Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Australia consider four quicks for Perth


Captain Ricky Ponting says Australia may play four fast bowlers, and bowl first if it wins the toss, in the third Ashes test against England which starts in Perth on Friday.


Those steps would mark a departure from regular Australian policy, but Ponting told Wednesday's edition of the Australian newspaper they were being considered because of the unusually green nature of the pitch at the WACA ground for the third match of the five-test series.

Ponting said it would be wrong not to consider employing four fast bowlers, possibly using vice-captain Michael Clarke and all-rounder Steve Smith to provide a spin bowling option.

"If it's going to be very favourable for the quicks, then you've got to think about it," Ponting said. "You're being negligent if you don't consider it."

England holds the Ashes and leads the current series 1-0 after winning the second test at Adelaide by an innings and 71 runs.

Ponting hasn't bowled first on winning the toss in a test since 2005 against England at Edgbaston when England scored 407 on the first day and went on to win by two runs, leveling that Ashes series at 1-1.

He was criticized for not bowling against Pakistan in Sydney earlier this year, though Australia went on to win, and again against Pakistan at Headingley, England in June when Australia was bowled out for 88.

Ponting indicated decisions over the composition of the Australian attack may be delayed until match day.

"If you played four quicks and you win the toss and bat and they don't get a chance to bowl on it until halfway through the second day if you bat well, whatever life that was in the pitch is probably gone," Ponting said. "You've still got to decide what is your best attack to take 20 wickets in the conditions.

"We've been saying that for weeks and haven't looked like it yet (bowling England out twice). Hopefully that comes this week."

Australia enters the Perth test under pressure to keep alive the Ashes series. If England wins again, to lead the series 2-0 with two matches to play, it will have succeeded in retaining the Ashes.

Australia's selections during the series, its repeated changes to the fast bowling lineup and the choice for this match of untried spinner Michael Beer have all been interpreted as signs of panic.

Ponting said that, while disappointed with their form, his players remained confident of matching England. He pointed out England has won only one of 11 previous tests in Perth where it has often been unsuited to fast, bouncy conditions.

In a regular newspaper column on Monday, Ponting said England may also be unsettled by the loss of fast bowler Stuart Broad with an abdominal injury.

"Their other opening bowler, James Anderson, has had an interrupted preparation having flown home to England for the birth of his second child and then back again in the space of a few days. That's got to be unsettling for him and the team," he said.

"Perth is somewhere we usually play well. Our record against England in particular is very good here."

Ponting said Australia needed to rediscover its natural game in Perth.

"The overall theme for us this week is doing less talking and more with our actions," he said. "We've felt over the last couple of weeks we've almost over-burdened the guys with the amount of talking we've done and how specific we've tried to be with tactics.

"When you want to win games of cricket, you need to play with freedom and play on instinct more than anything else."

England has yet to decide whether Ajmal Shahzad, Chris Tremlett or Tim Bresnan will take Broad's place in its lineup for Perth.

Captain Andrew Strauss said he expected England's batsmen to be tested with bouncers in Perth as Australia still saw short-pitched bowling as their Achilles heel.

"If they do come at us with the short stuff then we've got to be ready for it," he said.

"They bowled a bit of short stuff to (Alastair) Cook, (Jonathan) Trott and Kevin Pietersen at Adelaide so we've got to be prepared for that. The crucial thing is not to be surprised by anything on the day so preparation has to be about being ready for anything and we will be.

"We're a confident side and I'm pleased with what we've achieved so far, but everyone has made a conscious effort to keep their feet on the ground.

"They are a proud cricketing nation and they wouldn't have liked the way they were beaten in Adelaide. We're expecting a bit of a backlash from them and we've got to be strong enough to withstand that and come out the other side."

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