Resilience will stand tourists in good stead (12 November 1998)
UNTIL the record-breaking partnership between Graham Thorpe and Mark Ramprakash on Tuesday England seemed to be taking their mission to emulate Mike Gatting's team in 1986-87 a little too seriously
12-Nov-1998
12 November 1998
Resilience will stand tourists in good stead
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins in Cairns
UNTIL the record-breaking partnership between Graham Thorpe and
Mark Ramprakash on Tuesday England seemed to be taking their
mission to emulate Mike Gatting's team in 1986-87 a little too
seriously.
Twelve years ago, it will be remembered, they had a singularly
unimpressive lead-in to a series which they eventually won 2-1.
Now they approach the last of their preparatory matches against a
powerful Queensland side tomorrow without even a sniff of victory
in their two first-class games to date but having at least made
the point that they will be hard to beat.
When they were four down in the second innings against South
Australia on Monday, with four sessions of play stretching ahead
and 58 runs still to be knocked off before they could even get
level, the only optimistic spin which could have been applied to
events was that the home side might again be deceived into
believing that their challengers were worse than they are.
Now, a reappraisal has begun, though defeat by a Queensland team
led by Ian Healy would rapidly put a stop to it. Not to be
outdone for more than a few hours, the Australian one-day side
duly ended their tour of Pakistan with a record total of their
own, the highest made to win a one-day international. It
concluded a mission of unprecedented success in a land where
things have often gone wrong for Australian teams.
Andrew Symonds, who made his belated first international
appearance in Lahore, is one of eight players in the Queensland
side who have played for Australia, though only Healy, his deputy
Stuart Law and the new-ball pair, Michael Kasprowicz and Andy
Bichel, have played a Test. Kasprowicz is widely expected to be
selected for the Brisbane Test next week and Bichel is in the
running after a good start to the season. He took five for 31
when New Zealand also played in Cairns last year and were
thrashed by an innings and 127 runs.
Queensland's XI tomorrow is as it was in that match 13 months ago
and still has some of the players who scored four hundreds
between them against England's last touring team before narrowly
failing in a fourth-innings run chase. The successful England
spinners on that occasion in Toomwoomba might not come easily to
mind: Phil Tufnell and . . . Shaun Udal.
At least one spinner will surely be required this time in the
tropical heat of Cairns. The atmosphere is far more West Indian
than Australian. It will be interesting to see whether the
selectors - Stewart, Hussain, Gooch and Lloyd - plump for Peter
Such or Robert Croft when they pick the team. Such has been
comfortably the more impressive so far.
It is quite possible, however, that neither will play in Brisbane
next week. The composition of that first Test side may be the
most crucial decision the selectors will make all tour. The Gabba
Test usually shapes the series and there is a leaning towards
playing all seven specialist batsmen. Runs for Stewart and Mark
Butcher in this match might allow a bolder approach and Ben
Hollioake still has a chance of getting in at No 7 if he is given
a chance in this game.
Stewart said after arriving in Cairns yesterday afternoon: "The
side which plays against Queensland won't be the Test side but
Darren Gough and Alan Mullally will obviously play here.
Hollioake is probably 80 per cent fit to bowl now. All the
bowlers who played in Adelaide did well. Mark Butcher and myself
just need to spend time in the middle now. We have the option of
playing five bowlers or seven batters but we'll wait until we see
what the Brisbane conditions are going to be."
One man who will not play tomorrow is Warren Hegg, Stewart's
reserve wicketkeeper, who has returned to Lancashire to be with
his wife, who is expecting their first child. He will return to
Australia next week. John Crawley could take the gloves in an
emergency.
Jason Gallian captains an England XI in the first of three
one-day "internationals" against a Barbados XI at the Kensington
Oval in Bridgetown today.
England XI (from): *J E R Gallian, C W J Athey, B C Broad, R J
Bailey, D J Sales, C White, D J Capel, -C M W Read, G Chapple, K
T Medlycott, D E Malcolm, P W Jarvis.
More....
Warne sets target
SHANE WARNE has all but written himself out of the first two
Ashes Tests against England. The leg-spinner admitted yesterday
it was not realistic to target either the Brisbane or Perth
matches but said his goal was to return for the third at the
Adelaide Oval on Dec 11-15.
Warne's recovery from major shoulder surgery will be tested when
he leads Victoria in the Sheffield Shield against Western
Australia in Perth on Friday.
"I'll get through this Shield game okay, bowl a few more in the
next game and gradually build it up," Warne said. He added that
his shoulder showed no reaction after bowling eight overs in
Victoria's win over NSW last week.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)