Dalrymple hundred lifts Glamorgan

Jamie Dalrymple cracked his first century of the season as Glamorgan took
control on the second day of their County Championship clash with
Northamptonshire at the Swalec Stadium
Division clash on a seam-friendly wicket at Cardiff

11-May-2010
Scorecard
Jamie Dalrymple cracked his first century of the season as Glamorgan took
control on the second day of their County Championship clash with
Northamptonshire at the Swalec Stadium.Having dismissed the visitors for just 253 in their first innings at the end of
play on day one Glamorgan responded by reaching 348 for 5 at the close of the
second day, giving them an overall lead of 95.Dalrymple’s century – from 174 balls with 13 fours – was his fifth for the
Welsh side but he was dismissed just before the close for 105 having shared in a
stand of 79 with Jim Allenby (39) for the fifth wicket. As well as the captain’s contribution, the Welsh county were indebted to a solid platform set by openers Mark Cosgrove and Gareth Rees (64), who put on 147 for the first wicket in 36.4 overs.Cosgrove looked set to score another century against Northamptonshire following
the 102 he plundered against them last season. And he certainly made his mark. In the seventh over he hit strike bowler Jack Brooks on the shin with a hard hit drive. Brooks was helped off the field but did manage to return to the action later in the day.The south Australian left hander brought up his half-century in only 54 balls and looked relatively untroubled, although he did survive a difficult stumping attempt by Niall O’Brien off James Middlebrook when he was on 60. Cosgrove responded by striking the same bowler for a six over long on. Rees had been happy to drop anchor at the other end but brought up his half-century in the penultimate over before lunch.Glamorgan continued to go well but in the fifth over after lunch
Northamptonshire got the breakthrough they needed when Cosgrove, 15 short of his
century, edged Lee Daggett to David Sales at second slip. And with Cosgrove’s departure the tempo of the innings changed as the Northamptonshire seam battery began to find a better line and length.That improvement was rewarded with the wicket of Rees, who was caught down the
leg side by O’Brien off Andrew Hall to leave Glamorgan 170 for 2, which became
223 for 2 by tea.After the interval Glamorgan continued to make progress but Dalrymple lost both
Ben Wright, caught at slip off Daggett, and Michael Powell, who was trapped in
front by Hall.Despite being off the field for 30 minutes because of rain Dalrymple and
Allenby took the lead to almost 100, but in the final over of the day the
captain was snared at slip off Nicky Boje.

Tom Sears appointed Kenya's new CEO

Tom Sears, the former chief executive of Derbyshire, has been appointed as the new chief executive of Cricket Kenya

Cricinfo staff30-May-2010Tom Sears, the former chief executive of Derbyshire, has been appointed as the new chief executive of Cricket Kenya. He moves into a position which became vacant in December when Tom Tikolo was forced to resign after mismanaging board funds.Sears, 40, who has been head of business development at New Zealand Cricket since 2008, was commercial director at Worcestershire between 2000 and 2005 and then spent three years as CEO with Derbyshire. He was widely credited with turning round Derbyshire’s finances. When he took over they were making losses, but a restructuring programme had led to them reporting profits in his last two years.Before that he was involved in rugby administration and also spent time as a journalist.His first job will be to accompany Samir Inamdar, the board’s chairman, to the ICC annual conference in Singapore in late June.Cricket Kenya received more than 70 applications for the post.

2011 World Cup tickets go on sale

The first phase of tickets for the 2011 World Cup in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh have been put on sale following a meeting of the tournament’s Central Organising Committee in Mumbai

Cricinfo staff01-Jun-2010The first phase of tickets for the 2011 World Cup in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh have been put on sale following a meeting of the tournament’s Central Organising Committee in Mumbai. The tickets have been priced affordably, with the cheapest costing 20 cents US in Sri Lanka, the committee said. The tickets are available on the ICC’s website from June 1.”The prices confirm the promise we made that the tickets would be affordable and accessible,” Sharad Pawar, the ICC vice president, said. The committee said that in excess of 100,000 tickets were being released for the first phase of online ticket sales. The move to make tickets cheaper comes after the debacle of the 2007 World Cup in the West Indies, where tickets were expensive and the grounds largely empty as a result.Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief executive, was happy with the progress of preparations for the competition. “While there is a lot of important operational detail ahead of us, I am pleased at the progress we have made to date,” he said. “For example, in the next few months, safety and security aspects will be dealt with in detail by the security directorate headed by BCCI President Shashank Manohar.”

