Ashes 2017 - Mason Crane remains the envy of Australia

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Ashes departures from Heathrow follow a familiar pattern. There are odd occasions, at least 20 years apart, when English fans rejoice at the parade of talents strutting through the airport. More commonly, though, our sense of forboding is matched by full-on Aussie scorn.

Yet 20-year-old leg-spinner Mason Crane bucks the trend. His inexperience and high economy rate might have prompted scepticism from the home camp, with Michael Vaughan just one of the experts calling the selection “a step too far”. But there is a different mood Down Under, where the cognoscenti are fascinated by this rare creature: a leggie who is prepared to give the ball some air.

“He’s got the right attitude,” said Trevor Chappell, coach of the Gordon first-grade team that signed Crane up for their 2016-17 campaign. “He is aggressive, and gives it a rip; he doesn’t just roll the ball out. He bats and fields pretty well too so he’s a good cricketer. It’s just a pity he’s English.”

Crane’s connection with Gordon developed through his Hampshire team-mate Will Smith. The previous season, Smith had opened the batting at Chatswood Oval – a picturesque ground where sixes still land on the commuter railway line into Sydney Central. And when Smith heard that the club was looking for a spinner, he put Crane in touch with Gordon’s chairman of selectors Mark Carmichael.

“We’ve seen a lot of good players from England come through this club,” Carmichael told Telegraph Sport. “Tony Greig, Mike Gatting, Bill Athey. Then, when Mason arrived, everybody went ‘Wow, this is something a bit different.’”

Had Crane been a seamer, his 52 wickets in 12 matches might have gone largely unnoticed. Yet the wrist-spinner – always the joker in the bowlers’ pack – has a unique magnetism. In England, we distrust the species instinctively, in the same way that we distrust proportional representation. The Aussies are much more comfortable, having spawned a long line of mystery bowlers from Clarrie Grimmett to Bill O’Reilly, from Richie Benaud to Shane Warne.

Climate plays a role here, because Australia’s hard red soil places a premium on creativity. But there is also something temperamental at work. The Aussie approach - best summed up in that salty cry from the bleachers, “Have a go, ya mug!” - is naturally adventurous. It took no little chutzpah, 135 years ago, to challenge the Old Country at cricket and win.

As with Crane, there are always exceptions to the rule. Bill Lawry, the adhesive opener who captained the 1968 Australian tourists, used to score so slowly that he was once described as “a corpse with pads on”. In general, though, England have been more likely to go safety-first. These ancient rivals may now stand dead level in the series, having each won the Ashes 32 times. But if you stack up individual Test victories, the score favours the bolder Australians by a distance: 130 to 106.

To return to Crane’s case, his willingness to entice the batsman – even at the risk of turning in expensive figures – is his X-factor. At Gordon, he would occupy one end for most of the day, once rolling out 41 straight overs. As the season drew to its close, the state selectors began to take an interest. “He flighted the ball, and bowled to get people out,” recalled Carmichael. “There were a few balls where he got hit over the fence for six, but then two balls later he probably got the same person out.

“The match against St George, in particular, was a tremendous contest, because Mason was bowling at [New South Wales captain] Moises Henriques and [regular NSW No 4] Kurtis Patterson. It was club cricket, but we had three international-class players going at it. When NSW needed a spinner for their last home game of the season, that spell may well have influenced them.”

Thus it was that Crane made his state debut against South Australia, so becoming the first overseas player to represent NSW since Pakistan’s then captain Imran Khan in 1984-85. “It was an unusual decision,” says Chappell. “Not so much that he is an English guy but that he was a one-off - it wasn’t as if they were likely to get him back again to play in the future. There were a couple of other young spinners in the system who didn’t take to Mason’s selection too kindly. But I think NSW felt he was clearly the better bowler, and they were trying to get into the final.”

One of the decision-makers was Geoff Lawson, the NSW assistant coach. “The Sydney Cricket Ground is a big arena to be playing on, so you never quite know how people will deal with it,” Lawson told Telegraph Sport. “But Mason had been coming to practice with the squad here most weeks as part of the England and Wales Cricket Board’s development programme, working away with [former Australian leg-spinner] Stuart MacGill, so we already knew him and liked his attitude.”

If Crane was a little on the expensive side again – he finished with match figures of 27.2-0-116-5 - no-one at NSW was complaining. He broke a dangerous second-innings partnership, dismissing both set batsmen in the space of 11 balls, to set up their eight-wicket victory. But he was never going to be needed for the next match, away to Western Australia on the spinner’s graveyard that is the WACA (the only Australian ground where Warne never took a Test five-for). His new team lost a thriller by six runs, and with it their shot at the title.

Still, Crane’s stock remains far higher among the Aussies than it does on this side of the world. Lawson put it best. “The question is really whether England are brave enough to pick a wrist-spinner. At 20, Mason is still only serving his apprenticeship. But we were surprised that he wasn’t getting picked by Hampshire from the start of the county season. If you’ve got a good young leg-spinner over here you give him a go.

“Whatever happens in this series, I’d say there’s a good case for playing two spinners at the SCG,” Lawson added. “I’m sure the Aussies would be looking to do that if he was one of ours. It’s just a pity he’s a Pom.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/cricket/...y-england-mason-crane-remains-envy-australia/
 
It will be interesting to see if England actually play him in the X1.
 
