Showing posts with label peter moores. Show all posts
Showing posts with label peter moores. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 July 2015

The Ashes 2015 preview: Play without fear

ASHES 2015 SCHEDULE
8-12 JulyFIRST TESTSophia Gardens, Cardiff
16-20 JulySECOND TESTLord's, London
29-2 AugustTHIRD TESTEdgbaston, Birmingham
6-10 AugustFOURTH TESTTrent Bridge, Nottingham
20-24 AugustFIFTH TESTThe Oval, London

ENGLAND must play without fear to stand any chance of recovering the Ashes from Australia this summer, according to former skipper Michael Vaughan.

Vaughan, who led England to a first series win over the Aussies in 18 years back in 2005, said: "They have to take Australia on with the mentality of 'we don't care about losing' because that will make the Aussies fear them more.

"If they have any kind of worries or concerns, then they will get walloped."

Now - exactly a decade on from the famous victory - England must indeed replicate the sort of nerve which saw Vaughan's men put on over 400 runs on the first day of the second Test at Edgbaston, having been put in by Ricky Ponting.

Still today, Vaughan has said he wonders what would have become of his talented side if Australia had batted first at Birmingham, and racked up a big score of their own.

England, having lost the first Test at Lord's, would have most likely faced a 2-0 deficit - and it would have been another missed opportunity.

Instead, Vaughan's team would eventually prevail by just two runs in the narrowest margin of victory by runs in Ashes history. And they then went on to take the series.

Ever since, England have been unbeaten in home series against the Baggy Greens, a record which culminated in a 3-0 win two years ago.

Moreover, in the winter of 2010-11, England also won 3-1 Down Under - with three innings victories ending a 24-year wait for success on Australian soil in comprehensive fashion.

But, of course, not all of the series since 2005 have been like that. As a matter of fact, the other two tours to Australia - in 2006-07 and 2013-14 - both resulted in shambolic whitewashes.

Remarkably, those two 5-0 thrashings mean Australia have actually won more individual Ashes Tests than England in the past 10 years, despite the latter winning four of the last six series.

So, rather than 2005 then, England would perhaps be better served by igniting the spirit of a far less heralded home series win - 2009 - which came, like now, just 18 months after a battering.

Then again, maybe not - that 2009 victory came against one of Australia's poorest ever sides.

Therefore, another even better alternative perspective would be to emulate the way in which the Baggy Greens in 2013 went from losing 3-0 in England to beating the same opponents 5-0 less than six months later.

After all, England appear to be in a similar position right now to one in which the Aussies found themselves a couple of years ago.

Back then, Cricket Australia replaced unpopular coach Mickey Arthur with the attack-minded former batsman Darren Lehmann.

And, although Lehmann was unable to prevent a third successive Ashes series defeat in England, the 5-0 whitewash at home vindicated his philosophy and more than made amends.

Since then, Australia have barely looked back. Further Test series successes have followed in South Africa, West Indies and at home to India, all capped by a record fifth World Cup, won on home soil in March.

At the same tournament, England stank the place out in heavy defeats to New Zealand, Australia and Sri Lanka before eventual elimination in the group stages after one final loss to Bangladesh.

So began the end of Peter Moores' second brief stint as England head coach. Dumped on the first occasion in 2009 after just 22 months in charge, this time Moores had an even shorter tenure, lasting less than 14 months.

The decision of former skipper Andrew Strauss, now the Director of Cricket at the ECB, to make the change came following a drawn series against the West Indies only a few weeks after the World Cup debacle.

England had taken the lead in the Caribbean with a confident nine-wicket win in Grenada but then meekly surrendered their advantage in the third Test in Barbados.

At the start of the series, in the drawn first Test in Antigua, James Anderson had become England's highest Test wicket-taker in history with the scalp of Denesh Ramdin.

Meanwhile, in the second Test, Gary Ballance became the third-fastest England batsman to reach 1,000 Test runs

But, by the end of the tour, the feel-good factor had completely dissipated - and Moores was rather unceremoniously fired while England were being washed out in a one-off One-Day International in Ireland.

