Time to turn up the heat and fight for every inch (15 November 1998)
"BRING back Tuffers, mate, he can bowl quicker," offered a wag from the hill as Angus Fraser ran in to bowl on a flattie at Adelaide
15-Nov-1998
15 November 1998
Time to turn up the heat and fight for every inch
By Michael Atherton
"BRING back Tuffers, mate, he can bowl quicker," offered a wag
from the hill as Angus Fraser ran in to bowl on a flattie at
Adelaide. I knew then that we were back in Australia with all its
attendant delights.
It has been an eventful start - Mark Butcher needing 10 stitches
after ducking into a half-volley at Perth. A cut over his other
eye after a training drill has given him the appearance of a
fighter the morning after a bout. But soon the shadow boxing ends
and Brisbane, the first Test and the Ashes are upon us.
Although Brisbane, aided by Ian Botham's last Test century,
sparked off England's last successful Ashes campaign, it is not a
ground that holds many recent happy memories. In 1990-1 Graham
Gooch missed the Test match with a hand injury and Allan Lamb was
the stand-in captain. Of course, all good captains are gamblers
by nature but Lamb took this maxim too literally when seen out in
a casino until the early hours with Kerry Packer after the second
day's play. His gamble backfired when he was dismissed by Terry
Alderman's first over the next day. Australia wrapped up the
match in three days.
The injuries that plagued the 1994-95 touring team began at the
Gabba when Devon Malcolm withdrew from the first Test with, of
all things, chicken pox. Despite many exhortations by the
management to start well, some undisciplined bowling and a dire
first-innings batting performance gifted the first Test to the
Aussies.
Conditions at the Gabba can vary dramatically: in 1990-91 the
pitch was damp and green and a seamers' paradise until the third
day. By the time we next played there Shane Warne was on the
scene and the pitch was dry, cracked and turned considerably by
the end - funny that! The humidity is usually a constant factor
though - remember Graham Thorpe fainting through dehydration here
after a one-day international against Zimbabwe?
Usually the touring team have confronted the heat and humidity of
Brisbane immediately after a four-day game in Hobart, Tasmania.
For the uninitiated, Hobart's weather in November is like
Manchester in April. Mount William, which looms over the Bellrive
Oval, is usually snow-capped and four days' play is a rarity.
This time, however, the team's immediate first Test preparations
took place in Cairns, the second biggest town in Queensland yet,
and this gives you some idea of the size of the place, still two
hours' flying time from Brisbane.
If the venues have been different then the type of cricket played
so far by this touring party has been little different to that
played by our predecessors. We have played moderately thus far
with plenty of room for improvement. I think the hardest thing
for a touring party to do here, and especially for those yet to
tour Down Under, is to get out of what I would call the 'county
cricket mentality'.
By that I mean county cricket in England, largely because of its
quantity, is played at three-quarter pace compared to here. Here
you have to look for the quick singles all the time, you have to
push hard for every run and you have to hustle more in the field
and give off an intensity which needs to be maintained throughout
the whole match. I certainly recognise that, more than I did on
my first tour here and the team management are drumming that into
the squad.
Despite this there have been real plusses so far. A hundred for
Nasser Hussain in Perth, a record-breaking partnership between
Thorpe and Mark Ramprakash, runs and wickets for Dominic Cork in
Adelaide and an impressive debut there by Alex Tudor. Even Fraser
rediscovered the nip and radar so missing in Perth. I do not
believe personal form is a problem for anybody at the moment, but
the team must realise that they have to up the intensity levels
in general, for there is only one way to beat the Australians and
that is to play the Australian way; to contest every inch of
ground, to match their commitment, to take a few risks and play
as aggressively as they will.
Personally, the tour has started reasonably, with two fifties in
three knocks, if slightly disjointed by the odd injury. I was
slightly taken aback on arrival in Australia to be greeted by
claims that I was "running scared" of facing Australia's opening
bowler Glenn McGrath. What I was actually trying to say some
weeks ago in this column was that he is a good bowler and I am
looking forward to the challenge immensely. After all, that is
what Test cricket is about.
Ironically, I was to face my first ball on this tour from the man
who made those claims, the great Dennis Lillee. Fortunately, I
did not succumb to the great man, who could not let the occasion
go without his traditional Lilac Hill bouncer. "Had to let you
have one, Athers," he snarled. Old habits die hard.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)