Devon Smith century seals thumping win

West Indies A continued their successful run with a second successive win over Ireland at Stormont in Belfast.

Cricinfo staff25-Jun-2010
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
West Indies A continued their successful run with a second successive win over Ireland at Stormont in Belfast as Devon Smith’s aggressive 114 secured an eight-wicket victory. The hosts struggled to reach 217 despite half centuries from Andrew Poynter and Andrew White, then Andre Fletcher hit 81 alongside Smith’s hundred as the visitors raced home.Smith launched West Indies’ chase in spectacular style, thrashing six fours in left-arm medium-pacer Phil Eaglestone’s first two overs – five of them through the off side. With two more boundaries coming off O’Brien soon after, West Indies had rushed to 48 in the first six overs, though fellow opener Kraigg Brathwaite had made only seven.Smith raced to a fluent half-century, and after Brathwaite chipped a simple return catch back to offspinner Albert van der Merwe, he continued the assault in partnership with Fletcher. Fletcher got going with several strong shots down the ground and never slowed down, going to his half-century from 49 balls with yet another hit down the ground.Smith brought up an 88-ball hundred with a push through the covers off George Dockrell in the 32nd over, but with just three runs required for victory, he top-edged a pull off Eaglestone to give Dockrell an easy catch at mid on. Fletcher sealed the win in Eaglestone’s next over with a glance to the fine leg boundary.Ireland captain O’Brien had had the better of the toss but his decision to bat first soon backfired. After Andre Russell trapped Gary Wilson lbw, Dave Bernard struck twice in quick succession to put Ireland under real pressure. O’Brien played a counter-attacking 37, smashing 15 in an over off Russell, and was timing the ball well before he clipped Kevin Stoute to Smith at midwicket.Poynter and White picked up where he left off, adding 88 for the fifth wicket before they were separated by Imran Khan, Poynter trying to launch the legspinner down the ground but finding Assad Fudadin at long-off to depart for 64.Ireland were 161 for 5 with his dismissal, and thereafter lost wickets at regular intervals, with Fudadin and Khan the main destroyers of the lower order before Bernard returned to bowl Eaglestone and keep Ireland to a mediocre total.

Teams gear up for WCL Division Four

Teams from Nepal, USA, Italy, Cayman Islands, Argentina and Tanzania will participate in the World Cricket League Division Four, to be held in three venues in Italy in August

Cricinfo staff12-Jul-2010Teams from Nepal, USA, Italy, Cayman Islands, Argentina and Tanzania will participate in the World Cricket League Division Four, to be held in three venues in Italy in August. USA and Nepal secured a promotion to Division Four after finishing in the top two in the WCL Division Five last year, while Cayman Islands and Argentina were relegated after finishing poorly in Division Three in 2008-09.The teams will gear up in the hope of qualifying for the ICC World Cup Qualifiers in 2013, the tournament that will determine which four teams make it to the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand in 2015. The top two sides in Division Four will win promotion to WCL Division Three, to be staged in Hong Kong in 2011.The teams arrive on August 12 and the tournament ends on August 21.Itinerary
August 12 – Arrival
August 14 – USA v Nepal (Pianora); Italy v Cayman Islands (Medicina); Tanzania v Argentina (Bologna)
August 15 – Italy v Nepal (Pianora); Argentina v Cayman Islands (Medicina); USA v Tanzania (Bologna)

August 17 – Italy v Argentina (Pianora); Nepal v Tanzania (Medicina); USA v Cayman Islands (Bologna)
August 18 – Cayman Islands v Tanzania (Pianora); Italy v USA (Medicina); Nepal v Argentina (Bologna)
August 20 – USA v Argentina (Pianora); Cayman Islands v Nepal (Medicina); Tanzania v Italy (Bologna)
August 21 – Final (Pianora); third/fourth place play-off (Medicina); fifth/sixth place play-off (Bologna).

