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Flintoff
consults specialist over ankle
LONDON—Andrew Flintoff is set to pay a visit to the surgeon who
performed the latest operation on his troublesome left ankle, amid fears
that he could miss both the remainder of the NatWest Series against
India, as well as next week’s ICC World Twenty20 in South Africa.
Flintoff underwent his latest bout of ankle surgery in June, and missed
all seven of England’s Tests against West Indies and India. He returned
successfully for the first half of the NatWest Series against India,
touching 90mph with his bowling and taking a career-best 5 for 56 in the
second match at Bristol, but further problems have since flared up. He
missed England’s matches at Edgbaston and Headingley, leading to
speculation that his days as a force in international cricket could be
over.
England, however, are clinging to the hope that a consultation with his
specialist will reveal no further damage, and he has not yet been ruled
out of Wednesday’s sixth ODI at The Oval. “He is seeing the surgeon who
performed his third ankle operation later on this afternoon - and we
will go on from there,” said David Graveney, England’s chairman of
selectors. “He’s not ruled out of tomorrow, but at the same time, he is
not definite to go to the Twenty20, because we have to wait for that
medical opinion tomorrow.
“His mood is remarkably upbeat given the number of operations he’s had,”
added Graveney, but privately England will be extremely pessimistic
about the prospects for their talismanic allrounder. His injury has
flared up a mere seven matches and 55.5 overs after his return to action
for Lancashire, and this is the third time in three years that he has
broken down shortly after a comeback from injury.
Flintoff’s problems, coupled with the news that Ravi Bopara will miss
the Twenty20s with a fractured thumb, means that England could depart
for South Africa without either of the two allrounders on whom so many
of their hopes were pinned. Sussex’s Luke Wright has already been
drafted in to the one-day squad as a replacement for Bopara, but seeing
as he is already in the Twenty20 line-up, further reinforcements may
have to come from further afield. “It may not be like-to-like
replacements but we need to know how many we’re replacing,” said
Graveney. “It’s a difficult logistical thing, and the decision may have
to made in the weekend as the team leaves for South Africa on Sunday.”
Two allrounders who were named in the provisional 30-man squad are
Lancashire’s Glenn Chapple and Yorkshire’s Tim Bresnan, although Marcus
Trescothick’s withdrawal from that number gives the selectors scope to
look beyond that initial pool of players.—Agencies |