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'If you just look to survive there will be a ball that gets you out'
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Apart from a lot of sweating and snake-spotting, England weren't able
to ascertain too much from their opening warm-up match at the Colombo
Cricket Club. The bowlers toiled with little reward on a dead pitch
while the batsmen enjoyed a succession of misleadingly unchallenging
innings. Nevertheless, for Alastair Cook, who top-scored with 63
before retiring at the lunch break, the chance to build an innings
over the course of two-and-a-half hours was not to be sniffed at.
For Cook, however, the more significant cricket took place not in
Colombo, but in Brisbane and Hobart, where he watched with interest
the success enjoyed by Australia's domineering batsmen, not least his
fellow left-hander, Mike Hussey, who racked up hundreds in the first
innings of each Test. Australia lost only 11 wickets out of a possible
40 en route to a 2-0 series victory, and Cook believes that the
positive mindset they demonstrated - and the knock-on effect it will
have on Sri Lanka's morale - is something that England have to
capitalise on in the course of the next month.
"Obviously we don't know what these wickets will be like, but we saw
how aggressively [Australia] played, and we know that you've got to be
positive and look to score," said Cook. "On those wickets you could
probably hit through the ball more, but if you just look to survive
there will be a ball that gets you out." With that in mind, he's
determined to master the sweep - a shot that was his undoing on
several occasions in the summer. "I've been working quite hard on that
as a gameplan B, and if I have to resort to it, I will."
Muttiah Muralitharan, who needs just five more wickets to overhaul
Shane Warne's record tally of 708, is likely to be the target of that
strategy. Few people, Cook included, doubt that the record will fall
at some stage this series, but in Australia Murali managed just four
wickets at exactly 100 apiece. It's proof that the man is not
invincible, and Cook believes that the experience he gained from
facing Sri Lanka in 2006 will help him go some way towards emulating
that success.
"He's a good bowler but picking him is the key," said Cook. "Towards
the end of the series in England I was picking him more and more, and
if you can pick him and survive defensively, rather than defending and
thinking you're going to get out, it gives you a base to work from. I
certainly can't score as quickly as the Aussies did, but we'll just do
the normal stuff like rotating the strike and playing from the other end."
The strike rotation will be especially important now that England have
settled on their new left-hand right-hand combination - the first
they've used since Michael Vaughan and Marcus Trescothick were a
regular partnership from 2002 to 2004. There is more than a decade's
difference between the ages of Cook (22) and Vaughan (33), but the
younger man is more than happy to have acquired such an experienced
sidekick - even if it means he'll have to take first strike for the
first time in his career.
'I
certainly can't score as quickly as the Aussies did, but we'll just do
the normal stuff like rotating the strike'
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"Vaughany's a good man to bat with," said Cook, after the pair had put
on 77 in their first outing of the tour. "He's a serious player who's
seen a lot in his career. He's been here [to Sri Lanka] twice and he
is quite good technically at picking out something that you're not
quite doing right - just one word and he reminds you of your basic
skills. It worked well yesterday, and hopefully that's just a good
start.
"He looks after a lot of the players in his own way," said Cook.
"He'll wander over for a chat, and make sure everyone's alright. And
when he's playing he just checks up on you, because his game is quite
basic in terms of how he thinks about batting, and he relates that to
the way we bat. If your head's falling over, for instance - simple
things that when you're in the heat of the battle you forget about.
That's what I picked up from batting with him."
Vaughan's batting looked to be back to its sublime best during the
home series against India, most notably during his century at Trent
Bridge, and he was once again full of attacking intent during his
brisk innings of 38 on Thursday. By and large, however, Cook is aware
that he and his new partner tend to bat at the same tempo - much as he
and the out-of-favour Andrew Strauss did during their summer
partnerships.
"We'll just look to get the side off to a good start in the most
natural way we can," said Cook. "It's vital that we bat well together
because we want to keep as many wickets as we can against the new
ball. That means it's more overs that Murali has to bowl. The last
thing we want is to be four or five-down when he comes on."
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo