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Praying for rain

England in bad shape as second test looms

Click here for more on this story
Posted: Tuesday July 17, 2001 6:37 AM
Updated: Tuesday July 17, 2001 10:09 AM

  Michael Atherton Stand-in England captain Michael Atherton had vowed never to go near the job again. Hamish Blair/Allsport

LONDON (Reuters) -- Injury-ridden England head for the second Ashes test gambling on a stand-in captain who had vowed never to go near the job again, a key batsman who has not played for six weeks, a swing bowler who has lost his swing and an emergency recruit accused of a suspect temperament.

To make matters worse, it takes on an Australian side regarded by many as the best ever to play the game and already 25-1 ON to win the series.

And, worse still, the past offers little cause for optimism, England having beaten Australia at Lord's just once in 105 years.

Michael Atherton, who has agreed to step into the breach after skipper Nasser Hussain broke a finger in the first test, will struggle to put together an inspirational pre-match team talk as England fight to avoid going 2-0 down in the five-test series.

It will clearly require some heroics sadly lacking in the innings and 118-run defeat at Edgbaston.

The spotlight will be on Graham Thorpe and Mark Ramprakash in particular.
England vs. Australia
Lord's, London, July 19-23
Head-to-heads:
Australia has won the past six Ashes series, winning 20 matches in that run to England's five. England's last series success dates back to 1986-7 under Mike Gatting.

In all, the Australians have won 118 Ashes tests to England's 93, with 86 drawn.

Recent form:
Australia has won five of its last six series, 17 out of its last 19 games and lost just two out of 21. During that run it amassed a world record 16 victories in a row. England, meanwhile, has won four and drawn one of its last five series, a run which has seen it move to third in the world test championship, behind leaders Australia and South Africa.

Key players:
Graham Thorpe -- Perhaps the only England player who would challenge for a place in the Australia side. Has averaged 56.80 against Pakistan, 67.25 against Sri Lanka and 76, again against Pakistan, in his last three series. Last appeared on a cricket field on June 4 before sustaining a calf injury.

Jason Gillespie -- The dark horse of the Australian attack, never getting the credit he deserves as Glenn McGrath, Shane Warne and Brett Lee grab the headlines. Injury has not helped his cause but Steve Waugh values him as highly as any of his other bowlers. Has taken 88 wickets at 22.60 in 22 tests.

Venue:
Lord's -- Named after Thomas Lord and his private club established in 1787. The ground in St John's Wood was built much later, with its first game on June 22, 1814. The home of Middlesex since 1877.  

 
 

Both seem certain to play as part of a block of five Surrey batsmen in the top seven.

The left-handed Thorpe is England's premier batsman but, plagued by a tight calf, he has not played since the second test against Pakistan in early June.

"I feel the calf is 100 percent," said Thorpe. "It feels fine. If it was a slight problem it would be a big gamble for me to play. There would be no point in playing a side which knows you are carrying an injury."

But he added: "It's crucial people don't think everything is okay now Graham Thorpe is back. I'm not thinking this is a miracle cure. I'm just trying to come back and contribute.

"All the England players have to get more out of themselves."

Thorpe said he was convinced his calf would stand up to a five-day test match but conceded it would feel like his first match of the season again.

"I didn't feel under any pressure (to come back). I'm coming in pretty cold. It's going to be tough for me but it's a challenge I have to accept. The first 20 of 30 minutes of an innings are pretty important but they will be even more important for me.

"It's the best bowling attack, without a shadow of a doubt, that I have faced," he said, adding that only Pakistan's bowling variations came close to matching Australia.

Thorpe's inclusion, perhaps more than anything else, reflects how desperate England has become over its lack of quality cover.

Ramprakash, meanwhile, returns after a 12-month absence and a maddeningly frustrating career at the top level.

Suspect temperament

His solid technique has provided a counterpoint to a fragile confidence which has been blamed for his failure to establish himself as an automatic choice despite appearing in 42 tests.

Before his recall as cover for Thorpe, many thought his international career was already over.

He will need to steel himself against Steve Waugh's side, famed for its ability to unsettle opponents with a few well-chosen taunts. Perhaps it will greet Ramprakash to the crease by reminding him of his test average at Lord's -- 7.36 in 11 innings.

Dominic Cork, likely to act as back-up to pace bowlers Darren Gough and Andrew Caddick, is another man who England is gambling on to come good against the odds.

The Derbyshire swing bowler has struggled since returning from the tour to Pakistan last year with a back problem but -- unlike Ramprakash -- he has been included because of his love of Lord's, where he took seven for 43 on his debut against West Indies in 1995.

"We are backing him totally, not least because of his record at Lord's," England chairman of selectors David Graveney said.

Australia, meanwhile, rolls on untroubled, the one hiccup provided by forecasts of approaching wet weather.

Nursing injuries

Opening batsmen Michael Slater and Matthew Hayden are both nursing injuries -- ironically meted out in the game against Somerset by Pakistan pace bowler Shoaib Akhtar, the same man who gave Hussain his first broken bone of the season -- while Brett Lee has a niggling rib problem.

Unlike England, though, it has the proven back-up of Justin Langer and Damien Fleming waiting in the wings.

With Slater and Hayden likely to recover, Australia will boast a batting lineup in which all of its top seven average over 40 -- the benchmark of top-class players -- in test cricket, with two even breaking the 50-mark. England has just one player in the over 40 bracket in Thorpe.

The Australians are similarly superior in the bowling department and will surely play leg-spinner Shane Warne while England may opt for an all-seam attack.

The home side cannot even take consolation in the third of cricket's main disciplines, fielding, after it missed nine chances in the first test (man-of-the-match Adam Gilchrist was dropped on 14 and ended on 152 not out).

Atherton, therefore, will probably be reduced to appeals for his team to show pride, guts and spirit, while taking each game as it comes. All the time secretly praying for rain.

 
Related information
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England names Silverwood, Thorpe for Ashes
Atherton to captain England in second test
Hussain hurt as England plunges to Ashes defeat
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