England v Australia | 1st ODI | Rose Bowl | 22/6/2010

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Amjid Javed

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Match facts

June 22, 2010
Start time 2.30pm (13.30GMT)


If there is a future for 50-over cricket, then surely it lies in contests such as this: a five-match hors d'oeuvre that is decidedly and unashamedly geared towards more significant encounters in the not-so-distant future. Everything that England and Australia have done in their recent outings - whether it's thumping Pakistan or labouring past Bangladesh - has been assessed in the context of their Ashes preparations. So here we go then. Here's a proper Phoney War to be getting on with. May the best team steal the momentum and land the psychological blows.

Whatever happens in the coming five games, it is hard to envisage a scoreline as one-sided as last September's 6-1 drubbing. England have come on in leaps and bounds since that ignominious thrashing - their gameplans have been liberated by key personnel such as Eoin Morgan and Craig Kieswetter - while Australia, regardless of their status as World Cup and Champions Trophy-holders, are in an undeniable period of transition, and beset by a raft of injuries to many of their first-choice seam attack, most notably Mitchell Johnson, Ben Hilfenhaus and the fading Brett Lee.

But the real reason why this series could and should be a humdinger lies in its timing. Ever since the days of the Texaco Trophy, English teams have invariably performed better when the one-dayers have preceded the Tests. In 2005, England produced some of their best 50-over form of the decade to share the NatWest Series courtesy of a tied final against Australia (before slumping 3-0 in the subsequent NatWest Challenge, but that's another story), while their achievement in beating South Africa in South Africa back in November gave them vital self-belief ahead of the tough Test series that followed.

Whether the public interest will match the expected commitment from the teams is a moot point - although given how woeful both England and Australia have been in the football World Cup to date, many sports fans might quite enjoy the chance to recapture some bragging rights.



Form guide (last five completed matches)


England WWWWW
Australia WLWWW



Watch out for...


Ricky Ponting is back in England and bristling for vengeance once again. His last two visits have not been among the most enjoyable memories of his illustrious career, seeing as he surrendered the Ashes in both 2005 and 2009, but the indignities will only have strengthened his resolve. He's now the elder statesman of a new-look team, and his talents may not be as razor-edged as they once were, but his presence on a cricket field remains inspirational nonetheless.


Paul Collingwood was a part of the England side that thrashed Australia by 100 runs on this very ground in 2005, in the first Twenty20 international between the two teams. While the prospect of once again reducing the Aussies to 31 for 7 may be improbable, Collingwood knows full well how critical it is to attack from the outset, just as they did five years ago. After his break during the Bangladesh series, he's fit and refreshed, and ready to resume hostilities.



Team news


Cameron White scored a century on this ground when the teams met last September, and he is now the fulcrum of the batting line-up at No. 5. Tim Paine resumes his wicketkeeping duties following the injury to Brad Haddin, while Doug Bollinger leads an inexperienced seam attack, in the absence of Johnson and Hilfenhaus.

Australia (probable) 1 Shane Watson, 2 Tim Paine (wk), 3 Ricky Ponting (capt), 4 Michael Clarke, 5 Cameron White, 6 Michael Hussey, 7 James Hopes, 8 Nathan Hauritz, 9 Ryan Harris, 10 Clint McKay, 11 Doug Bollinger.


England eased to victory over Scotland at the weekend, and it's hard to envisage many changes to the side for that game. Andrew Strauss and Craig Kieswetter gelled as an opening partnership at the first time of asking, while Stuart Broad will be better for his first outing since the World Twenty20 final.

England (probable) 1 Andrew Strauss (capt), 2 Craig Kieswetter (wk), 3 Kevin Pietersen, 4 Paul Collingwood, 5 Eoin Morgan, 6 Luke Wright, 7 Tim Bresnan, 8 Graeme Swann, 9 Stuart Broad, 10 Ajmal Shahzad, 11 James Anderson.



Pitch and conditions


The Rose Bowl had a reputation as a seamer's paradise in its early years, but the pitch has settled down considerably since then. With fine weather in prospect, the challenge of batting under lights will be less daunting than it might otherwise have been, although White and Co. weren't exactly unsettled by the autumnal chill they experienced on their last visit.


Stats and Trivia



The Rose Bowl match will be the 3000th ODI, and it will feature the same two teams who contested the first, at Melbourne in January 1971.


Despite defeating Australia in the Ashes and the final of the World Twenty20, England's recent record in ODIs against them is woeful. They've lost eight of their last nine fixtures, dating back to the World Cup in March 2007, and most recently were crushed by nine wickets in the semi-final of the Champions Trophy last October.


Australia have a 100% record in ODIs at the Rose Bowl, albeit they've played just two matches, against England in 2009 and the USA in 2004. England have won two, lost two in four visits.