Paul Farbrace took temporary charge for the New Zealand home series - and, freed from the shackles of the data-obsessed Moores, there was an immediate, if not entirely successful, change.

First, England won a spectacular first Test of the summer at Lord's despite conceding a 134-run deficit on first innings.

And, although the Black Caps fought back at Headingley in Leeds for a deserved share of the spoils in the Test series, England went on to win 3-2 against the World Cup finalists in the One-Dayers.

Better still, they achieved their victories in style - hitting more than 400 in an ODI for the first time in the first match and completing their highest-ever successful run-chase in the fourth before holding their nerve in a decider at Durham.

New permanent England coach, Australian Trevor Bayliss, nevertheless finds himself in a similar situation to Lehmann two years ago in taking up his role on the eve of an Ashes series.

But, unlike Lehmann, Bayliss begins with the pressure and expectation of a home series - and neither does he benefit from being able to work out his opponent's weaknesses in back-to-back campaigns.

At the same time, there is still an easy comparison to be made - and it should be noted that Australia only fully recovered from their nadir by playing positive, no-fear cricket.

Now, England - under Bayliss - must pick up where they left off against New Zealand and do the same, regardless of the Australians' favourites status.

For, undoubtedly, Australia are favourites. The Baggy Greens have an embarrassment of riches in a fast bowlers department spearheaded by a dual Mitchell menace.

Relative youngster Mitchell Starc joins a man who needs no introduction after his exploits in the 2013-14 whitewash, left-armer Johnson - while they can also call upon Josh Hazlewood, Peter Siddle and Ryan Harris' replacement Pat Cummins.

Nathan Lyon has really come on over the past few years as the spinner while number three batsman Steve Smith is currently statistically the best in the world.

By contrast, England are still scratching around a bit and may be a side whose confidence remains a bit fragile.

True, the likes of Joe Root and Ben Stokes have provided much in recent times to be optimistic about - and skipper Alastair Cook rediscovered his best form with the bat against New Zealand.

But doubts continue to plague Cook's captaincy - can he really be as aggressive as his counterpart Michael Clarke if push came to shove?

There are also questions to be answered by England's bowlers.

Behind Anderson and the sometimes erratic Stuart Broad, there is no definitive third seamer - though Durham's Mark Wood has showed encouraging signs. Meanwhile, Moeen Ali looks uncomfortable in the role of a front-line Test spinner.

Yes, Australia are definitely favourites then, especially as a first series draw since 1972 would allow them to retain the urn.

This will sound rather defeatist - and, in isolation, a rare drawn Ashes series would admittedly be a frustrating outcome.

However, an attacking - though obviously fallible - 2-2 result against the Aussies would most likely still be enough to keep English cricket spirits on its recently rediscovered relative high.

Find out if Bayliss and Cook can achieve at least this, starting tomorrow at 10am on SkySports 2, currently re-branded SkySports Ashes.

Alternatively, as ever, radio coverage throughout the summer will be provided by the excellent Test Match Special team on BBC Radio 4 LW and BBC Radio 5Live Sports Xtra.

ASHES HISTORY
OVERALL

IN ENGLAND

SERIESTESTS
SERIESTESTS
ENGLAND31103
1747
AUSTRALIA32128
1446
Drawn589365

Since 2000
2001(H)AUSTRALIA won 4-1
2002-03(A)AUSTRALIA won 4-1
2005(H)ENGLAND won 2-1
2006-07(A)AUSTRALIA won 5-0
2009(H)ENGLAND won 2-1
2010-11(A)ENGLAND won 3-1
2013(H)ENGLAND won 3-0
2013-14(A)AUSTRALIA won 5-0

ASHES 2015 SQUADS
ENGLAND Alastair Cook (c), Moeen Ali, James Anderson, Gary Ballance, Ian Bell, Stuart Broad, Jos Buttler, Steven Finn, Adam Lyth, Adil Rashid, Joe Root, Ben Stokes, Mark Wood