Hammad Azam steers Pakistan A to tight win

Hammad Azam, the 19-year-old Rawalpindi allrounder, struck a 54-ball 63 to guide Pakistan A to a narrow victory over Sri Lanka A

Cricinfo staff26-Aug-2010
Scorecard
Thilina Kandamby made 62 and then took three wickets•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Hammad Azam, the 19-year-old Rawalpindi allrounder, struck a 54-ball 63 to guide Pakistan A to a narrow victory over Sri Lanka A with eight deliveries to spare at the Sinhalese Sports Club in Colombo.Pakistan looked set to lose their second match of the tri-series as well, after defeat in the opening game to South Africa A, when they sunk to 166 for 7 in the 43rd over, still needing 59 off 46 deliveries. Azam, though, with the help of highly rated fast bowler, Mohammad Talha, steered Pakistan to a win, blasting 14 off the first four deliveries of the penultimate over to confirm the victory.The pair’s efforts came after the chase lost its way following a blistering start from captain Azeem Ghumman and Khurram Manzoor, who sped to 46 for 0 by the sixth over before three wickets fell for nine runs. Thilina Kandamby, recently axed from the national side, took the next three wickets with his legspinners to put Pakistan in further trouble before Azam intervened.Kandamby had earlier top-scored for Sri Lanka with a 75-ball 63 that pushed the home side to a competitive score despite a lack of contribution from the other middle-order batsmen.

Battling Bairstow earns Yorkshire a bonus point

A battling unbeaten 62 from Jonathan Bairstow rescued Yorkshire and earned them a
valuable batting bonus point against Kent at Headingley as they aimed to clinch
the County Championship title in their final match of the season

13-Sep-2010

ScorecardA battling unbeaten 62 from Jonathan Bairstow rescued Yorkshire and earned them a
valuable batting bonus point against Kent at Headingley as they aimed to clinch
the County Championship title in their final match of the season.Bad light and drizzle restricted the opening day’s play to 58 overs but
Yorkshire managed to reach 205 for 7 and pick up a batting bonus point after
they had been 93 for 5 at one stage.Kent, who also need a victory in order to avoid relegation, were happy to win
the toss and insert Yorkshire on a green pitch which offered plenty of
assistance to the seam bowlers. Adam Lyth and Jacques Rudolph survived together until the ninth over when Simon Cook found the edge of Lyth’s bat and he was caught at first slip by James Tredwell for 17.Anthony McGrath (one) drove loosely outside off-stump in the next over from
James Coles and was caught by Martin van Jaarsveld at second slip to leave
Yorkshire struggling on 31 for 2, but skipper Andrew Gale came to the crease
in a positive frame of mind and made good progress while Rudolph continued
cautiously at the other end. The ball before lunch, however, brought about the downfall of Gale who moved in front of his stumps and was lbw to Dewald Nel for 39 off 63 balls with seven
boundaries.That made Yorkshire 81 for 3 at the interval and not long afterwards they
dipped to 93 for 5. Rudolph, who had occupied the crease for two hours for his 25, was bowled by Nel and in the following over Gerard Brophy played Coles into his stumps for one.Bairstow and Adil Rashid responded by taking the attack to Kent with Bairstow
moving the score along smartly by helping himself to three boundaries in an over
off Nel before twice finding the rope against Coles.Two short stoppages for the thinnest of drizzle which barely wet the ground
drew some barracking from Yorkshire fans, but when play did resume Rashid drove
Cook gloriously through the covers for four. Further light rain brought forward the tea interval and, when play finally re-started 70 minutes later, 14 overs had been lost. The sixth-wicket stand moved on to 65 in 13 overs before Rashid drove wildly at Nel and was caught behind by Geraint Jones for 29 off 37 balls with five fours.Another useful stand began to develop between Bairstow and Ajmal Shahzad as
Yorkshire closed in on a valuable batting bonus point and Shahzad gained in
confidence with a couple of fine cover drives. Bairstow pulled Coles for four to reach a sparkling 50 – his eighth half-century of the season. It contained nine boundaries and came off 81 balls.Although time had earlier been lost when it was virtually dry, play was now
able to continue while rain fell in the near distance and a cheer went up when
Shahzad found the square-leg boundary off Nel to secure a batting point at 200
for six. The same over saw Ajmal dismissed for 21 as he moved into his stumps and was
lbw to bring Nel his fourth wicket, but soon afterwards bad light ended play for
the day.

Suspended Pakistan trio file replies to ICC

The three Pakistani players provisionally suspended by the ICC on allegations of spot-fixing have filed appeals against their suspension

