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Bowling to Adam


Adam Gilchrist (r) shows Chandrahas Choudhury how to bowl an outswinger
© AFP

Sports journalists from across the country came together last week at the Jawaharlal Nehru stadium in Delhi for an unusual event: an encounter with seven members of the Australian team, not with dictaphones and notebooks, but with bat and ball. The Australian team’s sponsors on tour, Travelex, had organized an unusual event called the Media Bowling Masterclass, with the intention of getting the players to pass on some hints and tips to the scribes, many of whom play cricket at some level.The event was conceived like this: some of the bowlers from the Australian squad would help the members of the press – young, old, fat, slim, competent, incompetent – with their bowling, after which Adam Gilchrist and Michael Bevan would line up in adjoining nets and have a bat against them. Rod Kohler, brand manager for Travelex, explained that a similar experiment had been made in the World Cup last March, except that that had been a batting masterclass. “We got out some kit for the press, and some of our batsmen helped them out with their technique, after which Glenn McGrath and Jason Gillespie had a bowl at some of them. But the bowlers held nothing back – it’s not their nature to do so – and some of the sports writers didn’t have the most pleasant time. After that we decided that it would be more interesting to let the journalists bowl rather than bat.”The Australians brought along Brad Williams, Nathan Bracken, Andrew Bichel and Michael Kasprowicz to advise eager members of the press about their bowling. For a while there was much talk of inswingers and outswingers, seam position and head position, front leg and leading arm, while shutterbugs clicked away and cameras rolled.Of course, the Australians did some bowling themselves to illustrate points of technique, and many were blissfully happy to be running up to bowl in the wake of a Williams or a Bichel. Even Adam Gilchrist turned his arm over, bowling some beautiful curving outswingers and explaining he’d learnt it all watching his pacemen bowl.After a brief break, Gilchrist put on his pads, as did Bevan, and the most eagerly awaited part of the event began. Bevan, batting with his dark glasses on, did not exert himself unduly, but Gilchrist, ever the sport, warmed to the task, and soon had the stadium abuzz with excitement as surely as in a real international game. Several cracking hits flew into the heavens, accompanied by cries and gasps from those watching, and kept the security guards at the edge of the arena busy retrieving balls. Those of us who took some stick also had the pleasure of seeing, from closer than ever before, evidence of the quickness of his eye and his spectacular bat-speed. As the afternoon drew on, even those who were there merely to cover the event could not resist the temptation of rolling their arm over. One portly cameraman entrusted his instrument to a colleague, scurried in, and let fly some deliveries of surprising pace.The event was useful for many, and entertainment for all. Perhaps the only problem with it that journalists, photographers and cameramen all got in each others’ way – not that they don’t usually, but here they were present both as actors as well as reporters. It was not long before the run-ups were besieged with those seeking soundbites, autographs and advice on matters unrelated to the occasion. Perhaps those of us who keep emphasizing the need to play more disciplined cricket ought to take a note.Chandrahas Choudhury is staff writer of Wisden Asia Cricket magazine.

Punjab thrash Jammu & Kashmir

Vineet Sharma and Babloo Kumar helped to bowl Jammu & Kashmir out in no time to provide the first act to an eight-wicket Punjab win in their Ranji one-day match at Ludhiana on Wednesday.Batting first after winning the toss, Jammu & Kashmir could not take advantage of first strike. Apart from Ashwani Gupta’s 46, no other significant score was registered. Jammu & Kashmir were bowled out for 114 in 42.4 overs, with Sharma and Kumar taking four wickets apiece.The low total never looked like bothering Punjab. With opener Dinesh Mongia making 65, the runs were knocked off in just 15.1 overs for the loss of two wickets. Mongia’s 65 came off 54 balls, with seven fours and one six. Although Surinder Singh took two wickets for Jammu & Kashmir, Punjab cantered to their eight-wicket win in style.

Doug Marrilier on the Midlands – Mashonaland match

Doug Marillier, a Zimbabwe A player and a member of the Zimbabwe Cricket Academy last year, is currently based in Kwekwe where he coaches and plays. Here he talks to John Ward about the recent match between Midlands and Mashonaland, which he missed with a broken finger, and Midlands cricket in general.Unfortunately it wasn’t a fantastic pitch at Harare Sports Club, and the Mashonaland bowling attack is a lot better and a lot more experienced than the Midlands bowling attack. We won the toss and did the right thing by fielding. The Mashonaland side is a good side and we got them out for 165, which we thought was pretty good for our bowling attack.Unfortunately though our batsmen didn’t show, I think, enough commitment. A couple did – Ken Connelly showed a fair amount of commitment, but everyone else tried to get themselves out of a tough position by playing big shots. I think that’s something you learn by experience; the Midlands haven’t played a lot of first-class cricket, and a lot of guys haven’t played any first-class cricket before. The most experienced guys in the Midlands side apart from the pros have played a maximum of four first-class games, so we haven’t a wealth of experience.Being our first year, there are a lot of good things that have come out of it. I know we haven’t done particularly well but we beat Matabeleland in one game, and it was great for us to come into a competition like this from playing league cricket to playing a much higher standard of cricket although the Logan Cup isn’t at its strongest, with most of the national cricketers being away. But it’s very encouraging to see that we’ve done as well as we have. We lost three games and won one, but to go through a season, our first in first-class cricket, and not lose all of them, we’ve done pretty well, and the guys have shown a lot of commitment.Raymond Price, David Mutendera and myself are all down in Kwekwe to try and broaden the base of cricket. Obviously we want to get cricket restarted in places where it used to be played, like Chaplin and Guinea Fowl High Schools, because obviously later on that’s where our young cricketers are going to come from. We want to try and get cricket ‘amongst the millions’, as they say. So we’re doing an awful lot of coaching. We coach on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from about two in the afternoon until about eight at night, and on Tuesdays and Thursdays we coach from two until five in the afternoon, different schools and different age groups. The standard of cricket in the Midlands has improved an awful lot, I would say, since we got there three months ago.Hopefully next year we are trying to get some of our youngsters into the CFX Academy. We have two of them in this year, Travis Friend and Gregg Haakonsen, who are both from the Midlands, although Travis went to school in Harare and Gregg was down south. They will come back to the Midlands after this year at the Academy, and they’re both Midlands boys so the community will really accept them. What we’ll try and do is bring on two young players, Justin Lewis and Luther Mutyambizi, so they will go to the Academy next year. That way we’ll always get Midlands players coming back to the Midlands instead of having Harare guys sent out there.Our Midlands captain is Colin Sanders, and he and Ken Connelly are probably the most dedicated people I’ve met in my life. Although Colin isn’t the most experienced player he did a fantastic job. I know we lost three matches, but in the one game we did win his captaincy was an inspiration. And he’s still learning – who knows, in two or three years he may be the best captain in the country.Guy Savory also did very very well, but he seems to have a problem in the thirties. He got to 30 several times and then got out. He’s going overseas to play as a pro this year for Kenilworth in the Birmingham league, where I had a contract.The Kwekwe ground has improved a lot. It used to be what they call in England a village ground, because obviously Kwekwe isn’t a fantastically popular place. But I believe that Kwekwe Sports Club has one of the best wickets in the country in terms of batting, anyway. It’s a fantastic place to be able to play cricket. The field is coming on a lot, the community is showing a lot of dedication to making Kwekwe Sports Club a much better place. They’ve drawn up plans to make it into a really big, impressive ground, with seating and good facilities. It’s looking really good. We have the centre of excellence at Kwekwe Sports Club, and kids come from all over the place and we coach them there, pretty much like the centre of excellence they have at the CFX Academy. At the moment we’re staying in lodgings, but we’ll move into a house at the ground when we go back for the third term. They’re building a house and an office at the ground, and the intention is that next season basically the professionals will be running Midlands cricket, taking the load of those who have to hold down jobs.

AVFC must unleash Tim Iroegbunam

Aston Villa missed out on the chance to secure four consecutive Premier League wins in a row yesterday after losing to West Ham United at the London Stadium with the home side winning 2-1.

Next up for the Midlands club is a home clash against another London club as Arsenal will be making the trip to Villa Park on Saturday afternoon.

In terms of who could be available and who Villa manager Steven Gerrard could pick to be in his starting XI to take on Mikel Arteta’s side at the weekend, we think one rarely seen figure at the Midlands club should be in line for some action.