AUSTRALIA Michael Clarke (c), Steve Smith (vc), Brad Haddin (wk), Fawad Ahmed, Josh Hazlewood, Ryan Harris*, Mitchell Johnson, Nathan Lyon, Mitchell Marsh, Shaun Marsh, Peter Nevill (wk), Chris Rogers, Peter Siddle, Mitchell Starc, Adam Voges, David Warner, Shane Watson

*retired due to knee injury and has been replaced by Pat Cummins

Monday, 9 March 2015

Cricket World Cup: Shambolic England dumped out by Bangladesh

CRICKET WORLD CUP
Group A preview - Group B preview - Results sheet
Group update - England review - Group review - Quarter finals - Semi finals - FINAL

SHAMBOLIC England wrote a new chapter in their long and wretched history of Cricket World Cup lows after being knocked out in the group stage by Bangladesh in Adelaide today. 

The Tigers won by 15 runs to qualify for the quarter finals for the first time ever as England failed to progress out of the groups for a third time in the last five editions.

Yes, in fairness to coach Peter Moores and the current squad, English failure at a World Cup is hardly exactly something new - and the 1999 exit at the start of that run actually came on home soil.

But that is not quite a valid comparison. So much has changed about English cricket in the last 16 years, and all of it has been with the intention of preventing a repeat failure. 

The players are now centrally-contracted to the England Cricket Board - and they have been for some time - while the ECB itself is one of the wealthiest organisations in the sport worldwide.

Thus, as unacceptably cringeworthy as the 1999 debacle remains to look back upon, this latest early departure is just about unthinkable, given the resources now involved. 

England even seemed to have produced a clear plan ahead. A whole Ashes tour was moved forward 12 months - and promptly lost 5-0 - to leave the whole of this winter focused on the 50-over format. 

Meanwhile, Kevin Pietersen - the team's undoubted best player - was sacked after claims he was a disruptive influence to the dressing room.

Moores then returned for his second spell as national team coach to set about a rebuilding the side around the captaincy of Alastair Cook. 

But it was at this point that it all started to go very wrong indeed. Cook struggled for form - and, while he recovered his position as Test skipper by the end of last summer, his One-Day record remained dreadfully poor. 

Onto the seven-match autumn tour of Sri Lanka - and, with Cook still unable to make a major contribution, England lost 5-2 and the captain was axed.

Yes, just eight weeks before the start of the World Cup, Irish-born Eoin Morgan was being hastily installed - although, if that had perhaps been the extent of the muddled thinking, it would have been almost forgiveable.

Then, however, the England set-up trumped even its own acclaimed capability for self-destruction. 

Almost throughout the whole build-up, James Taylor had batted at three and Ravi Bopara at six, while Chris Woakes had taken the new ball.

Literally on the eve of the tournament, this all changed. Bopara was replaced by the out-of-practice Gary Ballance and Taylor was moved from three to six to accommodate him. Broad, meanwhile, took the new ball out of Woakes's hands.

Unsurprisingly it did not work - and a clearly unsettled side was roundly thrashed by 111 runs by Australia inside a boisterous and joyous Melbourne Cricket Ground. 

An even bigger defeat came against the other hosts New Zealand in Wellington. There, England were bowled out for 123 and Brendon McCullum's inspired Black Caps knocked the runs required off inside 13 overs. 

It was a spectacularly crushing reverse and left England facing a banana skin of a tie against the auld enemy, Associate nation Scotland.

England did at least win that one - but still found time to collapse unconvincingly from 172-0 after 30 overs to 303-8 - and it was if the 300 mark had become the team's be-all and end-all. 

Certainly, that was the case against Sri Lanka when - having made 309-6 - skipper Morgan defended the total as a "par score" because that is what the data on the laptop read. 

Sadly, England had not realised that this World Cup cannot much be anaylsed on a computer. 

