400 totals will be the norm - Gilchrist
Australia will regain two of their most knowledgeable fast men for Friday's CB Series match against England with Glenn McGrath cleared of a groin problem and Brett Lee recovering from a chest infection
Peter English at Brisbane
18-Jan-2007
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At the start of the CB Series there were mutterings about Australia's outfit being so dominant - and the opposition so poor - that they would quickly regain the world record one-day score. While part of the belief is Australian chest-beating after the Ashes cleansweep and a strong limited-overs start, Adam Gilchrist insists scores of 400-plus will become more common as a flow-on effect from Twenty20.
Gilchrist, who will lead the side against England in Brisbane on Friday, is likely to have a strong say in any massive Australian total and is convinced they will get bigger. "I do believe 400s are going to become parts of the game," he said. "Slowly but surely they may become the norm, but they're a little way off yet.
"Batsmen are power hitting earlier and Twenty20 is going to show teams how expansive they can be." However, he does not expect too many repeats of Australia's mind-blowing game against South Africa last year when 872 runs were scored in 99.5 overs and Australia held the world mark for only an innings.
As Gilchrist talked in the Gabba gym he was asked by Angus Fraser, the former England seamer, whether it was a good thing for the game if the batsman had an unequal advantage. "I can't see why bowlers have got such a raw deal," Gilchrist said. "The powerplay changes it a lot, but there was always an overs restriction. The bowlers will adapt and they are adapting. Looking at bowling now in one-day cricket compared to 20 years ago, they are smarter about it."
Australia will regain two of their most knowledgeable fast men for Friday's match with Glenn McGrath cleared of a groin problem and Brett Lee recovering from a chest infection that ruled him out of the first two games. The pair's inclusion forces Ben Hilfenhaus out of the squad - he will play for Tasmania in the Pura Cup game against Queensland in Hobart - and Stuart Clark and Brad Hogg will also be missing.
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McGrath was rested for the 105-run win over New Zealand in Hobart on Sunday and did not bowl in the nets today. "They are just managing his workload and monitoring him closely," Gilchrist said. "We're sure he's 100% fit."
Gilchrist will captain Australia for the 14th time in one-day games as he replaces the resting Ricky Ponting, and he downplayed the prospect of the side's invincibility. "There's every chance we could lose a game to England or New Zealand," Gilchrist, who will play his 250th ODI, said. "It's the nature of one-day cricket. That's what we're trying to guard against.
"Not for a minute are we thinking we have wrapped up this tournament. Far from it. But if we maintain the standard and keep progressing we shouldn't lose too many."
Australia 1 Adam Gilchrist (capt, wk), 2 Matthew Hayden, 3 Brad Hodge, 4 Michael Clarke, 5 Andrew Symonds, 6 Michael Hussey, 7 Cameron White, 8 Brett Lee, 9 Nathan Bracken, 10 Mitchell Johnson, 11 Glenn McGrath.
Peter English is the Australasian editor of Cricinfo