After losing the first Test to Pakistan by a 75-run margin at Lord's,
a beleaguered England management have announced a 14-member team for
the upcoming Old Trafford Test, due to begin on Friday (June 22).
Despite the loss at Lord's, the team management kept their faith in the
playing eleven, while adding the returning pacer bowler, James Anderson,
allrounder Ben Stokes and leg-spinner, Adil Rashid, to the mix.
While
the return of Anderson and Stokes was on expected lines, the inclusion
of Rashid has set the tongues wagging, with the pundits wondering if the
hosts are set to play two spinners at Old Trafford. Speaking after the
selections for the second Test, Trevor Bayliss, the head coach, set
matters straight regarding the selection of Rashid. "I've always thought
of playing two spinners (at home) at some stage," he said. "(Pakistan)
have three left-arm pace bowlers, who created rough outside the off
stump for Moeen. So looking ahead, if we did happen to have two
spinners, they could both play an important part for us."
Expressing
disappointment over the way his batsmen handled Yasir Shah, Bayliss
asked his batsmen to tighten their technique against the newly rated No.
1 Test bowler in the International Cricket Council (ICC) Test rankings.
"Our batters have to play their (Pakistan) spin a lot better.
Especially in the first innings, I felt we gifted him a few wickets with
shots I'm sure the boys would like to replay," he noted.
England's
middle-order fallacy was the team's undoing at Lord's and James Vince,
the Hampshire batsman, has come under immense pressure with experts
asking the batsman to be dropped for the next Test. However, the head
coach expressed confidence in Vince's abilities and backed him to
deliver. "Most of the innings he's played, I think he has looked very
good while he has been there. Personally, I think it would be an
injustice if he doesn't make it," Bayliss said.
"In the end, it
will be the number of runs that determines his longevity in the team.
I'm sure he is starting to feel the pressure. He'd like to be scoring
more runs. Ask anyone who has been in that situation, it is a difficult
thing to go out and play your natural game. He has some work to do. If
you think they are good enough and they believe they are, a lot of times
they will come good. That's not 100 percent of the time ... but I like
to think that (Vince) will play more cricket for England."
England's
catching has been shoddy in recent times with Vince, Joe Root and James
Bairstow, the wicketkeeper, dropping relatively simple chances at
Lord's. Bayliss reckoned that the team needed to go back to basics and
work out modules which will help them in future. "We've all got work to
do. I don't think we move all that great from left to right, from side
to side. We've got to make sure we take our head to the ball not just
throw out an arm with our head back two or three feet from the ball.
We've got to get our head close to the ball. We seem just to throw out a
hand at it without moving our feet," he concluded.

No comments:
Post a Comment