Showing posts with label Jonathan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jonathan. Show all posts

Sunday, January 30, 2011

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

England's Jonathan Trott aims to become the new Paul Collingwood after successful bowling spell in fourth ODI

After producing a match-winning display with bat and ball in England's 21-run win in the fourth one-day international against Australia in Adelaide on Wednesday, Trott revealed he wants to fill the role Paul Collingwood has left in the Test side as a batting all-rounder.

Trott hit his second one-day century at the Adelaide Oval to be the cornerstone of England's 299 for eight - their highest total against Australia on their soil.

The 29 year-old then claimed the crucial wickets of Cameron White and David Hussey, who had been threatening England's total with a 60-run partnership.

While Trott knows he still has plenty of work to do to improve his self-confessed "bits and pieces" bowling - his wickets yesterday were his first in international cricket - he is hopeful he can play a role with the ball following Collingwood's retirement from Test cricket at the end of the Ashes.

"I've had a chat with (bowling coach) David Saker and we're going to work hard at that," he said.

"If I could bowl like Colly has in this tour then definitely I can help the side.

"When called upon to bowl it is always nice to contribute.

"I know how cricket can be, it can be a nice game and it can be a horrible game sometimes."

The Warwickshire right-hander admitted, however, that it was his 102 from 126 balls that gave him the most satisfaction yesterday.

Trott also praised Matt Prior's heavy-handed 67 from 58 balls at the top of the order, after the wicketkeeper-batsman had been under some scrutiny following back-to-back ducks since his surprise World Cup call, for allowing him to construct his match-winning innings, which included six boundaries.

"Obviously I'm in the team to get hundreds. I was very happy to do that and set up a very good total," he said.

"With the way Matt Prior was going, for me is was just knocking it around and picking up the odd boundary when it came around - he always made it easier for me.

"When we lost the three wickets it was important that we didn't have what happened in Sydney with a progression of wickets.

"It was important that I hung around.

"I was a little bit disappointed to get out in the manner I did towards the end with the powerplay looming.

"That's something to work on for future games with batting and setting totals or chasing them."

Trott's century was his third of a hugely-successful tour to leave Australia stand-in skipper Michael Clarke in no doubt that the right-hander, who has not always been a one-day regular, has a key role to play for England ahead of the start of the World Cup next month.

"I think the earlier he gets in probably the better for him and the more it suits his game and allows him to play freely," he said.

"He's in pretty good nick and he batted really well. I thought he held the innings together really well, the other guys had the opportunity to play around him."

England's Jonathan Trott aims to become the new Paul Collingwood after successful bowling spell in fourth ODI Englands,Jonathan,Trott,become,Collingwood,after,successful,bowling,spell,fourth http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/international/england/8285507/Englands-Jonathan-Trott-aims-to-become-the-new-Paul-Collingwood-after-successful-bowling-spell-in-fourth-ODI.html