Osman Samiuddin and Nagraj Gollapudi14-Sep-2010The three Pakistani players provisionally suspended by the ICC on allegations of spot-fixing began the process of clearing their names by filing replies to the game’s governing body on Tuesday.”Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir have filed their replies to the notice of charge that the ICC had placed upon them,” Taffazul Rizvi, the PCB’s legal advisor, told ESPNcricinfo. Though the trio are back in Pakistan, the replies were filed through their London-based lawyer Elizabeth Robertson.The three players were served notices on September 2 after the ICC felt they had “a case to answer” and had two weeks – till the coming Thursday – to respond.ICC officials, however, offered no comment on receiving the replies from the three Pakistan players. “The ICC will not rush into any sort of decision,” a source close to the investigation said. “It might take a lot of time and nobody really knows how much before anything is decided,”ESPNcricinfo understands that the players have entered a plea of not guilty and have asked for the provisional suspensions to be lifted. It is likely that the players are seeking both extra evidence and time on the matter; the request for more time is a result of the PCB and players’ concern that the Scotland Yard investigations are still on and if the ICC pursues the investigation as well, the players may end up being punished twice.Since the players have filed their replies, the ICC can go ahead and form its tribunal to hear the case. Otherwise the governing body would have had to wait until the actual charge sheet was placed before the disciplinary committee and punishments were handed out. The three-member tribunal is chosen from the members of the Code of Conduct Commission, and generally includes the chairman, currently Michael Beloff QC.The three players were questioned twice by police in London before returning to Pakistan, firstly in the immediate aftermath of the original story breaking then again a week later at Kilburn police station in north London. No charges were brought at any stage and the three flew back to Pakistan on Friday , but with an agreement with Scotland Yard that they would return at any time for further questioning.

Chance for youngsters to showcase their talent

Cricinfo looks ahead to the what essentially now is a two-match ODI series between India and Australia

The Preview by Sriram Veera19-Oct-2010

Match Facts

Wednesday, October 20, Visakhapatnam

Start time 14:30 (09:00 GMT)Can Ravindra Jadeja cement his ODI spot with good performances?•AFP

The Big Picture

This is the series for lesser-known players to make a name for themselves and grab a permanent spot in the one-day team, that is, if the weather would allow them. The first ODI was washed out and it’s very humid in Visakhapatnam, but showers have only been forecast for Thursday, the day after the match. If the dark clouds can stay away on the match day, however, youngsters like R Ashwin, Mitchell Starc and Ravindra Jadeja will breathe easy.The continuing presence of Jadeja in the playing XI has baffled many an Indian fan. Here are his stats: A bowling average of 41.55 and a batting average of 31.47 at a strike rate of 76.97. He hasn’t sparkled with the bat or the ball with any consistency; the best (only?) thing going for him is his economy rate in ODIs: 4.84. MS Dhoni has pointed out what he thinks Jadeja should do: “For a player like him, it is very important to contribute with the bat and ball. He has to do a bit more with the bat.”His bowling has increasingly been backed by his captain: he has bowled his full quota of 10 overs nine times and seven of those occasions have come in 2010. His direct competition until recently was Yusuf Pathan: Yusuf’s strike rate is over 100 but he averages just 22.11. His bowling average is 40.66, slightly better than Jadeja, but his economy rate of 5.75 is almost a run higher.Is R Ashwin the man, then, to replace Jadeja? Ashwin is a much better bowler than Jadeja, and has a lower economy rate when you compare their performances in domestic circuit. In more than half of those matches, Ashwin had yet to use his new tools, like the carom ball; he is a more complete bowler now. Jadeja’s batting is better than Ashwin’s, but he lacks the skills to demolish a good attack. So it will come to what the team management needs from the player who fills that spot: is it a bowler who can bat a bit or batsman who can bowl? Ashwin fulfills the first requirement while Jadeja hasn’t quite managed to fill the second. Both will play in this series and the one against New Zealand, which should help the selectors to decide between them, or perhaps even go back to Yusuf, for the World Cup.Australia too have a few youngsters in the squad and one of them, Mitchell Starc, might get his chance tomorrow as Doug Bollinger is a doubtful starter. “Obviously I’d love him [Bollinger] to play both these one-dayers but I think we also need to be smart with what we’ve got coming up,” Michael Clarke said today. If Bollinger doesn’t play, Starc might make his debut. Those who have followed his career rate him very highly. He has a pre-release load-up like Mitchell Johnson but gets more bounce. He even has a first-class fifty. The experts reckon he is a bit raw now but is likely to put up a stiff fight to his more established team-mates in a year’s time.This series also will reveal the position of Shaun Marsh in the team. Will he play as an opener? If not, he will have to fight with the talented Callum Ferguson for a spot in the middle-order.

