Tucker: Blewett prepares for Akram. (Oct 95)
Title: Leader of The Pack
01-Jan-1970
Title: Leader of The Pack! - Blewett`s plan to hold off rivals...
Author: Jim Tucker Source: Inside Edge (October 1995)
Jim Tucker Quizzes Greg Blewett about the Caribbean...and lifting
the tempo against Wasim and Waqar
Test tyro Greg Blewett will maximise his time in the nets against
South Australian team-mate Mark Harrity to help prepare for the
threat posed by Pakistan`s Wasim Akram this summer.
Like Akram, Harrity bowls left-arm and at a pace. Any practice
against the laft-armer`s different angles can only be of value,
according to Australia`s rising star.
"Mark obviously had a different action, but he is quite sharp and
can swing the ball in like Akram," Blewett says. "As much practice as I can get against his bowling will hold me in good
stead."
Blewett`s reasoning is similar to that employed by Test team-mate
Michael Slater last year for the tour of Pakistan.
He rigged a bowling machine on the laft-arm bowler`s angle, studied video of his footwork and found two eager second-grade lefties for the indoor nets to give him that little extra edge.
Last summer, Blewett burst onto the Test scene with back-to-back
hundreds against England, yet his follow-up series against the
West Indies (132 runs at 22) was "ordinary" by his own rating.
The fact Slater, Mark Taylor and David Boon also averaged in the
20s in a Carribean series largely dominated by bowlers makes
Blewett`s results look less fragile.
Still, he hardly wants his Test position left to the judging of
such modest figures, especially with Michael Bevan back in form
after a hot season with Yorkshire. Ricky Ponting and Justin
Langer also enter the new season with a flying start after their
healthy run streaks on the Young Australia tour.
"It boils down to making runs yourself, not worrying about who
else in the pack might be scoring them," Blewett says wisely.
"Good luck to the others. I hope they keep scoring runs, but as
long as I`m making them I don`t give anyone a reason for the other guys to get in.
"For me, it`s a matter of knuckling down and having as good a
season as last year...or better."
Blewett has already experienced how quickly fortunes change in
Test cricket. When his heroics against England were followed by
scores of 14, 11, 19, 17 and 2 in the West Indies, his position
in the Test side was suddenly questioned.
"There was a lot of talk about me being dropped for the last Test
(in Jamaica) but, thankfully, faith was shown in me," Blewett
recounts.
Blewett responded with the innings the Australian camp had waited
all series to see. His 69 dominated an invaluable 113-run stand
with double-century hero Steve Waugh on the pivotal third morning
when Australia needed to surge.
The runs were all hard-earned against the second new ball and the
pull shot which had failed him earlier in the tour was also back
in sync.
One crashing pull to the boundary off Curtley Ambrose was as good
as any stroke played in that deciding Test.
Blewett felt the flow of confidence, too.
"I like to think when the pressure is on I can respond. I think
that 69 helped me turn the corner a bit after a few frustrating
innings," he says.
"I had thought about putting away the pull shot earlier in the
series.
"On a pitch as two-paced as the on we struck in Antigua, it was
{probably the most dangerous shot you could play.
"At Sabina Park, the bounce was a lot more even. If you were going to pull and play it well, it was going to be there.
"Besides, if I didn`t start playing it I wasn`t going to have any
fingrs left because Ambrose was really getting the new ball to
jump into the gloves." Frustrated though he might have been with
his Caribbean results, Blewett believes he is now a tougher
cricketer for those 10 weeks abroad.
"You hear about the Sabina Park wicket being like polished glass
and you think it`s rubbish until you see it for yourself," he explains.
"Just about every wicket we played on was totally different and
the West Indian-style of attack is something you have to get used
to. Akram and Waqar pose anotherchallenge again because they will
bowl fuller and swing it more."
The 23-year-old right-hander starts the new season refreshed
after taking a total break upon his return from the West Indies
and Bermuda.
For his first month back in Adelaide, he did little more than
concentrate on trimming his golf handicap from five to four at
the Tea Tree Gully club.
Former Test batsman-cum-commentator David Hookes has been a regular partner and Blewett draws great benefit from their chats up
the fairways of Adelaide.
His burgeoning profile has also meant a sharp rise in promotional
activities. Speaking at sportsmen`s dinners, making supermarket
appearances and responding to fan mail is all par for the course
these days.
The fanfare hasn`t affected Blewett, nor does he find it a drag.
"I`m recognised a lot more around Adelaide now, although I`m definately not at the Tony Modra levek," he says with a grin.
"If it stays how it is, it`ll be fantastic. At the moment, it`s
people offering me congratulations or `well done` to the team on
the West Indies tour."
Among his fan mail, he has received perfumed letters from young
admirers, but the one which sticks boldest in his memory is one
from Bangladesh.
"This kid wrote, `I play cricket and one day want to play in my
national team`," Blewett relates.
"`It would be good if you could send me your autograph...along
with two bats, a pair of pads and a couple of pair of gloves`.
He was after the full kit!"
Blewett is eager to build on his six Tests and play a major role
in South Australia`s continued rebirth as a state power. To that
end, off-season weight training has bulit his upper body strength
which he hopes will correlate to extra zip in his bowling.
"I found my pace dropped off a little last summer when I went off
the weights, so I`m conscious of staying stronger throughout this
summer," he adds.
A Shield match against champions Queensland and a tour game
against Pakistan will hopefully have his batting in the groove
for his next Test challenge.
Source :: Inside Edge