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New South
Wales v England XI at Sydney
Pietersen’s struggle pays off with swashbuckling innings
SYDNEY—Hours spent in the nets practising how to counter
short-pitched Australian bowling paid off for Kevin Pietersen here with
an unbeaten 80 for England against New South Wales at the Sydney Cricket
Ground.
Pietersen delivered the innings the tourists have been yearning with 10
boundaries and two sixes against a Test-strength NSW fast bowling attack
to have England in high spirits at stumps on the second day of the
three-day practice match.
At the close on Monday, England were 256 for four in reply to the NSW
first innings declaration of 355 for nine.
Skipper Andrew Flintoff was at the crease with Pietersen unconquered on
48 off 81 balls with eight fours. Pietersen, one of England’s big
batting hopes if they are to retain the Ashes against Australia in the
Test series to get underway in Brisbane on November 23, said he has been
spending hours in the nets.
“It’s a delivery that I haven’t had much of at 90mph-plus over the last
few months, we’ve been playing a lot of the sub-continent, so it’s a
delivery I’ve worked on and it’s a delivery I am working hard on these
wickets,” Pietersen said.
“If you leave the short ball just to be negative and defensive then you
have more opportunity of getting out or being injured, the key is to
keep your eye on the ball for as long as possible and sway if you need
to.\ “At the end of the day you are going to get it, one, two, three or
11 times, you’re going to get it and you just have to play it.”
Pietersen said England’s batting performance Monday was a great tonic
ahead of the first Test.
“It was a test today, we’ve probably got three innings, this one and two
in Adelaide (against South Australia next week) before we play the Test
in Brisbane so it was important for guys to get in and score a few
runs,” he said. “It’s a case of acclimatising and getting used to the
Australian wickets, different conditions and I think a really big
positive from today is the bowling attack we faced.
“You have four possibilities of pacemen in the Australian side,
definitely Brett Lee and Glenn McGrath and then Stuart Clark and Nathan
Bracken.” Alastair Cook consolidated his grip on the No.3 Test batting
position with an impressive 59.
Cook, who scored 214 batting for Essex against the Australians on last
year’s Ashes tour, played strongly off his pads and the back foot before
he was lbw to McGrath.
While Cook flourished, Ian Bell was out for a second-ball duck and
missed a great chance to improve his Test chance, with England expected
to play four bowlers along with all-rounder Flintoff against the Aussies
in Brisbane. Marcus Trescothick’s troubled series lead-up took another
turn for the worse when he played on a delivery from Lee and was bowled
for eight.
That followed the Somerset left-hander’s abject two in last Friday’s
one-day loss to the Prime Minister’s XI in Canberra.
Opener Andrew Strauss had a life on 32 when he was put down by Clark at
third slip off Bracken. But Clark redeemed himself with a freakish
caught and bowled to send Strauss on his way for 50. Clark stuck out his
right hand on his follow-through and snatched the catch.
Clark struck again two balls later, dismissing Bell for a two-ball duck,
probing outside off-stump and caught behind. NSW declared their first
innings on the wicket fall of Bracken for eight.
Steve Harmison picked up the wickets of Moises Henriques (29) and Daniel
Smith (45) to finish the innings with 3-95 off 20 overs, while new-ball
partner Matthew Hoggard had Nathan Hauritz caught by a diving Ashley
Giles at mid-wicket for five.—Agenceis |