Form guide

(most recent first)

India LWLWL
Australia WWLLL

Watch out for…

David Warner is yet to learn how to construct a long innings. “Due to the volume of twenty20 cricket I have played over the past year, being able to actually play myself in and build an innings is something I am not all that used to,” he wrote recently. These two games offer him an opportunity to do it in on the international stage. We know he has the power-packed shots; does he have the skill to build an innings? We shall soon find out.Ashish Nehra ‘s confidence is his strength. He was in the wilderness for more than two years but every time you met him, he would say it was just matter of getting fit and he would be back into the Indian team. To him, it was never a question about his skill; it was just his body that was playing truant. Ever since his return he has been Dhoni’s go-to man under pressure. It’s Nehra who bowls in the batting Powerplay, its Nehra who bowls in the end overs and its Nehra who often has to take the wicket with the new ball too. It would be very interesting to see how he fares against his nemesis – Australia.

Team news

Shikhar Dhawan will make his ODI debut and Dhoni has already said that Saurabh Tiwary is likely to get one game in this series.India (probable): 1 M Vijay, 2 Shikhar Dhawan, 3 Suresh Raina, 4 Yuvraj Singh, 5 Virat Kohli/Rohit Sharma, 6 MS Dhoni (capt and wk), 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Praveen Kumar, 10 Ashish Nehra, 11 Munaf Patel.Doug Bollinger is yet to fully recover from the abdominal strain that ruled him out of the Bangalore Test. He bowled for the first time in the training today and his fitness will be assessed on the morning of the match before they make a call. Fast bowler Mitchell Starc is likely to make his debut in case Bollinger misses out.Australia (probable) 1 David Warner, 2 Tim Paine (wk), 3 Michael Clarke (capt), 4 Shaun Marsh/Callum Ferguson, 5 Michael Hussey, 6 Cameron White, 7 Steve Smith, 8 James Hopes, 9 Nathan Hauritz, 10 Clint McKay, 11 Doug Bollinger/Mitchell Starc.

Pitch and conditions

It’s currently prickly hot with high humidity indicating that rain might be just around the corner.

Stats and trivia

  • The beautiful stadium, located on the National Highway 5, has hosted just two ODIs. This is where MS Dhoni announced himself with a violent 123-ball 148 against Pakistan. Sri Lanka’s Chamara Silva is the only other centurion on this ground.
  • Nehra averages a very respectable 30.54 in ODIs, but it would be an understatement to say that he has struggled against Australia. In 12 games against them, he has an average of 51.75 and an economy rate of 6.14.
  • Cameron White’s stats get better against India. He averages about 36 with the bat but against India it jumps to 42.16 from seven games. His strike rate against India is 84.61 which is higher than his career strike rate and he has also hit eight sixes – about 22% of his total sixes – against India.
  • India have a poor record of chasing against Australia: They have lost 34 games and won only 17 while batting second against them.

    Quotes

    “We’ve still managed to enjoy it, to be honest. Plenty of time in the gym together but now we’re keen to get back on the cricket field. One benefit of not playing too much cricket is a lot of guys have been able to do their fitness work”

    .”It will be a big learning curve for all youngsters. It’s very important to live in the present… Small and basic things that needs to be done correctly to make a mark at the big level. I won’t put extra pressure on them.”
    .

Katich and North wary of Anderson threat

Australia will be looking to the heavens in the build-up to the Ashes opener, after another showery morning increased the probability of a seaming wicket for the first Test at the Gabba

