England v Australia, 2nd NatWest ODI, Old Trafford
Dice falls favourably for Fawad
Any spin bowler, no matter how accomplished, needs certain elemental
circumstances to fall in his favour. He benefits from team-mates
endeavouring to help him out by engineering those circumstances, and an
absent-minded moment or two by the opposition doesn't hurt either. On a
day when Australia disposed of England with unusual ease, the dice fell
the way of Fawad Ahmed, and against his opposite number James Tredwell.
Each man harbours ambitions of taking part in the return Test series
down under, certainly as understudy if not first choice, and though not a
whole lot separated their bowling at Old Trafford, the circumstances in
which they operated diverged wildly. By generously choosing to send
Australia in on a dry surface and a sun-dappled morning, England's Eoin
Morgan did Fawad Ahmed a significant favour, allowing him to bowl in
defence of a fat total. In contrast, Tredwell was left exposed by the
scoreboard and the situation, unable to settle as the Australians went
after him.
While Australia and England are content in their pace attacks and first
preferences as Test match spin bowlers, both nations seek greater
information about the slow bowlers who might replace Graeme Swann and
Nathan Lyon should they be required. In Fawad, Australia have a
tremendous story to inspire other new immigrants to play for the
national team, but as a bowler he remains minimally tested in
international encounters. Tredwell has been Swann's understudy for quite
some time, but the question of whether he might take on the role in
Australia remains open, particularly given Monty Panesar's recent
misadventures.
Perhaps mindful of this, Australia's batsmen targeted Tredwell in the
morning, cuffing 60 runs from his eight overs, the bowler gaining only
the wicket of Aaron Finch in return. The two overs Tredwell did not bowl
spoke much for the effect his expense had on the captain Morgan, who
was left looking for other options with only Steve Finn and Boyd Rankin
counting as full-timers. Tredwell did not bowl badly, but he lacked the
sense of danger Swann creates in Australian minds. They would not mind
seeing him again during the home summer.
In addition to runs on the board, a spinner is also aided by the
pouching of early wickets with the new ball. Even Shane Warne struggled
when, as on the 1998 India tour, he often found himself twirling the
ball down at settled and aggressive opening batsmen, their games
emboldened by the forging of a safe passage through the new ball phase.
This time Mitchell Johnson and James Faulkner knocked the top off the
England batting order to leave the hosts 54 for 3 when Fawad was
introduced in the 16th over.
Clarke set his field in careful consultation with Fawad. Their
backgrounds could not be more different, but as captain and legspinner
they must form a tight relationship if Fawad is to play successfully.
Empathy is not a quality felt by every captain when dealing with a spin
bowler, particularly in recent years in Australia. But in Clarke,
Australia have a leader who is able to think nimbly about how best to
gain wickets through spin. The circumstances of the innings and the
timing - shortly after the end of the Powerplay - were ideal for Fawad.
Fawad ended the day with figures eerily similar to those of James Tredwell. But it was Australia who would depart Manchester the happier, not only with the result but also what they had seen of their spin bowler. | |||
Scoreboard notwithstanding, he was quickly placed under pressure by two
of England's more inventive batsmen. Kevin Pietersen's reluctance to be
tied down is well known, and Morgan is similarly proactive, particularly
when confronted by a target that if accomplished would have represented
England's highest successful ODI chase. So it was that a pair of quite
presentable overs from a legspinner seeking to drop onto a length were
taken for 23 runs.
To Fawad's fourth ball, Pietersen smeared a flat six over straight
midwicket. To his sixth, Morgan reverse swept to the backward point
rope. Another paddled boundary in the next over had Fawad furrowing his
brow, and Clarke choosing to withdraw his leggie. None of the 12
deliveries had been particularly poor. They were a little flat perhaps, a
tad nervous and lacking in bite, but there was nothing of Simon
Kerrigan's Oval Test about them. Still, Clarke replaced Fawad with
Johnson to seek a wicket, and also to ensure Fawad could go on thinking
positively, lest further blows affect confidence not yet unshakeable at
international level.
Pietersen and Ravi Bopara had both been disposed of by the time Fawad
returned, the former skimming Shane Watson to cover and the latter
bunting a return catch from the unobtrusive slow left-arm of Adam Voges.
The desperation of the batsmen had increased. Both Morgan and Jos
Buttler would try to get at Fawad over his next four overs, essaying
slog sweeps, drives and cut shots. But neither would make the contact
they desired, and both would sky strokes that sailed narrowly out of the
reach of Clarke's fieldsmen. After his first two overs cost 23, Fawad's
next four went for 19.
Across those 36 balls, there was little sight of the variation that has
flummoxed more than a few Australian batsmen in the nets, or state
opponents in the Sheffield Shield last summer. Fawad kept his wrong'un
largely hidden, concentrating on subtly varied leg breaks and drawing an
error from batsmen straining to slam him to the fence. In this they
were plainly unsuccessful, not once collecting a boundary in his second
spell.
In that time the required rate climbed from 8.24 to 9.50, and the
pressure imposed would result in a rush of wickets. Morgan took the
batting Powerplay and immediately perished while trying to heave at
Clint McKay, who Clarke had sensibly recalled to the attack. From there,
England were without hope and Australia without worry. Fawad would come
back for a final over and scoop the wicket of Buttler, attempting
another slog at the end of his spirited 75, and spun one fine leg break
past the groping bat of Finn before the No. 11 mowed a six and drove a
boundary.
Those runs meant that Fawad ended the day with figures eerily similar to
those of Tredwell. But it was the visitors who would depart Manchester
the happier, not only with the result but also what they had seen of
their spin bowler.
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