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| Wednesday, 3 April, 2002, 09:40 GMT 10:40 UK Good winter's work Nasser Hussain's side dominated much of the winter A drawn Test series in New Zealand was a disappointment but, says Thrasy Petropoulos, England return from their winter tours with more positives than negatives. England will feel that they have fallen from a great height by failing to win a series that they dominated for two Tests. But with time they will view the defeat in Auckland in a very different light.
Had they gained an improbable victory, as it seemed they might when they were rattling along at five runs per over in the morning, or secured a draw, they would have won their third successive series abroad. Instead, they dropped valuable World Test Championship points by failing to repeat their series victory of six years ago, a result which sees them drop to fourth in the table. But it was only two weeks ago that England comprehensively outplayed New Zealand in Christchurch, Nathan Astle's whirlwind double-century notwithstanding. And last week they showed considerable courage to even compete, let alone dictate terms, in Wellington after the news, during the third morning's play, of Ben Hollioake's death in a car crash. It should also not be forgotten that in India they surpassed all expectations - including, if the players are honest with themselves, their own - by dominating the last two Tests, despite losing the first.
Now, for the second winter running, they showed themselves able to adjust to the threat of a world-class spinner - this time Harbhajan Singh - and score at a healthy rate in the process. By the time they came to face New Zealand's Daniel Vettori, there was no contest. In 31 overs during the first Tests in Christchurch, Vettori conceded 123 runs and went wicketless. Without the expected control from their left-arm spinner, New Zealand were rudderless. Strike force Those figures were, of course, dented by the two batting performances of the tour, Graham Thorpe's unbeaten 200 and Andrew Flintoff's 137. Flintoff was at it again during the second Test, contributing savage 75 from 44 balls.
But it was for his performances with the ball, specifically in India where he was genuinely hostile, that he was singled out by coach Duncan Fletcher as the player of the winter. With Matthew Hoggard again looking every inch a Test match opening bowler, and Andrew Caddick, absent from the Tests in India, finding his range with successive six-wicket hauls against New Zealand, Darren Gough is far from certain to reclaim his place this summer. And it is to those summer opponents, Sri Lanka and India, that attention must now turn. Though the bowling is unlikely to alter beyond Gough's challenge, and perhaps that of Durham's Steve Harmison, changes can be expected in the batting line-up. Mark Ramprakash's inability to pass a top score of 58, despite reaching double figures in eight of his 10 Test innings, will surely herald his return to the county ranks. And Michael Vaughan and Mark Butcher were again dismissed too often on the wrong side of 50 having more often than not bedded in, apparently in no trouble at all. Of those waiting in the wings, Warwickshire's 19-year-old batting prodigy Ian Bell seems likely to be given a chance in the near future, quite possibly for the first Test of the summer, against Sri Lanka.
In the one-day arena, Stewart could well reclaim his place, if only because of the World Cup early next year. But while Foster is showing signs of progress with every Test that passes, slowly improving his keeping and batting solidly in every innings in New Zealand and two out of four in India, there is little to be gained from discarding him now. When the Auckland dust has settled, Nasser Hussain, the most consistent batsman of the winter, will doubtless tell his players that they should hold their heads high for having played positive cricket in testing circumstances. It is a measure of the progress England have made, however, that drawing is no longer enough. |
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