Gough made to suffer by meaningless encounters (9 February 1999)
LEST you might not have noticed among the myriad inconsequential limited-overs cricket matches which have been taking place in Australia these past few weeks, the best-of-three final of the Carlton and United Series begins in Sydney tomorrow
09-Feb-1999
9 February 1999
Gough made to suffer by meaningless encounters
By Mark Nicholas in Sydney
LEST you might not have noticed among the myriad inconsequential
limited-overs cricket matches which have been taking place in
Australia these past few weeks, the best-of-three final of the
Carlton and United Series begins in Sydney tomorrow.
It will be contested by Australia and England - Sri Lanka knew
they were unable to qualify more than a week ago but have been
playing non-events since - which is rather more satisfactory than
the corresponding climax four years ago when England and Zimbabwe
were on the plane home and Australia A were left at water-pistols
with their senior brethren.
That four-way tournament was not enough of a success to be
repeated and though the triangular is the vogue game it is well
worth the English Cricket Board noting that the 15 qualifying
matches that we have just been through are too many. The nine
matches, plus one final, they have settled on for domestic
cricket in England from 2000 and beyond is ample thank you,
whatever the cash registers suggest.
After yesterday's net practice, which was conducted in the sort
of drizzle best recognised in Manchester, the England camp gave
little away on the fitness of Darren Gough. The rhetoric is that
his hamstring is OK and that he is likely to play - not that any
other yarn can be spun at present. The injury is an embarrassment
because it was picked up in a meaningless match against Australia
last Friday. Gough is a jewel and should have been rested after
three months of demanding travelling and cricket. Without him
England's chances of beating Australia are severely diminished.
The best news concerns Neil Fairbrother, whose own hamstring has
responded well to treatment and will almost certainly play. This
will bring immense relief to the team management and not simply
because Fairbrother is reborn as a key player in the middle
order. John Crawley is in no sort of nick, Ben Hollioake's
Lucanesque tour has given him no relevant match practice
whatsoever and Mark Alleyne has flown home after the shocking
death of his father in a car accident in Barbados.
It is a case of all hands to the pump and therefore another
opportunity is granted to the gutsy Vince Wells. He looked out of
his depth against Shane Warne the other night - he is not the
first of course - but still clawed his way to 39 valuable runs,
which were full of character if not class. Mark Ealham should not
bat too low tomorrow if any headway is to be made against the
Australian spinners because he is one player, along with Graeme
Hick, who is not limited to the sweep shot as the sole method of
ensuring that the scoreboard ticks over.
Hopefully, they will have studied the way in which the Sri
Lankans use their feet so effectively - this is not a new trick -
and drive the ball with a vertical bat. If they have not then the
same old confusion against spin could cost them the series.
Most of this, mind you, will depend on the pitch at the Sydney
Cricket Ground. The last couple have not been up to scratch - too
dry, too slow, and too much in favour of even mediocre spinners.
The best SCG pitches allow a little for everyone and certainly
have plenty of pace for the stroke-makers to entertain the
sell-out crowds.
In a cracking match in Sydney three weeks ago England beat
Australia by seven runs on an ideal pitch and there should be no
excuse if another such surface is not on show tomorrow.
Australia start as favourites, having won their last four
matches. What is more, they have everybody fit and playing
somewhere near their peak. England have lost four of their last
five matches and are still not sure that their best team will get
on the park. It will have to if the odds are to be upset.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)