Harmison ready to fight for place
Steve Harmison finally began bowling on the tour of Sri Lanka but his six overs cost 48 on the second day of England's warm-up match
Andrew Miller at Colombo CC
21-Nov-2007
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But afterwards Harmison declared himself satisfied with his work-out,
and insisted he was here to fight for the place that was once his by
right. "June was the last time I played," he said, having been
sidelined for most of the English season after a hernia operation.
"Others have got the England shirt, so all I can do is fight. I'm not
going to bullshit. If it's good enough I'll play on the first of
December [in the first Test at Kandy]. If it's not, then the people
who have earned their place will keep their place. I just want the
chance to prove to everybody I want to play for England."
That desire has been questioned in several quarters ever since
Harmison's form fell away during last winter's Ashes, most notably in
the opening match at Brisbane when, by his own admission, he "froze".
But he himself put his struggles down to a simple lack of time in the
middle. "In the past we still had bowlers knocking on the door, but I
went through a long period of not being injured. Now I can't get rid
of an injury without another one cropping up.
"I need to spend some time on the park, and if I do that and bowl
properly, I feel I'm as good as anyone in England," said Harmison.
"When I'm not bowling that well, and coming back [from injury] all the
time, then there are better bowlers than me. I'm not the best 80mph
bowler, but when I hit my straps and bowl 90mph, not many bowlers in
England can do that."
To aid his recuperation, Harmison spent a fortnight in South Africa
with the Highveld Lions, accompanied by his England bowling coach and
former Durham team-mate Ottis Gibson. He took 13 wickets in two
matches, which is more than he managed in an entire Test and
first-class programme on England's tour in 2004-05, but by his own
admission, his figures were somewhat flattering.
"I'm not going to lie to you," said Harmison, "in my first game my 6
for 91 looked good ... from England. From South Africa it wasn't very
good. But it was getting better all the time and I'm being realistic.
I want to play for England, I've always wanted to play for England,
but I'll have to wait and see. I'm here to fight but whether I play or
not is not my decision. I've got nothing to prove to anyone but
myself."
Harmison has had his recent performances dissected from so many angles
that he was not about to read too much into a rusty first outing in
new, slower, conditions. Besides, he was happy to look on the bright
side of an arduous two days for his side. "England have got to be
happy with the way things have gone," he said. "In these games there's
two ways to look at it. If a team gets bowled out for very little then
you're unprepared for when a team gets 450 for 5. Each individual
bowler got what they wanted out of the game, and hopefully if we can get
a full day's batting tomorrow, then it's a successful game. The result
is irrelevant.
"Before and after tea we were experimenting with the ball," he added.
"How we get that ball to work for us is key because we have to get it
to reverse swing as quickly as we can. I sent down a couple of overs
of cross-seamers, and the little guy [Kaushal Silva] played well,
pulling chunks out of my length, but at the end of the day I wasn't
too bothered. I'd rather experiment in this game than on December 2."
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo