Daily SectionMarker

Misc SectionMarker

Weekly SectionMarker

Weekly SectionMarker

Pakistan's Internet Magazine
Herald
Dawn GroupMarker

Archive, Search, Feedback & HelpMarker

Weather
Dawn Classified



FrontPage National International Local Business KSE Forex Sports Editorial Opinion Letters Features Today's Cartoon PTV 2 Guide Cowasjee Ayaz Mazdak Review Dawn Magazine Young World Images Dawn Group Subscription To Advertise

DINA
Previous Story DAWN - the Internet Edition Next Story


25 December 2004 Saturday 12 Ziqa'ad 1425






England seek to improve against shaky Proteas


DURBAN, Dec 24: England will seek to take advantage of an unsettled South African team in the second Test starting at Kings mead Sunday. A seven-wicket win in the first Test in Port Elizabeth gave England a significant edge in the five-match series.

England went in short of match practice and lost the toss but still dominated most of the game. England captain Michael Vaughan said he expected his team to improve. They had not played to their full potential in Port Elizabeth where some of their cricket had been "sloppy".

While England, who have won a record eight Tests in a row, have a settled team and are playing with confidence, South Africa are in a state of disarray at the end of a year in which they have plunged from second to sixth in the world Test rankings.

Captain Graeme Smith bemoaned the lack of stability in South African cricket following several changes in key personnel, including a coach and convenor of selectors who are both interim appointees.

In a newspaper column Friday, Smith said: "We desperately need to share a common goal and purpose in everything from racial representation to playing style to administrative structures. As far as the team is concerned, we simply can't succeed with ever-changing views on who, and why, certain players should play ahead of others."

A squad of 14 assembled in Durban Friday with uncertainty over who would make the final eleven. Herschelle Gibbs is likely to return to partner Smith as an opening batsman but will have to pass a fitness test after playing only one game, scoring just four runs, since suffering a right little finger ligament injury on November 17.

Another key fitness issue is whether Jacques Kallis will be able to bowl. He played as a batsman only in the first Test because of an ankle injury. Selection convenor Haroon Lorgat said he was confident Kallis would be able to bowl but Smith was more cautious Friday, saying: "Jacques probably won't be 100 percent by the start."

If Kallis can bowl, home town batsman Hashim Amla is likely to bolster a batting order whose shortage of specialists was exposed by the disciplined England bowling attack in the first Test.

There is also expected to be debate about whether Thami Tsolekile or AB de Villiers will keep wicket. Tsolekile performed efficiently behind the stumps but De Villiers, 20, who opened the batting in Gibbs' absence in Port Elizabeth, is rated a much better batsman with the potential to develop into a wicket keeper-batsman in the mould of Australia's Adam Gilchrist.

Swing bowler Charl Langeveldt, a match-winner for South Africa A when they beat England in the touring team's only first-class match leading into the Test series, is expected to make his Test debut, while left-arm spinner Nicky Boje could return to the side.

Smith said his team needed to play consistently well for five days, especially when they were under pressure. While South Africa's final line-up is far from certain, England are likely to retain the team that won in Port Elizabeth.

TEAMS:

SOUTH AFRICA (FROM): Graeme Smith (captain), Herschelle Gibbs, Jacques Rudolph, Jacques Kallis, Boeta Dippenaar, Hashim Amla, Shaun Pollock, Andrew Hall, Nicky Boje, AB de Villiers, Thami Tsolekile, Makhaya Ntini, Dale Steyn, Charl Langeveldt.

ENGLAND (PROBABLE): Michael Vaughan (captain), Marcus Trescothick, Andrew Strauss, Mark Butcher, Graham Thorpe, Andrew Flintoff, Geraint Jones, Ashley Giles, Matthew Hoggard, Simon Jones, Steve Harmison.

UMPIRES: Darrell Hair and Simon Taufel (both AUS)

TELEVISION UMPIRE: Karl Hurter

MATCH REFEREE: Clive Lloyd (WIS). -Reuters




Previous Story Top of Page Next Story

© The DAWN Group of Newspapers, 2004