They have not realised the best players in the world - most notably McCullum, AB de Villiers and Kumar Sangakkara - are so intent in putting on such a show that the final score of an innings just cannot be predicted. 

Sangakkara himself and Lahiru Thirimanne proved Morgan so horribly wrong as both made big centuries and the Sri Lankans beat England with the loss of just a single wicket.

It was a third massive loss out of four - and, with Bangladesh benefiting from a washout against the Aussies, left this tie as a must-win for England. 

Why then did Morgan - having won the toss - opt for a nervy chase when a truly big score, ie. more than 300, would have likely batted the Bangladeshis out of the game? 

Perhaps he did not trust or believe England would be able to make that truly big score. There cannot be many other explanations. 

As it happened, the decision to insert Bangladesh did not look a bad one as James Anderson finally got the ball to swing, reducing the Tigers to 8-2. 

At 99-4, England were still well on top - but then Mahmudullah made history, becoming the first Bangladesh player to score a World Cup century, as his side recovered to 275-7. 

Even still, a chase of 276 - though nervy - was highly achievable in Adelaide where one of the boundaries is particularly short.

That certainly looked the case as England reached 97-1 - but Moeen Ali's daft run out belied the jitters which were properly exposed when Ian Bell, Morgan and Taylor all fell in quick succession. 

Joe Root and Jos Buttler tried to rebuild the innings - but, once Root was caught behind with still more than 100 runs required, it was clearly Buttler or bust.

Bust was the outcome - though not before the Somerset-born man made an enterprising 65 from 52 balls. 

His departure, however, truly was the beginning of the end with the unfortunate Chris Jordan adjudged to have been run out two balls later. 

Jordan had actually made his ground with a desperate dive but his bat bounced up as the ball hit the wickets and even Lady Luck had vacated the room. 

Not that England had played well enough to deserve much in the way of favours - even if, amazingly, Woakes and Broad had one last go at an almighty heist. 

Broad, now on the record as fearful of the short ball, hit his first half-tracker for six - and, suddenly, the target was down to 16 off the final two overs. 

England did not score again as Broad and then Anderson had no answer to the pace of Rubel Hossain. 

Finally, it was over. England were out, deservedly out, having recorded one win against Scotland and four losses from their five games. 

Oddly enough, it is a record matched exactly by Afghanistan against whom England face in what is an effective fifth-placed playoff on Friday in Sydney. 

Has there ever been a more ignominious occasion in the history of English cricket?


ENGLAND AT CRICKET WORLD CUP 2015

DateVenueResult
14 Feb 03:30Melbourne AusAUSTRALIA 342-9 beat ENGLAND 231 41.5 by 111 runs
20 Feb 01:00Wellington NZNEW ZEALAND 125-2 12.2 beat ENGLAND 123 33.2 by 8 wickets
22 Feb 22:00Christchurch NZENGLAND 303-8 beat SCOTLAND 184 42.2 by 119 runs
28 Feb 22:00Wellington NZSRI LANKA 312-1 47.2 beat ENGLAND 309-6 by nine wickets
09 Mar 03:30Adelaide AusBANGLADESH 275-7 beat ENGLAND 260 48.3 by 15 runs
13 Mar 03:30Sydney AusENGLAND v AFGHANISTAN
Full results

GROUP A TABLEWLNR
Tie
Run 
rate
Pts
(Q) NEW ZEALAND500+3.0910
(Q) AUSTRALIA311+1.607
(Q) BANGLADESH311+0.217
(Q) SRI LANKA320-0.156
ENGLAND140-1.002
AFGHANISTAN140-1.882
SCOTLAND040-1.420

ENGLAND CRICKET WORLD CUP HISTORY
1975 Semi finals
1979 Runners-up
1983 Semi finals
1987 Runners-up
1992 Runners-up
1996 Quarter finals
1999 Group stage
2003 Group stage
2007 Super eights
2011 Quarter finals
2015 Group stage

Team-by-team group stage review to follow next week