Showing posts with label Cricket. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cricket. Show all posts

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Cricket World Cup 2011: bowling attack holds the key to winning the World Cup, says Kevin Pietersen

Cricket World Cup 2011: bowling attack holds the key to winning the World Cup, says Kevin Pietersen Hard at work: Kevin Pietersen says England's skills have improved dramatically over the past year Photo: GETTY IMAGES

With the Ashes urn sitting alongside the World Twenty20 prize, Pietersen’s next wish is to reach the pinnacle of the 50-over format in Mumbai in April.

While England’s form has been patchy in the one-day series against Australia, Pietersen expects that to change when the first-choice bowling line-up of James Anderson, Stuart Broad (stomach injury), Tim Bresnan (calf) and Graeme Swann (knee and back) reunites for the World Cup. The squad’s rise over the year has convinced Pietersen that England are capable of winning the event for the first time.

“The batsmen have improved, the fielding is top notch, our catching is incredible and our bowling is so skilful,” Pietersen said in Brisbane. “We’ve shown Australia up in a huge way, with the difference in our bowling attack to their bowling attack this summer, with reverse swing and the skill at which we’ve gone about our business. Our skill levels are really, really good.”

England have reached the finals of three World Cups but the closest they came to winning was in 1987, when Australia beat them by seven runs at Kolkata’s Eden Gardens. However, this outfit is conditioned to breaking down barriers, having collected the Twenty20 trophy in the West Indies last year and then raised the urn in Australia for the first time in 24 years.

“The team has been amazing through the last 12 months, winning in the Caribbean, winning the Ashes, winning on Australia Day [in Adelaide] the other day was magnificent for us,” Pietersen said. “To cap off the 12 months with a 50-over World Cup would be pretty surreal. The boys are absolutely buzzing for it.”

The series in Australia is England’s last official on-field engagement before their hectic schedule turns them home for three days. They then head to Bangladesh for a couple of warm-up matches and the opening exchanges of the World Cup.

Players who have been with the squad since November have started to feel flat and a mixture of fatigue and a post-Ashes hangover contributed to the slow start to the limited-overs campaign. Life in the subcontinent will be even more hectic as the sides that reach the final in Mumbai face more than six weeks of navigating through Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and India.

“Our schedule is ridiculous going into this World Cup,” Pietersen said. “It has been for England teams for a very long time. And that’s probably why England have not done well in World Cups.” The proximity of the Ashes tour and the World Cup, which both traditionally run in a four-year cycle, was a major reason for the unusual scheduling of back-to-back Australia-England Test series in 2013-14.

England’s exact World Cup itinerary is currently unclear after the stadium at Eden Gardens, which was due to host the match against India on February 27, was ruled unsuitable to host such an important encounter. “That was the huge game for us, for everybody,” Pietersen said. “So, yes, it’s disappointing, but it might work to our advantage playing at a ground where there’s not 120,000 [spectators] but 50,000.”

Whatever happens to England during the World Cup, Pietersen will be returning to India after the tournament. He was signed for US$650,000 by the Deccan Chargers IPL side this month, a fee which was less than half his US$1.55million price from Bangalore in 2009. The new value ranks him below his team-mates Dale Steyn, Cameron White, Daniel Christian and Kumar Sangakkara.

“It’s not a mere $650,000,” Pietersen said. “I’ve always said whatever you get in the IPL is an absolute bonus. We’re fortunate enough to have five weeks, and who earns that kind of money in five weeks? Nobody, unless you’re Rooney or Lampard or Ronaldo or John Terry. You look at it and just say, ‘We’re very fortunate’.” Despite his complaints about England’s draining schedule, Pietersen had no second thoughts about rejoining the IPL, preferring to cash-in rather than rest or play county cricket ahead of the international home summer.

“You’d be a fool not to put your name into the hat,” he said.

“All the England lads put their name in the hat for this IPL because you never know what’s round the corner. You want to potentially earn as much as you can earn, as well as making as many friends as you can along the way.”

Pietersen also faces a different Indian experience after admitting he didn’t know where the Deccan franchise was based. He will be spending most of his time in the information technology hub of Hyderabad, which could be valuable after his latest online misadventure.

He was furious that the winning bid of his Twitter auction to support Queensland’s flood victims was a fake. Initially Pietersen was hugely satisfied to learn his prize of a trip to Perth for the final one-day international against Australia next Sunday (Feb 6) had sold for £31,800.

When the winner was contacted he claimed his account had been broken into, leaving Pietersen hacked off. “It is so frustrating and disappointing that somebody can do that,” he said. “It’s as low as it gets, like looting a store after it’s been flooded.” Pietersen was left hoping one of the other bidders would make another offer in time to fly to the game. “I could only do what I’ve done,” he said. “I haven’t done absolutely anything to warrant this kind of thing.” The fourth one-day international in Brisbane turned into a fund-raiser for those affected by the devastating floods a fortnight ago, which killed 22 people and caused £2.5 billion of damage. Pietersen said the quick clean-up of the city — “it doesn’t look like anything has happened” — was “absolutely incredible”.

Australia’s players visited schools around Brisbane on Friday that were affected by the disaster and Michael Clarke, Australia’s captain, said the scene put his glamorous life in perspective. “We’ve seen so many houses where the actual structure was still there but the whole inside was destroyed, empty,” he said. “It was a little bit like a ghost town.”

