Saturday, May 19th, 2012

It’s not coming on so the chances of being carved away are cut down

August 26, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Entertainment

“It’s not coming on, so the chances of being carved away are cut down.”England will now probably start as favourites in the series. Ealham made the point that the destiny of the Test series would have an influence. He has played 60 one-dayers for England, is the 10th-ranked bowler in the world. Ealham may have become a dreaded specialist, he is unspectacular, but he is a cricketer to trust this week.. We have now opened the bowling for England in 18 consecutive Tests. Other pairs – notably Trueman and Statham and Botham and Willis – have done it more, but none has done it as many times in a row as Gough and Caddick. We have now opened the bowling for England in 18 consecutive Tests.

Other pairs – notably Trueman and Statham and Botham and Willis – have done it more, but none has done it as many times in a row as Gough and Caddick.
This is testimony to several things: continuity of selection, management of (and some luck with) fitness and injuries and, I suppose, the occasional taking of wickets. Gough moved into eighth place in England’s all-time list on Friday when he went ahead of Jim Laker’s 193. Not long after, I took my 150th.Yesterday, on a magnificent afternoon for this team, those figures advanced a little bit more. As Sri Lanka’s second innings crumbled to dust, my partner and I played our part. The first four batsmen all fell to the new ball, and Gough was quite rightly made man of the series for the way he has operated on these pitches.We form a contrasting partnership. Different bowlers, different blokes, but we know how well, perhaps how much better, we have performed together. Some 113 of our total number of wickets have come in these matches over the past 18 months since the Wanderers game against South Africa.It has been a small wonder that we have endured this winter on these pitches intact, but we have.

Gough has donebetter but we have survived as the new-ball pairing. I think we have a bit left in our tanks yet, and I cannot see a more accom- plished, complementary pair of new-ball bowlers in England.But it took the selectors a long while to alight on us as the combination which might do the trick. We had both made our debut years before we bowled up to the Wanderers in late 1999. We are helped by the fact that there is usually something in the pitch or the conditions which will suit one of our styles He is shorter, skiddier, bustles in and gets pace I am long and gangly, get a bit more movement and bounce. He has a big faster ball which can give the best batsmen the hurry-up and tries a lot of variation, I’m trying to swing it with a degree of movement off the seam.

On a perfect day, it should not leave much room for batsmen to get settled early on.Gough is the smiling face of English cricket, I am not He likes the fame and the attention, I do not. There is no doubt that he is splendid for the game, no doubt that the game needs people with his demeanour, but that, I’m afraid, is not me.There is another difference in the way our characters come through on the field. His bursting heart and titanic effort are there for all to see. I am a different, less bubbly, maybe more brooding, but that does not mean, as some may have perceived, that I am not trying with all his Yorkshire might.We get on. He wouldn’t live in my house and I wouldn’t live in his, but we respect each other’s abilities. Like many sportsmen who spend hours together in the confines of the dressing-room, we have a joshing relationship.

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