Vaughan savours Test comeback

Published May 27, 2007

LEEDS, May 26: England captain Michael Vaughan said scoring a century on his return to Test cricket was as ‘fine a feeling as I've ever felt in the game’.

Vaughan marked his return to the Test arena after 18 months on the sidelines with 103 in front of his Headingley home crowd – something he said he felt ‘destined’ to achieve – as England scored 366 for five on the opening day of the second Test against West Indies on Friday.

The 32-year-old batsman hadn't played a Test since appearing against Pakistan in Lahore in December 2005 after a career-threatening knee injury and a hamstring problem left him a frustrated spectator.

And just when it seemed he was about to return to the team, a broken finger sustained while batting in the county championship kept him out of the side for the drawn first Test of this four-match series at Lord's.

But Vaughan made good on his decision to bat first after winning the toss with his 16th century in his 65th Test, his fourth against West Indies and first at this level at Headingley.

“That's as fine a feeling as I've ever felt in the game, the England captain told reporters after stumps.

“It was almost destiny for me to get a hundred on comeback on my home ground. I had 18 months out of Test match cricket. I know I'm a good player, but you still have to go out there and do it.

“When you've had such a long lay-off, of course there are doubts in the back of your mind – whether you're going to see the ball, whether you'll react, whether the feet are going to move under pressure.

“Probably the most pleasing aspect of today is that I scored a hundred under pressure.

He added: “To produce it under that pressure is why it stands with the innings I played at Old Trafford (when he scored 166 against Australia during the 2005 Ashes, his previous Test hundred). Both are very special.”

Vaughan also paid tribute to the medical staff who helped him regain fitness. “The knee surgeon who did the operation was here today, and it was the only day he was going to come.”

West Indies suffered two injury blows. Before play began senior batsman Shivnarine Chanderpaul was ruled out with tendinitis in his right knee.

And in the final session captain Ramnaresh Sarwan had to leave the field with a shoulder injury after falling heavily while trying to stop a boundary.—AFP