Cricket World Cup 2011: bowling attack holds the key to winning the World Cup, says Kevin Pietersen Cricket,World,bowling,attack,holds,winning,World,Kevin,Pietersen http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/international/england/8290774/Cricket-World-Cup-2011-bowling-attack-holds-the-key-to-winning-the-World-Cup-says-Kevin-Pietersen.html

Cricket World Cup 2011: Asia pace will test Jonathan Trott's staying power

Cricket World Cup 2011: Asia pace will test Jonathan Trott's staying power: Jonathan Trott Setting the pace: Jonathan Trott may struggle against spinners and medium-pacers on the subcontinental pitches Photo: AFP

You can face the same sort of delivery that Harold Larwood would have bowled without exhuming him. But one thing that cannot be done is to make Jonathan Trott face his own bowling on a slow pitch in Asia.

And that is what England would like to do before the World Cup: to see how Trott would bat without any pace on the ball, when delivered by a spinner or a medium-pacer like himself.

He can bat through an innings, like nobody else in this fatigued England side; he can bat until the cows come home. But could he force the pace at the knock-out stage of the World Cup?

England would never dream of going into a one-day tournament with a settled XI, but whereas in previous World Cups this has been because some of England’s one-day batsmen have been so unproductive they have had to be dropped, this time it is because Trott has made an irresistible case.

He has stopped England being dismissed in less than 50 overs by Australia, and therefore he cannot be dropped, even though those suspicions remain.

It would be so convenient if Trott can grow into the No3 position, rapidly, as a batting all-rounder.

For although he hasn’t bowled on this interminable tour until now, Trott has plenty of experience of one-day bowling and was cheerfully doing the job at the death for Warwickshire when he forced his way into the England Test side and had more urgent matters.

If he and Paul Collingwood can be relied on for 10 overs between them, every time, England will bat deep and only have to pick four bowlers out of James Anderson, Stuart Broad, Tim Bresnan, Graeme Swann and Mike Yardy.

When there is pace on the ball, Trott is fine, working all the angles on the leg side. But when he has to put pace on the ball, the options are limited.

He doesn’t do sixes: six-hour vigils, yes, but not sixes over the rope. He has yet to hit his first in Test or one-day internationals, although the slog-sweep that he unleashed during his Adelaide century could be the portent of one.

But it was when David Hussey came on with his part-time offbreaks that we had an earnest of what might await in the World Cup: not in the qualifiers against Netherlands and their like, or even against India wherever that qualifier might be staged now that Kolkata’s Eden Gardens has been stripped of its plum fixture — and (don’t forget the politics) the president of the local association taken down a few pegs.

But in a semi-final against a team packed with spinners on a turning pitch, all of England’s top three of Andrew Strauss, Matt Prior and Trott are going to labour without pace on the ball.

Even though he had posted his hundred, Trott at Adelaide failed to get a single one of Hussey’s four offbreaks off the square and chopped on the last of them.

As with all batsmen, there is one thing that cannot be coached once he has passed his teens: the ability to run down the pitch at spinners with certainty. This has to be programmed in from an early age, and is with Asian batsmen, as a rule, but not those from England and the southern hemisphere.

If England’s top order are bogged down by spin in the World Cup, the truth is that only Kevin Pietersen can bale them out. And the trouble there is that Trott and Pietersen have no history of partnerships together; two men from similar backgrounds have been like poles repulsing so far.

Their only major partnership to date ended with the poles at the same end and Pietersen run out in the Centurion Test, which England only just saved thereafter.

Trott is so absorbed in batting through an innings that ‘calling’ sometimes seems to be a distraction. But at least this is an excess of what has nowadays become a rare virtue.

Cricket World Cup 2011: Asia pace will test Jonathan Trott's staying power Cricket,World,Jonathan,Trotts,staying,power http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/international/england/8289545/Cricket-World-Cup-2011-Asia-pace-will-test-Jonathan-Trotts-staying-power.html

Cricket World Cup 2011: fans in uproar as India v England clash is switched at the 11th hour

The venue is one of the game’s greatest, and Gullivers Sports Travel had organised a five-day trip for England fans just for that match.

Cricinfo call Eden Gardens 'cricket’s answer to the Coliseum’, and it has housed 90,000 fans. England’s appearances there are rare. The last Test they played there was in 1993, and it is nine years since they appeared in a one-day international.

An alternative venue, likely to be Bangalore, is being pursued by the Board of Control for Cricket in India.

“Regrettably, Eden Gardens has not made sufficient progress to justify the level of confidence required to confirm that the venue would be ready in good time,” ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat said. “It is absolutely necessary.”

The ICC was unable to confirm if three other matches scheduled for Eden Gardens — South Africa v Ireland on March 15, Ireland v Holland on March 18, and Kenya v Zimbabwe two days later – would remain at the venue.

Lancashire are to announce a record loss for a county as a delay over a major redevelopment of Old Trafford threatens its Test future.

The projected losses are believed to be around £2?million, four times the deficit they posted in 2009.

The absence of an Ashes Test was blamed for Lancashire’s £546,000 loss in their last accounts. This time professional fees of £1.5 million have worsened their plight. “It will be comfortably the biggest loss we have ever made,” said chief executive Jim Cumbes. “In fact, it will probably be the biggest loss any county club has made in the history of the game.”

Cricket World Cup 2011: fans in uproar as India v England clash is switched at the 11th hour Cricket,World,uproar,India,England,clash,switched http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/cricket-world-cup/8287591/Cricket-World-Cup-2011-fans-in-uproar-as-India-v-England-clash-is-switched-at-the-11th-hour.html