Injury keeps Gough out of reckoning until final Test (21 July 1999)
England have been itching to bring Darren Gough back into their seam attack, but yesterday David Graveney disclosed that the Yorkshireman's return from injury would be delayed until at least the fourth and final Test against New Zealand in a month's
21-Jul-1999
21 July 1999
Injury keeps Gough out of reckoning until final Test
Charles Randall
England have been itching to bring Darren Gough back into their seam
attack, but yesterday David Graveney disclosed that the
Yorkshireman's return from injury would be delayed until at least the
fourth and final Test against New Zealand in a month's time.
Gough's setback at least solved one ticklish problem for Graveney
and his England selectors, who were considering him for tomorrow's
second Test at Lord's until they realised he had no hope of
recovering from a tendon strain in his left shin, a worse injury than
the more common shin splints.
An England supporter living in Kent has been berating the chairman of
selectors in two letters - two different names, same handwriting -
for the mistake of omitting England's No 1 bowler, and he returned in
disgust two torn-up Test match tickets he had bought.
Graveney sent back a polite reply explaining that Gough was injured
and that the fast bowler was certainly in the selectors' thoughts. He
enclosed the ticket fragments, hoping his critic would use them after
all.
This latest injury episode is a sickening setback for Gough. His only
chance of returning to Test cricket this summer involves missing
Yorkshire's NatWest Trophy quarter-final at Lancashire next Wednesday
and giving up his first chance to appear in a Lord's cup final - the
Benson and Hedges Super Cup the following Sunday on Aug 1.
After more than a year free of serious injury Gough seemed to sail
through the World Cup, but the greater physical demands of four-day
championship cricket caused reaction in his leg. He suffered severe
soreness after last week's Warwickshire game and is due to see a
specialist to assess the problem tomorrow.
Graveney said: "He's back to square one, I think. It is of increasing
concern to me, as this has great similarities to a couple of years
ago. What seems to be a short-term injury suddenly becomes a
long-term one."
He added: "We need him to prove to us he could bowl longer and longer
spells, but there is actually no four-day cricket for him between the
second and third Test. I went to see him bowl at Edgbaston. You could
never detect, bowling-wise, that there was any particular problem. It
just hurts when he wakes up the following morning."
With Gough out of the frame, the selectors could select the same
group of seam bowlers who helped win the first Test at Edgbaston, and
there is every likelihood the same team will take the field at
Lord's, with Dean Headley again left out.
Even without Gough, England's seam attack should pose problems for
New Zealand, even on what has been predicted to be the mildest
batting strip at Lord's for many years.
Andrew Caddick, who looks stronger each year, has continued in
impressive form, and during the nets at Lord's yesterday he was
whipping the ball through off a few paces, hitting the seam
consistently and hustling the batsmen into errors.
Dean Cosker, the Glamorgan and England A left-armer, was drafted into
yesterday's nets to augment the spin bowling of Phil Tufnell, who has
cemented his England place after an unexpectedly good showing in the
first Test. Furthermore, the Birmingham crowd seemed to adopt him as
a minor hero, and the Middlesex left-armer can expect a favourable,
if more reserved, reception at Lord's, his home ground.
New Zealand kept their practice brief yesterday to attend a lunch at
the National Sporting Club. At least one change to their team seems
certain for Lord's, as Simon Doull is unlikely to be risked after a
knee operation.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)