Matches (17)
T20 World Cup (4)
IND v SA [W] (1)
County DIV1 (5)
County DIV2 (4)
CE Cup (3)
News

Warne's help no fix-all for Hauritz - Nielsen

Australia cannot expect Shane Warne's advice to magically solve Nathan Hauritz's recent bowling problems, according to the coach Tim Nielsen

ESPNcricinfo staff
19-Oct-2010
Nathan Hauritz had a rough day, India v Australia, 2nd Test, Bangalore, 3rd day, October 11, 2010

Nathan Hauritz will need to work out his areas for improvement himself, according to the coach Tim Nielsen  •  Associated Press

Australia cannot expect Shane Warne's advice to magically solve Nathan Hauritz's recent bowling problems, according to the coach Tim Nielsen. Hauritz is likely to remain Australia's No. 1 spinner for the Ashes but after taking six wickets at 65 in the recent Tests against India, he has some work to do.
That could include sessions with Warne, who has offered his services to Hauritz ahead of Australia's first home Ashes series since Warne's retirement. Nielsen said while such tutoring could be useful, it was more important that Hauritz take on the responsibility of working out what he should change in order to trouble England's batsmen.
"He's had some discussions with Warney in the past," Nielsen told the Sydney Morning Herald. "If Warney is available and Haury would like to speak to him I can't see any reason they wouldn't have a chat. In the end, that's a great little resource to utilise, but it's more important that Haury identifies the things he needs to improve and we identify as a team the things we need to improve, and go about fixing them.
"We can't expect someone to come in and fix the ills of the game for us. It's about us saying 'yes, I need to get better at this', and working our backsides off at training and preparation to make sure we've nailed those skills. It'd be great to have people like Warne offering advice but in the end it comes back to us."
The main competition for Hauritz in the immediate future is set to come from the legspinning allrounder Steven Smith, who made a promising start to his Test career against Pakistan this year. The former spinners Ashley Mallett and Ray Bright would like to see Smith in the Test side, although alongside Hauritz rather than in his place.
Smith's batting makes him an attractive all-round option and although Ricky Ponting is not keen on the idea yet, one possible role could be for Smith to bat at No. 6 and become the second spinner. But Smith, who was in the Test squad in India and remains there for the ODI series, believes his Test hopes for the time being will rest on his bowling.
"I'd like to become a genuine allrounder down the track so scoring runs whenever I can is going to be good for me to get my best foot forward," Smith told reporters in India. "Something I want to do is bat in the top six at some point. But at the moment it's probably going to be my spin that'll give me a game."