Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts

Friday, 30 August 2013

Ashes 2013: Australia face further misery as seamer Ryan Harris faces fitness battle ahead of winter Test series

Harris, 33, was Australia's man of the series in the recent Test tour of England - claiming 24 wickets at 19.58 in four matches.

That was the first time he has ever played four Tests in a row due to a career-long battle with fitness problems.

Indeed, he has worn the Baggy Green just 16 times since his debut in March 2010 despite being considered one of his country's most incisive bowlers and boasting a superb record.

A Cricket Australia statement read: "Ryan Harris injured his right hamstring during the latter part of the second innings on the fifth Ashes Test. He had to leave the field and did not return to the game as he was unable to bowl.

"He was assessed after arriving back in Australia today and is expected to be unavailable to play for the next 6-8 weeks."

He was left out of this summer's Ashes opener at Trent Bridge but was arguably the most consistent pace man from either side after his belated arrival in the Lord's Test.

Speaking after taking five wickets in his first innings of the series, Harris said his ambition stretched only as far as flying home with his team-mates when the time came, rather than alone with yet another injury.

He managed that in the end, but only just. He was forced to watch the thrilling climax to the final Test from the dressing room at the Kia Oval having felt his hamstring tighten.

The first Test in Brisbane begins on November 21, leaving Harris with limited rehabilitation time should his recovery be completed as expected.

It is the latest in a succession of fitness issues among Australia's talented pace division, with Pat Cummins, James Pattinson and Jackson Bird all being struck down with back injuries in the last few weeks.


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Monday, 26 August 2013

Ashes 2013: England coach Andy Flower 'to quit after winter series in Australia'

Flower is due to give a press conference when the present series ends at the Kia Oval later today, when he will be asked about a claim in a Sunday newspaper that he will be replaced by England 20-and-50-over coach Ashley Giles.

The report in the Sunday People said Flower has agreed with the England and Wales Cricket Board that he will step down after the series in Australia, when he will be trying to oversee a fourth Ashes victory since becoming England head coach in April 2009.

The speculation over his future comes even though England need only to lose fewer than 16 wickets today to equal their best result in an Ashes series at home.

Moreover, when England won 3-0 in 1977, Australian cricket was in a state of serious schism because half of their team had signed for the World Series and the other half had not, while in 1886 Australian cricket had no national governing body to organise and select their team.

This series is not quite over yet, however, because a minimum of 98 overs are scheduled for the final day, and the very prospect of going down as the equal-biggest losers in their history will spur Michael Clarke's Australia to produce one last effort.

Australia first have to prevent England scoring 46 more runs to reach their follow-on target of 293. After the pitch has been under cover for two nights and yesterday's washout, Australia's pace bowlers are likely to find it a suitable morning for swing and seam, so Ian Bell's job is not yet completed even though he is averaging 75.

The rest of England's batting consists of two debutants in Chris Woakes and Simon Kerrigan, a wicketkeeper who has scored 86 runs in this series, and the two older heads of Stuart Broad and Graeme Swann. As the self-styled engine room of this England side, Matt Prior, Broad and Swann need to rev up this morning for England to finish on a high note.

After conceding 30 in his first five overs, Woakes has settled in as the game has gone on. Kerrigan's chance of redemption lies in England saving the follow-on handsomely, then Australia batting out the last few overs without anything left to play for, when he would have the chance of a rehabilitating bowl.

Even so, England's selection here has been proved wrong: the intention, without question, was to pick the 11 best equipped in the selectors' opinion to win this match, but the consequence was to throw an added weight on to the shoulders of James Anderson, just as the selection of Steve Finn ahead of Tim Bresnan did in the opening Test at Trent Bridge, Bresnan's most successful ground.

If England only just save the follow-on, Clarke would still have one last dice to throw in his attempt to avoid doing down in Australian history alongside Greg Chappell and Hugh Scott, his two unillustrious predecessors.

Ten to 20 overs of hitting by David Warner and Shane Watson would then give Clarke enough runs to set a declaration, and the best part of two sessions to bowl England out a second time. Anderson and Broad would slow England's overrate down, but not so much as to risk a penalty for their captain, Alastair Cook.

However low that declaration target is, England will not be keen to embark on a run chase. But having been criticised widely for their defensiveness in this match - Australia's debutant James Faulkner suggested last night that spectators on Friday should be given their money back - there could come a point when England would feel embarrassed not to chase: if Clarke sets 200 in 60 overs, for example, they might feel obliged to have a go.

Yet the luck in this series is forecast to favour England until the very last as showers are predicted. The pattern has been astonishingly consistent: when England have won the toss and batted first, they have won, but when Australia have won the toss and piled up a big total, rain has helped England to draw.

If England do avoid defeat today, they will go second in the ICC Test rankings; Australia will go fifth, whatever today's result.


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Snicko 'could be used in winter Ashes'

Umpiring aid Snicko could be used in this winter's Ashes series between England and hosts Australia.

International Cricket Council chief executive Dave Richardson says the use of Snicko - which detects edges using sound - will be considered following problems with technology this summer.

There have been calls for thermal-imaging system Hot Spot to be scrapped.

"Snicko will probably be the first bit of technology introduced - it's always been reliable," said Richardson.

Snicko

Snicko uses soundwaves to try to detect if the batsman has edged a ball, while Hot Spot uses thermal imaging cameras. While there have been instances where a faint edge has not shown up on Hot Spot, it is hoped the two could work together to create a better decision review system.

Snicko uses sound from stump microphones to help detect if a batsman has edged the ball.

The technology has not been available to third umpires this summer because there is too much of a delay in synchronising television pictures with the sound provided by the microphones, but a new real-time Snicko is currently being tested.

"Without getting too technical it's quite an involved process to make sure the sound gets to you at the same time [as the TV pictures] and is synchronised perfectly with where the ball is," Richardson told BBC Radio 5 live's Sportsweek programme.

There have been a number of high-profile umpiring mistakes which have not been corrected despite using the decision review system - where teams can refer decisions made on the field to the third umpire - during this summer's Ashes.

Following the first Test at Trent Bridge, the ICC had to admit Jonathan Trott should not have been given out lbw after getting an inside edge.

Trott was initially given not out, but was dismissed by third umpire Marais Erasmus when Australia used DRS, because a key Hot Spot camera angle was not available to the South African.

Later in the same match, England's Stuart Broad edged to first slip, via a deflection off the wicketkeeper, but he was given not out and the decision stood because Australia had used up both of their allotted reviews.

Richardson is keen for a review of DRS, but pointed out that technology has enabled the umpires to get more decisions right than if they did not have access to it.

"What we need to do now is to take stock, review the statistics," said Richardson. "Looking back over the five Tests this summer, without DRS we would have had a correct decision rate of about 91% , which is lower than we would have liked and lower than the average, but with DRS we ended up with the correct decisions up around 97%.

"I don't think a 100% success rate is achievable because technology can sometimes fail and the umpires, even with technology, might make a mistake where judgement is concerned."

Real-time Snicko is expected to be the first piece of new technology implemented, possibly alongside Hot Spot.

"The good thing with Hot Spot is that when there is a mark we know there is an edge," said Richardson. "Sometimes it doesn't pick up the faint edges, we know that. It's going to help get us to 97% but not 100% at the moment.

"There are meetings coming up in September and they could have the authority to sanction Snicko's use."


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