Opportunity knocks

Taking into account how Marvelous Nakamba is still out on the sidelines with a knee injury he picked up back in December and Douglas Luiz is set to have surgery on a facial injury he sustained during the recent defeat in east London, this could give Gerrard the chance to finally unleash Tim Iroegbunam if the previously mentioned midfield duo aren’t able to play on Saturday.

Having been an unused substitute in 11 of Villa’s 12 previous league games, the 19-year-old, who has been labelled as being “raw” by his manager, has only played four minutes of Premier League action this season, which came during the club’s 2-0 win over Brighton & Hove Albion last month.

Described as having a “fantastic profile for a number six” by Gerrard, the teenager could finally show everyone at the Midlands club what he’s capable of by getting his first start of the campaign against the north London club this weekend.

With the Gunners scoring ten goals in their past five league games, it would certainly be a tough test for the youngster to come in for his first full game of his senior Villa career. However, if he were able to express himself on the pitch and help his side keep Arsenal out and ultimately pick up a positive result for the Villans, this would certainly show Gerrard he has what it takes to be a regular performer for the club.

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Moving forward, depending on what the injury situation is by the time Saturday rolls around, starting Iroegbunam should definitely be in the 41-year-old’s thoughts when deciding his team.

In other news: Major blow: Ashley Preece drops fresh Villa injury update, Gerrard will be gutted – opinion

Everton injury update on Van de Beek

Everton will travel to Turf Moor tonight in an important relegation clash against Burnley that could either put the side in a much better position if they win, or damage their chances of safety even further if they lose, and now there has been some bad news from Frank Lampard ahead of the game.

What’s the word?

The Blues boss took to his pre-match press conference to deliver an update on Donny van de Beek’s fitness after he was pulled from the team during the warm-up ahead of the West Ham United game at the London Stadium last weekend.

Lampard told the press:

“Donny won’t be fit. It’s a small grade thigh injury, which will make him fit for the match against Leicester City. He is ineligible to play against Manchester United at the weekend anyway.”

Supporters will be worried

At such a vulnerable time in the season losing players will be an absolute nightmare for Lampard and will surely leave supporters worried about what lies ahead when you consider the difficult fixtures coming up in the remaining weeks for Everton.

The Toffees still need to take on Chelsea, Arsenal, Man United and go to Anfield in the Merseyside Derby in their last ten league games and it is imperative that they pick up points wherever they can to maintain their Premier League status next season.

There is a silver lining in the storm for Everton as Fabian Delph has been confirmed as available for selection, however his lack of match fitness and sharpness returning from a long period of injury could be a cause for concern, but Lampard will surely be hoping he can hit the ground running and make an instant impact with his experience in the squad to deliver what is need.

As the ex-Chelsea boss has confirmed that the injury to the Man United loanee is small, there is hope that the midfielder could be available for selection again by next weekend which will be an absolute blessing for Lampard, and the fact that he is not eligible to play against his parent club at Goodison Park this weekend should give him the extra rest he needs to come back fresh.

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Everton have a challenging week with a tight fixture schedule after playing West Ham on Sunday, Burnley tonight and then the early kick-off against Manchester United on Saturday, so Lampard must do everything he can to ensure the side not only pick up important points but must keep the squad fresh in this tight run of games, avoiding more injuries and suspensions.

In other news: Lampard must finally axe £19.8m-rated “liability” who has “cost Everton dearly” again

Blues and Bulls share points in rainy Sydney


Scorecard

Ryan Broad was anchoring Queensland’s innings with 55 not out when rain ended play © Getty Images

Persistent rain in Sydney gave New South Wales and Queensland their first points of the FR Cup as the match was abandoned with the Bulls sitting at 4 for 127. The fourth and final rain stoppage came in the 28th over as Ryan Broad (55 not out) was trying to set the Blues a challenging target.He had survived a tough new-ball period after the Bulls chose to bat and fell to 3 for 44. Aaron Nye provided a flicker of entertainment for the spectators who braved the conditions, belting 43 from 44 balls before skying a catch to Nathan Hauritz in the outfield from what proved to be the final ball of the match.The no-result meant Queensland’s under-strength attack – Andy Bichel and Michael Kasprowicz are injured – earned a reprieve against a New South Wales line-up boasting Phil Jaques, who is pushing for a Test call-up. Both sides had lost their opening one-day games and the Blues now sit fourth on the table ahead of the fifth-placed Bulls.

