman, a
spinner and two quicker bowlers. But the biggest winners today were two
blokes who weren't even playing: Ian Bell and Geraint Jones.
Bell was being squeezed for his No. 3 spot. But none of the pretenders
shone here. Rob Key, dropped in 2004-05 after averaging 44 in his last
seven Tests, looked the pick: the tree-lined ground echoed to the boom of
his bat before he snicked a drive on 63. By contrast that of Essex's
Ravinder Bopara, whose cricket-loving parents were Indian emigrees to east
London, tapped as he ran hard in his 41. It was neat, but it was Mogadon
cricket. Middlesex's Ed Joyce was prettier but less assured than either
and fell for 49. He didn't always seem in control of his drives. Bell's
most realistic challenger, Alastair Cook, disappeared yesterday for an
inelegant duck.
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Poor Read. Having spent more than two years out in the cold, the feeling
was that his rapping on the Test selectors' door may just have been
getting loud enough - three hundreds in five first-class innings to go
with molten glovework. But yesterday at Old Trafford Geraint Jones palmed
a simple chance from the rampant Stuart Law straight to slip, a miss that
might easily have gone to grass and caused great pain. By contrast Read
was given out lbw to a ball that looked much too high by the
ex-Premiership referee Martin Bodenham. Read walked off with no runs,
three meaningful stares at the umpire and one at the sky. (At least
Bodenham was spared a chorus of "You don't know what you're doing".)
All would have wanted far more runs on a pitch with only a lick of sap and
against an underpowered attack. Nuwan Kulasekara, a whippy, whippety
seamer took 4 for 83. Lasith `Slinger' Malinga was good to watch - all
flowing mane, low catapulting arm and a potent mix of bouncers and yorkers
- but wicketless. Besides Murali (and it's a big besides) England have
little to fear next week.
With Sajid Mahmood likely to play at Lord's as the strike bowler, Plunkett
and Lewis were battling for a place. Lewis took two wickets, taking him to
eight in the game, Plunkett none. The captain looks certain to be Andrew
Flintoff. He was here today, supposedly to practice against the Merlyn
bowling machine, but probably also to talk teams with the selectors. And
the spinner - provided there is one? Selector Geoff Miller was giving
nothing away - except that if he was 20 years younger he'd be in with a
decent chance himself. "No. 8 batter who didn't turn it very much. I'd
have been perfect."
Paul Coupar is assistant editor of The Wisden Cricketer