Sports news Click here
Email   small font medium font large font

England still wary of India ahead of second cricket Test

NOTTINGHAM, England (AP) _ England is still wary of India's formidable batting lineup ahead of the second Test at Nottingham starting Friday, despite the visitors' disappointing performance in the rain-affected first Test draw.

Captain Rahul Dravid, Sourav Ganguly, Sachin Tendulkar and V.V.S. Laxman all failed to get past 50 in either innings at Lord's. But England paceman Chris Tremlett, part of an unchanged England lineup, is still treating India's batsmen with respect.

``It would be stupid to say their leading batsmen are in decline,'' said Tremlett, who took 3-52 in India's second innings in his debut Test. ``They are obviously great players. They didn't score many at Lord's but it would be stupid to say that they are losing their touch.''

India's top four batsman in England have a combined 84 Test hundreds. But India was bowled out for 201 in the first innings and reached 282 for nine wickets in chasing an unlikely win in the second innings before rain ended the match early.

``We would like to score more runs than we have, there is no doubt about it,'' said Dravid. ``When we've put big runs on the board it has made a huge difference to our team.

Tremlett said India struggled to deal with a Lord's pitch that swung the ball around. He also praised England's tight bowling unit which was missing the stars of previous years.

``As a group in the first Test, we were very aggressive and we worked together as a team,'' Tremlett said. ``We didn't make them feel comfortable. We built the pressure on their batsmen by being aggressive and also very patient with the bowling.''

With pacemen Matthew Hoggard (back), Steve Harmison (hernia operation) and allrounder Andrew Flintoff (ankle) all injured, the seam attack was led by swing bowler Ryan Sidebottom, along with paceman James Anderson and Tremlett, along with spinner Monty Panesar.

None of them have played more than 20 Tests.

India's less-heralded players also did well at Lord's, with Wasim Jaffer and Dinesh Karthik providing the backbone of both innings, and left-armer Rudra Pratap Singh taking Test-best figures of 5-59 in his fifth Test.

``It is nice that they are getting runs and wickets and making a name for themselves,'' Dravid said. ``If some of the guys who have performances behind them can recreate some of that, we should be very competitive.''

Ganguly sat out one India practice session with a sore back, which affected him while batting in the first Test. If he can't play, Yuvraj Singh will likely take his place.

The rain that threatens to disrupt the second Test forced a first Test draw at Lord's.

England needed only one more wicket on Monday's final day before the players left the field under darkening skies for an early tea. India still needed 98 runs to win, but poor weather prevented play from resuming.

The third and final Test is at The Oval from Aug. 9-13, followed by seven one-day internationals.


© The Canadian Press, 2007

Related news
LONDON (AP) _ England faces its first serious Test challenge since its disastrous Ashes defence when it starts the first of three matches against India on Thursday. While England's one-day form has remained ...
LEEDS, England (AP) _ England will field an unfamiliar bowling attack in the second Test against the West Indies starting Friday at Headingley, with all-rounder Andrew Flintoff and fast bowler Matthew Hoggard out ...
CHITTAGONG, Bangladesh (AP) _ Pacers R.P. Singh and V.R.V Singh each claimed three wickets to guide India to a healthy lead on Monday, the fourth day of their rain-plagued first Test. At stumps, ...
The situation is similar enough for Andrew Flintoff to remain confident his England lineup can retain the Ashes. England lost the first Test in 2005 by 239 runs before coming ...
Andrew Symonds posted his maiden test hundred and shared a 279-run sixth-wicket stand with Matthew Hayden that prolonged both his test career and England's Ashes woes. Having already relinquished the ...
Sri Lanka held a tenuous 73-run lead over New Zealand with only two second innings wickets remaining at stumps on the second day of the first cricket Test at Jade ...
Zimbabwe will return to test cricket in November 2007, almost two years after it volunteered to withdraw from Tests because it wasn't competitive. Zimbabwe coach Kevin Curran announced in September the team would be ...
Fast bowlers Shane Bond and James Franklin and recalled batsmen Mathew Sinclair and Craig Cumming gave New Zealand control of the first cricket Test against Sri Lanka after its opening ...
Prolific batsman Mohammad Yousuf smashed a record-equalling century Thursday as Pakistan forced a draw in the second cricket Test against a resurgent West Indies. Yousuf (191) missed the opportunity to ...

End: England still wary of India ahead of second cricket Test
Google
Web SportsNews24h.com


Discount Magazine Subscription!

Up to 92% off the cover price!

Search for your favourite magazine now!

© 2006-2007 SportsNews24h.com except where otherwise noted.