Clarke added to Australian squad

Michael Clarke’s inclusion indicates selectors may opt for the extra batsman if they lose Shane Watson to bolster the batting line-up © Getty Images

Michael Clarke has been added to Australia’s first Test squad as cover for Shane Watson after the allrounder picked up a hamstring injury. Watson is still to be assessed by Alex Kountouri, the Cricket Australia physiotherapist, but the selectors indicated they would not replace him with another allrounder if Watson is ruled out of the Ashes opener.Watson strained his right hamstring while bowling in a domestic one-day game in Perth on Friday and was expected to arrive in Brisbane later on Saturday. Cricket Australia said it did not expect to know the severity of Watson’s injury until Sunday. Clarke’s inclusion indicates the selectors may opt for the extra batsman to bolster the batting line-up.However, Watson has not given up hope of winning his fourth Test cap next week: “We just have to see how it continues to be over the next couple of days,” he said after arriving in Brisbane. “I’ll be doing everything I can to be ready for Thursday, but we’ll see what happens.”Playing an extra batsman could also decide the bowling combination, with Stuart Clark, Shaun Tait and Mitchell Johnson in the fray. If Australia plays only four bowlers instead of the five Watson’s inclusion would allow, the selectors might decide to choose someone who can deliver a number of steady overs, a fact that may favour Clark over Tait and Johnson.Clarke, 25, played all five Ashes Tests last year, and scored 335 runs at 37.22. He lost his place in the Test team during the last Australian summer and regained it in Bangladesh in April, although he failed to seal his spot with scores of 19, 9 and 23 not out. Clarke looked in good touch against England for New South Wales in Sydney a week ago, when he made 50 and 68.

ICC gets tough on 'war of words'

Malcolm Speed – “Players should be under no illusions” © Getty Images

The ICC has told international cricketers to cut down on their verbal sparring or risk disciplinary action. In a release issued on Sunday, they singled out Australia and South Africa after a prolonged “war of words” ahead of their upcoming Test series.They issued the statement from their Dubai headquarters, and warned that umpires and match referees would not allow the spirit of the game to be compromised. The ICC added there had been a “spate of code of conduct reports” and that the “war of words” in the lead up to South Africa’s series with Australia had raised concerns that the high standards expected of international cricketers were at risk of being eroded.The code of conduct governs players and officials on and off-field behaviour and, if broken, it can lead to both fines and suspensions. The ICC’s Australian chief executive, Malcolm Speed, added he was also concerned by the way off-field comments might adversely influence player behaviour and said what he wanted was more of the much-praised sportsmanship witnessed during the recent Pakistan-India and England-Australia Test series.”Unfortunately, since the Ashes there has been a spate of code of conduct offences committed by players which have resulted in a series of penalties being applied, including suspension,” Speed said. “There have also been a series of comments by players and former players ahead of the Australia v South Africa series that I believe make it necessary to remind the players of the importance of playing within the spirit of the game ahead of this series.”Since the start of November, eight players and officials have been found guilty of ICC code of conduct breaches, twice the number of guilty verdicts in the same period last year. This year 38 players and officials have already been charged with offences as the game heads into what is traditionally one of its busiest periods with a number of Tests and one-day internationals remaining before the end of the year. This compares with a total of 37 charges in the whole of 2004.Speed said that while verbal exchanges between players were part of the game any player who crossed the line faced action under the code. “Players should be under no illusions. Cricket is a game that expects high standards of behaviour from its players, Umpires will report code of conduct breaches and where a breach occurs, it will be dealt with.”South Africa have upset Australians by claiming the Aussies use hostile comments known as “sledging” to upset and distract their opponents. Australia leg-spin great Shane Warne, renowned almost as much for his ‘sledging’ as his bowling, hit back on Sunday.Told that South Africa were employing a psychologist, he said: “They might need one by the time we’ve finished with them.” The first Test of a three-match series starts in Perth on Friday.

