England hope to exploit Waugh's embarrassment (10 December 1998)
WAGNER'S epic cycle Der Ring is being performed in full in Australia for the first time at Adelaide's Festival Centre this week
10-Dec-1998
10 December 1998
England hope to exploit Waugh's embarrassment
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins in Adelaide
WAGNER'S epic cycle Der Ring is being performed in full in
Australia for the first time at Adelaide's Festival Centre this
week. Mastery over the world (which goes with the ring) could
wait as far as England are concerned, if only they could
establish even a temporary mastery over Australia in the next
five days at what remains, at least until further building
desecrations take place, the prettiest Test ground of them all.
Australia will retain the Ashes if they win the third Test,
starting here tomorrow. Whether the pitch starts as wet as it was
yesterday after a dousing by the groundsman, or as dry as the
respected Les Burdett calculates it will be after two days of
roasting in a temperature hovering around 100 degrees, England
have a much better chance than they ever did on that pitch of
ice-rink speed in Perth.
Their intervening match against Victoria has changed nothing, but
it is just possible that Australian embarrassment surrounding
their most commanding attacking player, Mark Waugh, will. He made
the most felicitous of centuries on his first Test appearance for
Australia here eight years ago but there has been an air of
distraction about his batting in the first two Tests, despite his
111 runs at 55 so far.
His slip catching has been, as usual, superb and his bowling in
the fourth innings at Brisbane was remarkably threatening
considering how little he bowls. Knowing the mental tenacity both
Waugh twins possess, it would be no great surprise if Mark were
to banish his temporary notoriety over the betting scandal with a
great innings.
England, however, will hope to exploit any unsettling effect of
the sudden change in the tone of the normally adoring Australian
press. Any sign of frailty from any of the top six batsmen might
not be tolerated much longer with the likes of Greg Blewett,
Darren Lehmann and Matthew Elliott waiting in the wings.
Another of the ambitious reserves, Adam Gilchrist, is standing by
to take over from Ian Healy, should he not recover from a thigh
strain.
England will no doubt want Robert Croft back in the side. Alec
Stewart said, after noting with some surprise that the water on
the pitch came over his boots before England's practice, that a
decision would be left until tomorrow morning. Dominic Cork had
to miss the nets with flu, which has more or less put paid to his
fading chance of holding on to his place. If so, that still
leaves a choice between five players - Croft, Alex Tudor, Dean
Headley, John Crawley and Angus Fraser - for the last three
England places.
With a match to win the selectors should go for five bowlers and
they should be the ones in the best form, namely Darren Gough,
Alan Mullally, Tudor, Headley and Croft. It is true, of course,
that a draw would keep the series alive and that John Crawley
played a fine second innings here four years ago in the match
which England won, their eighth success on this ground to set
against 13 Australian victories and five draws. With Mark Taylor
in charge, however, draws involving Australia are rare and unless
the weather intervenes a result is likely.
The 20-year-old Lancashire leg-spinner, Chris Schofield, was
bowling as well as anyone at England's net practice yesterday,
which was significant. The return of Stuart MacGill is
fundamental to Australia's plans on a pitch which still appears
to bear, below the surface, scars from footmarks made during a
previous match. The authorities assured any doubters that it has
not been used this season, but it would be surprising if
Australia do not also include Colin Miller, their off-spin/swing
bowler again, which would mean no place for one of the two
bowlers who enjoyed the WACA so much, Jason Gillespie and Damien
Fleming.
Glenn McGrath, of course, is an automatic choice and his
supremacy over Mike Atherton will continue to give Australia a
huge advantage: Atherton has been out 12 times to McGrath in his
last 17 completed innings against Australia. Mark Butcher has so
far played him better than anyone, but his slight groin injury
still rules him out as an occasional supporting swing bowler,
which leaves Stewart too short of bowling options in hot weather
if he plumps for seven batsmen.
Croft would be batting a place too high at seven, but the
tail-enders will simply have to bat with much more gumption. A
specialist spinner is necessary because of the long straight
boundaries (169 metres from north end to south), the tendency of
Adelaide pitches to wear and the presence of two left-handers in
Australia's top three. One of them, Justin Langer, may well
return to county cricket as captain of Somerset next season.
His former captain at Middlesex, Mark Ramprakash, who has been
marvellously consistent with the bat, has been lightly used as an
off-spinner so far, and Graham Hick has not bowled a ball in a
match since his arrival. He looks in great form with the bat and
is catching reliably again at second slip.
England (from): Atherton, Butcher, Hussain, Stewart, Ramprakash,
Hick, Crawley, Croft, Tudor, Gough, Mullally, Headley, Fraser.
Australia (from): Taylor, Slater, Langer, M Waugh, S Waugh,
Ponting, Healy, MacGill, Miller, McGrath, Fleming, Gillespie.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)