There have been several false leggings dawns for England in the last thirty years. Nobody here knows how to coach them. But I wish Crane well.
 
He maybe good but England really need quality fast bowlers to do the job and that they simply don't have. Nor do they have the batting to weather an attack of Hazelwood/Cummins/Starc/Lyon.
 
Ashes 2017: Mason Crane relishing Test debut against Australia

MASON CRANE is ready to be thrown in at the deep end in Australia this winter, insisting he would relish the prospect of making his England Test debut during the upcoming Ashes series.

The 20-year-old is England’s second spinner here behind Moeen Ali but could realistically make his debut in either Adelaide or Sydney, two grounds where teams have traditionally played two slow bowlers.

Crane knows Australia well having enjoyed a successful winter in the country last year, the leg-spinner being plucked out of Sydney Grade cricket to become the first overseas player to represent New South Wales since Imran Khan in 1984-85.

It was that success that alerted Trevor Bayliss, the Australian who was in charge of New South Wales before he became England coach in 2015, to his potential and led to him handing Crane a T20 debut in Cardiff last summer.

The Hampshire youngster took on South Africa’s AB De Villiers – and won – in that match, eventually snaring a memorable first international wicket after fearlessly continuing to throw the ball up after being smashed to all parts by the most destructive batsman in the world.

It is why the prospect of taking on David Warner and company over the coming weeks holds no fears for Crane, even though he knows the Australians will be itching to hit him out of the attack if he does get an opportunity.

“You’ve got to get used to it because that is the way Australians tend to play spin,” he said. “I know they are going to come after me so it is about holding my nerve and getting them out in the end.

“It is great to be on an Ashes tour – it is an experience I’ll remember forever.

“I’m very confident if I was called upon I could do a job. I probably wouldn’t be here if other people didn’t think so either.”

With Moeen having been ruled out of England’s opening two warm-up games with a side strain, Crane, who took two wickets in the tour opener against a Western Australia XI in Perth last weekend, knows he could at some point be thrust into the team as the frontline spin option.

“It just confirms that I have to prepare for every single game like I’m going to play,” he said. “You never know. I’ve got to be prepared to play in every game on this tour.”

Crane, who will fill in again for Moeen in England’s four-day pink-ball tour match against a Cricket Australia XI in Adelaide starting tomorrow, says his work with former Australia leg-spinner Stuart MacGill during in Sydney last winter accelerated his development massively.

MacGill, who works with New South Wales, took 208 wickets in his 44 Tests and may have become an all-time great had he not been around at the same time as Shane Warne, the greatest leg-spinner of them all.

“When I was working with Stu, he was very keen on letting me know what a big deal it was to play for New South Wales,” said Crane.

“This summer I’ve been able to play in some other big games as well. I feel like if I was called upon tomorrow, I’d be confident to go out and play.

“Stu’s had a big influence. We had a great relationship. He is as passionate as anyone I’ve seen when they talk about bowling and that came across even when I just spoke to him over coffee. We worked on a couple of technical things but a lot of it was mental with him – he was an amazing help.”

http://www.express.co.uk/sport/cric...-Crane-relishing-Test-debut-against-Australia
 
watch his master class with boom boom, afridi was making excuses for him as to why his deliveries were not turning, unfortunately another overhyped product of the English media. he will get found out in Australia
 
watch his master class with boom boom, afridi was making excuses for him as to why his deliveries were not turning, unfortunately another overhyped product of the English media. he will get found out in Australia

LOL at deliveries not turning, have a look at this:

<blockquote class="twitter-video" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">The spell of the series!<a href="https://twitter.com/masoncrane32">@masoncrane32</a> took 4-1 in 10 balls against the North! <a href="https://t.co/EaWrTgf4vE">pic.twitter.com/EaWrTgf4vE</a></p>— ECB�� (@ECB_cricket) <a href="https://twitter.com/ECB_cricket/status/844824795950735360">March 23, 2017</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
LOL at deliveries not turning, have a look at this:

<blockquote class="twitter-video" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">The spell of the series!<a href="https://twitter.com/masoncrane32">@masoncrane32</a> took 4-1 in 10 balls against the North! <a href="https://t.co/EaWrTgf4vE">pic.twitter.com/EaWrTgf4vE</a></p>— ECB�� (@ECB_cricket) <a href="https://twitter.com/ECB_cricket/status/844824795950735360">March 23, 2017</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Great dip & rhythm. Strong action- more energy in his run up vs Warne who powered it all through shoulder & hips in delivery. I can see why England are excited about this guy. I doubt they'll have the courage to play him before the 5th test though.
 
Conceded 193 runs on his debut(most by any English debutant & the 3rd highest by any England bowler).
 
Mason Crane needs to spend at least four years playing just county and England Lions.
 
Conceded 193 runs on his debut(most by any English debutant & the 3rd highest by any England bowler).

I was about to laugh at the English hype machine when I checked the scores and realized Australia had scored over 600 :murali with Moeen Ali getting a 170
 
He should get more chances as first choice spinner.shadab Khan also had similar test debute.
Crane and mathew Parkinson are the English legspinners to watch out for.
 
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