Source - Cricinfo
 
i thnk it wil be an even contest this time with england having a few good players and aussies missing thier main pace line up
 
England will meet their enemy again but this time I don't think so they can give defeat to them. Aussies are much stronger!!!!
 
Last edited:
Supporting England :)...

ne reports on SHAHZAD... is he a container or wicket taking option?

doesnt FINN deserve to be in the squad?
 
last time aussies won over here .. but that time. they had LEE BRACKEN JOHNSON HOPES..WATSON

3 bowlers are missing who bowled england out for 228
 
England would be looking to carry in their form from the T20 format. A good test for them as far as any progress that has been made.
 
I'm rooting for Australia here. I just hope someone is showing this match in Pak. Geo Super will prioritize the dead rubber Asia Cup match
 
should be a helluva match...I'll go against the grain and go for an England victory.
 
i thnk thre showing it on cricone or show sports ere in uae
 
bit of a pointless series, but if nothing else, it gives everyone an excuse to bask in the glorious weather here, which shows no sign of relenting. 3-2 to England if they play their cards right.
 
Whippy said:
bit of a pointless series, but if nothing else, it gives everyone an excuse to bask in the glorious weather here, which shows no sign of relenting. 3-2 to England if they play their cards right.

Can't cover your ass that quick Whippy, every series is an important series :asif GOOOO ENGLAND!
 
Should declare a national holiday if Ricky Ponting ever doesnt win the toss and a result batting FIRST...
 
adnan yasin said:
doesnt FINN deserve to be in the squad?

In light of Finn's form this summer (brilliant at every level), the ECB recently gave him a quickfire England contract so they could nick him from the counties and wrap him in cotton wool. thinking ahead to - yep - the Ashes. every centrally contracted bowler gets time off playing this summer to have a rest and build their fitness. this is why Broad didn't play against Bangladesh, and now it's the turn of Finn.
 
Whippy said:
bit of a pointless series, but if nothing else, it gives everyone an excuse to bask in the glorious weather here, which shows no sign of relenting. 3-2 to England if they play their cards right.


why 3-2 buddy ,.......

England will thrash them in this series like they did to u in last series ....

I m predicting 4 -1 here for England and KP or Swann MOS

Common Eng ....... hit them hard ...
 
Whippy said:
In light of Finn's form this summer (brilliant at every level), the ECB recently gave him a quickfire England contract so they could nick him from the counties and wrap him in cotton wool. thinking ahead to - yep - the Ashes. every centrally contracted bowler gets time off playing this summer to have a rest and build their fitness. this is why Broad didn't play against Bangladesh, and now it's the turn of Finn.

Finn is going to get battered on flat Aussie wickets this summer.
 
most touring bowlers get battered in Australia, nowt you can do. but Broad and Finn are the best chance we've got, as Anderson relies too much on swing under cloud cover, and as good as Swann is, overseas spinners usually fail in Australia.
 
Most Australian wickets have I think become more suited to batsmen, helping the home team in that they're allowed to post massive totals and pressure most touring sides into collapsing in a heap under pressure; as most teams would with Australia's imperious record at home. Hopefully England can buck that trend.
 
Poison said:
Most Australian wickets have I think become more suited to batsmen, helping the home team in that they're allowed to post massive totals and pressure most touring sides into collapsing in a heap under pressure; as most teams would with Australia's imperious record at home. Hopefully England can buck that trend.

Australian wickets are strictly for batsmen, nothing new there. if England want to retain the Ashes you'd think they would need to win at least two tests, and like you say, their only chance of doing that is batting first up and making a truckload, and even that might not work. it's gonna be seriously tough work out there for everyone, but this is the first time in my time as a fan i've entertained the possibility of going down under and avoiding defeat. even in 06/07, having picked the wrong captain, wrong team and gone in with the wrong attitude, I knew we would get mullered. so I dunno. I'm quietly confident.
 
Hazlewood makes his debut! This should be interesting, has been hyped as the next big thing in Australian fast bowling stock.
 
Nice to see England getting a hammering. Sky Sports have gone nuts since they won the world title and described the Australia bowling line up as useless, and they should win 4-1.
 
God, Watto's gona be a real pain in the backside this summer :mad:
 
This ain't T20.

Australia are clearly the best team in the 50 over game by far. England will be lucky to win a game
 
A couple of lovely shots from Ponting. Hope he gets going today. Few players today are as pleasing to watch
 
oh, come on. one of the form teams of the test arena, and the twenty20 world champions, and they're not allowed to feel confident about a home ODI series? the amount of posters that seem to have a massive chip on their shoulder with regards to everything England, I swear. it's so jealous and pathetic.
 
England are doing fine. bowling well and taking regular wickets in batsmen-friendly conditions. every chance they'll be chasing an achievable total later on.
 
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