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Refreshed
Vaughan targets Sri Lanka success
LONDON—It’s been three long months since Michael Vaughan was last
involved in the international set-up - an eternity in the modern
calendar - but for once that has had nothing to do with the state of his
fitness.
After standing down from the ODI captaincy, and watching from the
sidelines while Paul Collingwood marshalled impressive wins over India
at home and Sri Lanka away, he’s back at the helm for one of the
toughest tours of all, and ready to attend to some unfinished business.
This winter Vaughan comes full circle as England’s Test captain. It was
on the corresponding tour to Sri Lanka in 2003-04 - a trip that also
included a maiden series in Bangladesh - that he first set out the
agenda that would eventually turn him into England’s most successful
captain of all time. The series was lost after two hard-fought draws and
a rout in the decider at Colombo, but the mindset he instilled was not.
From those inauspicious beginnings evolved the side that would go on to
win every one of its next six Test series, including of course the 2005
Ashes.
“Sri Lanka is one of the toughest away trips you can go on, but it’s
also one of the most exciting,” said Vaughan on the eve of England’s
departure. “There’s a lot of factors involved - there’s the heat, the
humidity and the fact we’re playing against a good side - but if you get
all your players playing in the right fashion and towards a plan, and
playing for each other, you can be successful. That’s what we’re hoping
to do in the next six weeks.”
A marker for this trip has already been set down by the success of
Collingwood’s men. Their 3-2 victory in last month’s ODIs was England’s
first in the subcontinent for 20 years, and Vaughan was eager to tap
into the mindset that carried them to a very notable triumph. “I’m
delighted, because it’s very important to have had success on the shores
of Sri Lanka,” he said. “We know Test cricket is totally different, but
to have so many in this camp with a real confidence factor is great for
the team.”
In fact, Vaughan is one of only two members of the tour party to have
missed out on what was undoubtedly a significant bonding session for a
new-look squad. Matthew Hoggard is the other (he’s been surplus to ODI
requirements for 18 months now), and though Steve Harmison could yet
swell the Test-specialist numbers to three, Vaughan is well aware of the
pressure to perform that his exalted status now brings. After all, in
2003 his predecessor, Nasser Hussain, decided he had lost the
dressing-room after Vaughan’s youthful one-day team had seen off South
Africa in the NatWest Series, and duly resigned after just one more Test
in charge.
“I’m sure there will be external pressures, but I’m not looking at that
at all,” said Vaughan. “I’m feeling very refreshed and focussed, and I’m
looking forward to what I hope will be a great cricket trip. I know I’m
not going to be England captain forever but it’s not something I worry
about. One day Collingwood could be the man to replace me but that’s not
something to lose sleep over. I’m delighted to be here with a young
team, and hopefully I can do it for a while.”
Time and again Vaughan reiterated how “refreshed” his mind was, as if
trying to convince himself every bit as much as his doubters. But as
India have just demonstrated with the appointment of Anil Kumble as Test
captain, there is something about an experienced leader in five-day
cricket that cannot easily be quantified. This is Vaughan’s third Test
tour to Sri Lanka, following his contrasting fortunes in 2000-01 and
2003-04.
But while England’s team has changed beyond recognition in the
intervening years, the kingpins of the Sri Lankan line-up - Murali, Vaas,
Jayasuriya, Jayawardene, Sangakkara - remain largely the same. The
experience and strategies that Vaughan can bring to bear could prove to
be England’s trump card in the coming weeks.
“We know a lot about all their players, but we’re trying to focus on
getting our plans right,” he said. “We have to get our players playing
to a real good standard, because if we don’t we’ve got no chance. This
next two-and-a-half weeks, we’ll prepare really hard, get used to the
conditions, and go to that first Test in Kandy full of confidence and
with a real good strategy in place.”—Online |