Andrew Miller in Brisbane22-Nov-2010Australia’s batsmen will be looking to the heavens in the build-up to Thursday’s Ashes opener, after another showery morning in Brisbane increased the probability of a green, seaming wicket at the Gabba. Despite their formidable record at the venue, at which they haven’t lost a Test since West Indies’ heyday in 1988-89, the Aussies are already braced for one of their stiffest Gabba challenges of recent times, with Simon Katich and Marcus North both earmarking James Anderson as England’s most potent wicket-taking threat.Both men know his capabilities all too well, for Anderson played a crucial role in England’s 2009 Ashes victory, instigating consecutive first-innings batting collapses at both Lord’s and Edgbaston. However, Anderson’s reputation in Australian eyes remains tarnished by his inglorious role in the 2006-07 whitewash. On that tour, he claimed five wickets at 82.60 in three appearances, and proved especially ineffective in the opening Test in Brisbane, in which his solitary wicket cost 195 runs.This time around, however, the improbably damp weather in Queensland, coupled with Anderson’s burgeoning maturity, have ensured that he receives a cautious degree of respect from his opponents. At times during the recent home series against Pakistan he was unplayable, claiming 23 wickets at 13.73 in his four Tests, including his maiden ten-wicket haul at Trent Bridge, which he bagged only days after Australia had themselves been dismissed for 88 by Pakistan in the second Test of their neutral series at Headingley.”I wouldn’t look at what he did four years ago, that’s a long time ago,” said Katich. “It was against different players, he’s a much improved player since then, and you’ve got to give guys credit, they can improve. Four years is a long time in cricket, and he’s now at an age where he’s more mature, and knows his game better. Hopefully the conditions here will pose different problems for him, but he’s had a great 12 months so I wouldn’t read too much into what he did four years ago.”Anderson’s tour to date has been effective without being earth-shattering, with six wickets at 28.33 in the first two warm-up games in Perth and Adelaide before he, along with his fellow frontline bowlers, was rested for the four-day game against Australia A in Hobart last week. However, the arid conditions he faced in those two matches were a far cry from the humid environment that he can expect at the Gabba in the coming days, and that is a factor that Katich recognises only too well.”[This summer’s] been totally different to usual, it’s been really wet, and without a doubt I expect movement,” he said. “There’s been a lot of talk here that the ball won’t swing around as much as in England, but there’s no doubt the ball does swing here, otherwise bowlers would get pretty frustrated.  That’s particularly true in places like Brisbane where it’s humid. It’s nice when the sun’s out but that’s been few and far between. There’s no doubt that can play a part with conditions. In Australia we’re used to playing in the sun, so hopefully it will come back out for us.”Aside from taking him on in the 2009 Ashes, North has an inside track on Anderson’s game having played alongside him during a brief stint as Lancashire’s overseas player in the summer of 2005. Anderson at the time was out of favour at international level, and played no part in that summer’s epic Ashes campaign, but North is in no doubt how far his career has developed in the intervening period.”I think Jimmy has proven to be a world-class bowler,” said North. “When the conditions swing he’s very, very dangerous. I guess he has had a big impact in English conditions, although back [here] in 2006 it didn’t really go his way. I guess if the Kookaburra ball doesn’t swing he’ll be under pressure, but he’s proven himself in all sorts of conditions. You can’t really judge somebody on the strength of one series. We’ll see how he goes over the next five Test matches and get a better understanding of how he can adapt to Australian conditions.”Up here the ball tends to stay pretty good,” he added. “It doesn’t get roughed up, it’s a beautiful outfield [at the Gabba] and in the humid conditions you can try to get it to swing. If the sun stays out it might be difficult for both teams, but if he’s going to enjoy swinging conditions, then this is one of the grounds around the country.”Katich, who has now recovered from the broken thumb that he sustained during the tour of India in October, is steeling himself for a war of attrition against England’s bowlers, whom he recognises have the ability to put dents in a batting line-up that has proved susceptible to dramatic collapses in recent months.”It’s a matter of trying to bunker down for half an hour or an hour to limit the damage, and if you can do that it’s amazing what happens,” he said. “The sun can come out, the game can change, particularly in England. Here in Australia, it’s a bit different because we generally play in sunshine so you don’t get those evil conditions so much. But it could happen at the Gabba because the weather has been so patchy. If it is like that, we’ll just have to bunker down for whatever time it takes to get through those periods.””If it’s an overcast day the ball will definitely swing, so in my mind I’m prepared for a tough battle,” he added. “The Kookaburra does swing, probably not to the same extent as the Duke but it still does. It’s easy to say the ball doesn’t swing in Australia, but that’s not entirely true.”There is, however, one unquantifiable factor that will play into Australia’s hands, regardless of the conditions, and that is their thirst for revenge. Four years ago, arguably their greatest team of all time made England pay for their 2005 victory by routing them 5-0 in the return series, and while that sort of a scoreline is wildly improbable this time around, the desire of the current Australian generation to win back the Ashes is no less ardent.”It’s definitely a motivation,” said North. “There’s nothing negative about [the 2009 defeat], it is what it was, and disappointing as it was for us and supporters, it’s been turned into a motivating feeling. As a professional sportsman you remember the good times but you also remember the times when it hurts, and you use that to better yourself, and your team.”But it promises to be a tough challenge, nonetheless. “I respect all their bowlers,” said Katich. “There’s no doubt they’ve all got ability, they wouldn’t be playing for England if they didn’t, and they all bring different things to the table. [Stuart] Broad and [Steven] Finn are quite tall so get bounce and can move the ball about, Anderson is an out-and-out swing bowler who can bowl at reasonable pace, and [Graeme] Swann is one of the best spinners in the world, if not the best. It’s a very well-balanced bowling line-up and we know we got tested last year in England. Hopefully in our conditions it will be a little better for us, but time will tell.”

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