Langer leads the Australian charge

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Justin Langer’s 21st Test hundred was the highlight of Australia’s revival after their early collapse© Getty Images

Justin Langer’s coruscating unbeaten 181 shone through on an enthralling day of Test cricket when Australia demonstrated, once again, why they are by far the best side in the world. Staring at an abysmally low first-innings total when they had slumped to 5 for 78, Australia, led by Langer and Adam Gilchrist, responded with a blistering counterattack which was more proof of their incredible self-confidence. They ended the day well in control, on 8 for 357.The one characteristic which has differentiated Australia from the rest of the teams for the last few years has been their ability to attack even when in a crisis, and that feature stood out in the afternoon session. The loss of five top-order wickets in a couple of hours would have been enough to force most teams into a defensive shell. Not this Australian side, though. Langer and Gilchrist, who made a magnificent 69 from 78 balls, came out all guns blazing, thrashing the bowling to all parts in an astonishing onslaught which fetched 142 runs in a mere 25.2 overs. Pakistan’s early advantage vanished in a couple of hours, and normal service was restored. Even when Gilchrist left, Jason Gillespie rubbed it further in with a stubborn 24, adding 80 more for the eighth wicket.Langer’s 21st Test century – his second on his home ground – was among his most fluent knocks in Test cricket. Many of his big knocks in Tests have been scratchy, but this one was assured from the outset. He took his time to settle in, scoring only 22 in the morning session, but at no stage was he unduly troubled by the bounce at the WACA. He got into his stride during his stand with Gilchrist, playing some scorching drives and pulls, and then went into overdrive when batting with the tail: the shot of the day was probably his on-driven six off Mohammad Sami, who was charging in with the second new ball. Pakistan did have one chance to remove him early in the piece, but Kamran Akmal failed to move down the leg side quickly enough when Langer gloved one off Sami. Langer was on 13 then, and made the most of the reprieve. When on 41, he went past Brian Lara’s tally of 1178 to become the year’s highest run-scorer in Tests.If Langer’s was a well-paced innings, then Gilchrist’s was a typically belligerent one. Five years ago, at Hobart, the same pair had revived a seemingly lost cause against the same opponents and taken Australia to an improbable win; here, Gilchrist failed to reach his hundred, but did enough to turn a dire situation into a dominant one in a couple of hours. As always, he pounced upon even marginal errors in length – anything fractionally short was cut or pulled away, while deliveries even slightly fuller than good length were driven with precise timing and placement.The Pakistan attack, so impressive in the first session, slowly came unstuck. Shoaib Akhtar and Sami had shared the five wickets to fall, but they were given a much-deserved rest in the afternoon, and both batsmen cashed in. Abdul Razzaq was creamed through the off side, while Danish Kaneria was twice lofted over long-on for sixes by Langer. The momentum shifted drastically, and even Shoaib and Sami couldn’t do much to restore the balance when they came back into the attack.

Shoaib Akhtar struck twice before lunch to give Pakistan the early initiative© Getty Images

However, Pakistan had everything going their way in the morning. Inzamam-ul-Haq won the toss, and then Shoaib and Sami ripped through the Australian top order. Shoaib had publicly baited Matthew Hayden before the game, calling Langer the better of the two openers, and he backed up that statement in only his second over. Hayden had thumped him for four earlier in the over, but had no answer to a full-length delivery which swung back in and trapped him plumb in front (1 for 6).Ricky Ponting and Langer steadied the innings, but at no stage of the partnership did either batsman dominate. Ponting played a couple of crunching drives on the off side, but for the most part Pakistan kept the pressure on. Shoaib, Sami and Mohammad Khalil, the left-arm seamer making his Test debut, bowled with control and made run-scoring an onerous task. Only six fours came in the first session, and the discipline yielded results, as three wickets fell in the last six overs before lunch.Ponting played all across a straight delivery from Sami which crashed into his stumps (2 for 56), Damien Martyn nicked a perfect away-going delivery, while Darren Lehmann shuffled far too much and had his stumps knocked back by Shoaib (4 for 71). When Michael Clarke edged Shoaib to slip immediately after lunch, Australia had slumped to 5 for 78, and were in danger of being bundled out for 150 or less. Then Gilchrist joined Langer, and the Australian party began.

