English bowlers can win Ashes: Sarfraz

Published August 24, 2005

ISLAMABAD, Aug 23: England’s mastery of reverse swing can help them win the Ashes, former Pakistani fast bowler Sarfraz Nawaz, regarded as a pioneer of the batsman-bamboozling technique, said on Tuesday.

Sarfraz said English pacemen Andrew Flintoff and Simon Jones had caused Australia problems in the first three Tests and would continue to do so in the fourth in Nottingham.

“I am amazed at the England bowlers’ ability with reverse swing. It can win them the elusive Ashes,” Nawaz told AFP.

Sarfraz, who took 177 wickets in 55 Tests for Pakistan, is widely regarded as pioneer of reverse swing, the rare skill of gaining vicious aerial movement with a roughed-up ball.

He passed the art to legendary all-rounder and compatriot Imran Khan and it was perfected by Pakistan pair Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis in the early 1990s, helping Pakistan lift the World Cup in 1992.

“Flintoff and Jones are very impressive in reverse swing and since the second half of the English season is drier it will get better and better,” said Sarfraz.

He said Darren Gough was the first English bowler able to reverse swing.

“Before Gough, the English used to search for any lame excuse and accuse Pakistani bowlers of cheating when they reverse swung the ball,” said Sarfraz, attributing Pakistan’s 1987, 1992 and 1996 wins in England to the technique.

Now England are using it too, and have a chance to turn around their unenviable record of having lost the last eight Ashes series.

“If England bowlers bowl as they did in the second and third Test, they have a real chance to win back the Ashes,” said Sarfraz.

He advised Australian batsmen not to play shots in haste. “You need to play late against swing and take singles and twos.”


HADLEE ENJOYS

MELBOURNE: Cricketing great Sir Richard Hadlee is revelling in watching English bowlers giving Australian batsmen a torrid time in the gripping Ashes cricket series.

The New Zealand all-rounder, who tormented Australian batting line-ups during the 1980s, said on Tuesday it was “absolutely magnificent” to see England’s fast bowlers dictating terms in the 1-1 series, which resumes with this week’s fourth Test at Trent Bridge.

Hadlee is impressed with the way Andrew Flintoff and Steve Harmison have put the Australian batsmen under sustained physical pressure.—AFP