Panesar ready for Ashes challenge
Written By
DNA Web Team
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The England spinner says he is ready to produce if given an Ashes call-up, despite a lack of match practice on the tour.
PERTH: Much-vaunted England spinner Monty Panesar says he is ready to produce if given an Ashes call-up, despite a lack of match practice on the tour. The left-arm finger spinner was a frustrated onlooker for the first two Tests, with England selectors preferring Ashley Giles’ extra experience and superior batting ability.
However, there was widespread criticism of that decision in the wake of England’s stunning second Test loss in Adelaide, following on their defeat in the first Test, and Panesar seems certain to be recalled for the third which starts December 14 at the WACA Ground.
Panesar gets his chance to impress the selectors in Friday’s Lilac Hill festival match and England’s subsequent two-day tour match against Western Australia on Saturday and Sunday. The 24-year-old hasn’t played since taking just two wickets in the tour match against South Australia from November 17-19, but said he was ready to tackle the Australians.
“I played in the warm-up games and I’m going to play in the warm-up games this week,” Panesar said on Thursday. “I think I have bowled a fair bit and also in the nets during the two Test matches I haven’t played in. I have got a fair bit of bowling done already since I have been in Australia.
“I am pretty happy with the way the ball is coming out and the way I have been bowling. I just have to continue to build on the way I have been bowling in these conditions.”
Panesar said his third Test chances hinged on bowling well at Lilac Hill and in the match against Western Australia.
“There is a chance for me, if I bowl well, to put my name in the hat and obviously the coach and captain would take notice,” Panesar said. “It is up to me to try and bowl well and hopefully give myself a chance.”
Despite the outcry, particularly in England, over his omission from the first two Tests, a philosophical Panesar said besieged coach Duncan Fletcher had told him he was overlooked in the interests of team balance.
“The balance of the side is important and he told me it was important that we bat down to eight,” he said. “I can understand the balance of the team... I am disappointed I didn’t get a chance but all you can do is focus on the next Test match.”
Panesar, who has 32 wickets in 10 Tests in a promising start to his career, said he would be able to cope with the enormous pressure of expectation that would come with the Ashes recall many outside the team are demanding.
“It is flattering to see people wanting me to play and it is nice to hear that, but I am not going to put any pressure on myself.”
Can England play Warne?
Shane Warne has laughed off Duncan Fletcher’s claims that England have learnt to tackle him and despite the abject surrender in the second Test at Adelaide, Andrew Flintoff’s men have shaken off the hold the veteran leg-spinner once had over them.
“I’m sure Fletcher will come up with some you-beaut plan, a you-beaut comment,” Warne was quoted as saying in the Herald Sun. “I know Fletcher has said he thought England are playing me really well. If that is what he thinks, that’s fine, but at the end of the day it is all about winning.” Fletcher is convinced that despite the huge loss in which Warne bowled a destructve spell to take four wickets in the second innings, the English team showed that they were no longer under Warne’s grip.
“I don’t think he has,” Fletcher said when asked whether the Aussie spin king dominated the English batsmen. “It’s like other good spinners who have bowled well against us on wickets that suit them. I have never said we have played him comfortably in the sense we are confident against him, but I felt we played him better than we have in recent years.
“He had to wait 54 overs for one wicket in the first innings. In the second we struggled to score off him but he still had to bowl 32 overs,” he added. Warne also rubbished claims that he struggled against Kevin Pietersen and was forced to bowl a negative line to the English swashbuckler.