England need strong showing against NZ

Published February 20, 2015
WELLINGTON: James Anderson of England bowls during a training session at the Basin Reserve on Thursday.—AFP
WELLINGTON: James Anderson of England bowls during a training session at the Basin Reserve on Thursday.—AFP

WELLINGTON: The reckoning has come early for England at the Cricket World Cup. Out of form and down on confidence, Eoin Morgan’s England need a strong showing in Friday’s Pool ‘A’ match against New Zealand to restore some belief in their campaign.

A 111-run loss to Australia in its opening match delivered a blow to team morale which was already low after its heavy loss to the Australians in the preceding limited-overs tri-series.

They now face co-hosts New Zealand, who have won their first two matches and who are buoyant if a little chastened after a narrow win over Scotland. Another win — their third in seven days — would put the Black Caps in a powerful in the group with an eight-day break before their subsequent match against Afghanistan.

A loss to New Zealand wouldn’t be an irreversible setback for England: with matches remaining against Afghanistan, Scotland and Bangladesh they should still progress comfortably to the next round. But the effect of another defeat on already brittle confidence might be more severe.

Morgan has inherited the captaincy after Alastair Cook was fired amid the team’s inconsistent form. His tenure hasn’t yet been transformative: while England has won individual One-day Internationals against India and Sri Lanka, they struggle to win series or consistently beat top sides.

One reason is that is, in the absence of Kevin Pietersen, they appear to lack an X-factor player, one of the proven match-winners New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum said will shape the outcome of matches at this tournament.

McCullum insisted England do have players of that calibre and lists Morgan among them.

“They’ve got match-winners and I’ve said right from the start of this tournament that the wickets we play on allow match winners to come into play,” McCullum said on Thursday. “So, even though the England team may not have been firing of late they’re still a dangerous proposition and we’re respectful of that.

“Morgan is a definite match-winner with his uncanny ability to hit different areas and seize opportunities. I think Jos Buttler is a very dangerous player.”

Morgan is out of form, making four ducks in his last five innings and averaging only 18 over his last 22 turns at bat. His run drought has impacted directly on England’s overall performance but not yet on his self-belief.

“I’d love you to explain it to me because I don’t understand it,” he said of his recent batting slump. “You don’t look any further than what is in front of you and I’ve done that but it hasn’t worked. I believe it will work and when it does hopefully I can cash in on it and either make a match-winning performance or build on somebody else’s.”

McCullum believes Morgan’s slump won’t last. “Morgan is a champion player and he’s probably one of my better mates from around the world.

“He’s obviously going through a bit of a tough time at the moment but tough times don’t last, tough blokes do. So hopefully at some point he’ll come out of it but hopefully tomorrow [Friday] we’re able to keep him quiet.” England batting coach Mark Ramprakash also voted confidence in Morgan’s ability on Thursday.

“He’s aware of the fact that he wants more runs and it’s important for the team that he plays his part,” Ramprakash said. “But in terms of handling the tournament, the pressures of it, you couldn’t really ask for better character to be able to handle that.”

New Zealand will take an unchanged line-up into the match at Wellington’s Westpac Stadium, where they have won nine of their last 11 ODIs.

“We’ve played a bit of cricket on this wicket recently and we expect it to be the same,” McCullum said. “The guys have performed well so far and we want to give them that same opportunity again and we think the balance of the team will suit us well on this ground.”

Teams:

NEW ZEALAND: Brendon McCullum (captain), Martin Guptill, Kane Williamson, Ross Taylor, Grant Elliott, Corey Anderson, Luke Ronchi, Daniel Vettori, Tim Southee, Adam Milne, Trent Boult.

ENGLAND (from): Moeen Ali, Ian Bell, Gary Ballance, Joe Root, Eoin Morgan (captain), James Taylor, Jos Buttler, Chris Woakes, Stuart Broad, Steven Finn, James Anderson, James Tredwell, Ravi Bopara, Alex Hales, Chris Jordan.

Umpires: Paul Reiffel and Rod Tucker (both Australia).

TV umpire: Bruce Oxenford (Australia).

Match referee: Roshan Mahanama (Sri Lanka).

Published in Dawn, February 20th, 2015

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