Shiell: Review of ACA tour to Pakistan. (17 Oct 95)
Victorian wicketkepper-batsman Peter Roach and SA leg-spinner Evan Arnold were the outstanding performers on the Australian Cricket Academy`s recent tour of Pakistan
17-Oct-1995
Title: School of Hard Knocks Author: Alan Shiell Source: Sports
Weekly (October 17, 1995)
Victorian wicketkepper-batsman Peter Roach and SA leg-spinner
Evan Arnold were the outstanding performers on the Australian
Cricket Academy`s recent tour of Pakistan. Academy coach Rod
Marsh said Hawthorn-Waverly`s Roach, 20, "kept brilliantly" and
scored the team`s only century - 136 not out off 130 balls in
Lahore. Sturt`s Arnold, 21, took 15 wickets at less than 20 runs
apiece in three four-day matches.
The young Australians won two of their three one-day games and
won and drew one of their three four-day matches against Pakistan
teams composed of experienced first-class players and youngsters
on the verge of international selection.
"The Pakistanis provided strong opposition, especially under
their conditions," Marsh said. "But we planned it that way. We
wanted a short (three-and-a-half weeks), tough tour and we ceratinaly got one. The heat got at our players a bit and there were
the inevitable stomach upsets, but our cricket was very positive and there were some good, solid performances. It was such a
fantastic learning experience, cricket-wise and life-wise,
seeing different conditions and customs.
"The boys fielded like Trojans. The Pakistanis couldn`t believe
how well we fielded. Our fielding and our running between wickets were so much better than theirs. But if we wanted to learn
something from them, it was the way they went about hitting the
ball along the ground against the spinners, whereas our batsmen
tended to go over the top a little too much."
Physiotherapist Max Pfitzner was kept busy caring for the 13-man
team, captained by Queensland left-hand batsman Matthew Mott, 22.
The most serious casualties were WA allrounder Kade Harvey, 20,
who had stress fractures in his back, NSW speedster Brett Lee,
18, who hurt his back, and SA medium-fast bowler Jason Gillespie,
20, who was ill. SA left-arm quick Mark Harrity, 21, was rested
after touring with Australia A to England earlier this year.
The bowling load fell mainly on Victorian left-arm opener Ian
Hewett, 19, NSW`s Matthew Nicholson, 21, Victorian batsman Clinton Peake, 18 - who became a stock left-arm orthodox slow bowler
- and SA leggie Arnold, who delivered the most overs. Marsh said
Arnold had skin and blood dripping off his fingers, "but just
kept going". "He even came off once for the blood rule," Marsh
said. "He showed great stamina and great courage."
Previous academy teams have toured South Africa, India and New
Zealand, and March is looking at next year`s squad going to South
Africa and Zimbabwe.