England's nearly man shines
Ian Bell came in to the first Test at Lord's under pressure with Andrew Flintoff fit for action against for the next match, writes Derek Pringle in the Telegraph

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To get the ball in the gap behind square leg, Pietersen had to rotate his wrists as if turning a car steering wheel sharp left at the lights. Bell may lack that kind of elasticity in limb but not in mind, and his late cut for four off Ntini, through an empty slip cordon, was like a deadly kiss, delicate but lethal in its effect on South Africa's morale. Before that his finest shot had been a lofted six off his eventual nemesis, Harris, but this came with that delicious cruelty closer to sadism than sport.
"We had a couple of issues but we resolved everything afterwards. There's no problem now. Just a couple of misunderstandings."
Allan Donald, the former South African bowler, has seen him progress at Warwickshire and his loyalties seemed with the batsman when he predicted before the Test: "It's only a matter of time before Ian Bell absolutely nails it." Well, he has nailed it, with utter certainty. And, after Pietersen departed, Bell was the one in charge of the hammer.
Nishi Narayanan is a staff writer at ESPNcricinfo