Clarke: I've been very nervous early on in my career, so I hope to relax over here'


Rikki Clarke: ‘I do what I do, scoring runs and taking wickets’

Michael Vaughan says your bowling needs a bit of work.
I know my bowling is my weak area. Ideally I’d like to bowl a lot more at Surrey, but basically it’s a case of working with Troy Cooley when I get the opportunity and seeing how it goes. At Surrey, I’ll bowl well in one game, but then not bowl again in the next or for a while after that. It leads to inconsistency, and that’s what I lack at the moment. I need to sort out my technique, iron out that odd short ball and odd full ball, and hit more of a consistent area at a decent pace.Was your action modelled on that other famous Guildford and Surrey seam bowler?
Bickers? No, it wasn’t planned like that. But when I joined Surrey I did work a lot with him, and he said that that sort of action would help. I had a tendency to fall away at the crease, which was something of a glitch in my technique. Bickers’s advice was to find an action that just repeated itself naturally.How are you feeling with a Test debut seemingly round the corner?
I’d like to play, and most people reckon I will play. I’ve just got to wait and see who they go with. From a very early age I’ve wanted to play for England, and now I’ve got the chance, I want to grab it with both hands. It’s all come pretty quickly. In the summer before last I was playing for Guildford, got a few games for Surrey and at the end of it I was picked for the ICC Champions Trophy. And then, at the start of this summer, I went the other way. I started off with Surrey, got dropped, went back to Guildford for two or three games. And then two months later I was in the one-day series … and now this.Would your career benefit from a move from Surrey?
It’s definitely something I’ve thought about. I’ve played all my cricket for them, but if I was somewhere else, then I’d be higher up the order and have more responsibility. But for the moment I’m a Surrey player and I just need to work hard. But moving away is something I’ve thought about, to further my England career. Because at the moment my bowling is not good enough. I’ve mentioned it to Adam Hollioake and the coach, and towards the end of last season they did give me more responsibility, and it went well – I was taking wickets and building a good rhythm. I think that’s what I need, day-in-day-out bowling. Up till now I’ve been getting a game where I’d bowl 25 overs, then in the next I wouldn’t touch the ball. It leads to inconsistency.Last season you scored a hundred and were then dropped?
Yeah, I got 127, but then the overseas players came back and it was a case of “the youngster has to go”. I missed the next four or five games and went back to Guildford instead. But I know they rate me – I’ve signed a five-year contract, and I’ve got four years left … which is pretty tidy!How’s the one-day career going?
It’s been okay, so far. In my last game against South Africa at Edgbaston, I didn’t exactly set the world alight, but I batted well and played my natural game – basically the nerves had settled. The Pakistan series earlier in the summer didn’t go so well, though I’m not sure why. Maybe it was nerves, possibly some bad shot selection. Either way the key is to play naturally. I do what I do, scoring runs and taking wickets.How do you rate your prospects in Bangladesh?
I’ve been very nervous early on in my career, so I hope to relax over here. But I can’t escape the fact that my bowling is still weak. I want to do a job as a third seamer, go for two runs an over, keep it tight and take the odd wicket. That’s what I’m working at. I worked with Troy in the summer, and to be totally honest, my bowling really progressed in that time, only to fall back again at Surrey. Hopefully he’ll help take it on again.Is Freddie Flintoff something of a role model?
Yes, definitely. Freddie is taking on more responsibility with the ball as well as bat, and he’s getting wiser as a cricketer. He’s a definite role model. I’ve heard no word for Stewie [Alec Stewart], my predecessor at No. 6 – he’s too busy watching Chelsea. But 6 is my number. I’ve done it for Surrey and I’ve enjoyed it. It’s down to me to do well now, so that when Freddie comes back, I’ll be giving the selectors a bit of a headache. I just want to be in the side.Is your fielding natural or the product of hard work?
I don’t work that hard on my fielding, to be honest. Of course, it’s the same as everyone – we have our catches in the morning. But maybe I’ve just got big hands! I enjoy standing at slip, backward point, or wherever. It’s just a question of where the skipper wants me. Down at fine-leg is not really me – I like to be in the action and maybe take a run-out.How have you adjusted to the batting conditions overseas?
Batting-wise I’ve been working with Duncan Fletcher, and he said get a bit lower at the crease. In England I stand very tall, because the pitches are so true. Over here that’s not the case, you have to stay lower, especially when you’re quite tall like me. As the allrounder I’m not quite in the Flintoff mould – Freddie is more powerful than I am. He still plays the correct shots, but hits the ball so much harder. Given time at the crease I can be pretty destructive myself, but I like to have a look first and build an innings. Freddie, on the other hand, can just come in and destroy bowlers

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