Abdullah719
T20I Captain
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2013
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The England all-rounder speaks to Mike Atherton about battling his way back into the Test team after a gruelling Ashes.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/4da4458a-b76a-11e8-9605-b6ff09b482a1
Some excerpts from this article:
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/4da4458a-b76a-11e8-9605-b6ff09b482a1
Some excerpts from this article:
“Muslim cricketers deep down want to have religion in their life,” he says. “I was a bit reluctant until I saw Hash. I was a bit hesitant. I would have got there in the end but Hash made it much easier for me. I thought, ‘If he can do it, why not me?’ ”
“I found it very difficult in Australia to switch off,” he says. “It was my first Ashes tour and I was desperate to do well and was really looking forward to it. I worked so hard on the short ball before the series began, maybe too hard. Then [Nathan] Lyon kept getting me out. I found that very hard to deal with. I never thought that I was a poor player of spin but I really struggled against him. I wasn’t getting any wickets either. Things just got tougher and tougher.
“After the third Test I’d almost had enough. You never want to get dropped but I was at that point. I probably shouldn’t have played the second Test with my finger injured; then someone got injured and I had to play the fourth Test; then I played the fifth. After that I just needed a break; needed to get away from the game.”
Ali is very critical of the Australia team, and his lack of respect for them lingers still. “Everyone you speak to . . . they are the only team I’ve played against my whole life that I’ve actually disliked. Not because it’s Australia and they are the old enemy but because of the way they carry on and [their] disrespect of people and players.”
As for the events in Cape Town that led to Steve Smith, the Test captain, being banned for 12 months, along with David Warner and Cameron Bancroft, who got nine months, Ali insists it was always coming. “I’m someone who generally feels sorry for people when things go wrong but it’s difficult to feel sorry for them. This ODI series they were very good actually; they’d been . . . ” Humbled? “Yeah, humbled.
“The first game I ever played against them, in Sydney, just before the 2015 World Cup, they were not just going hard at you, they were almost abusing you. That was the first time it hit me. I gave them the benefit of the doubt but the more I played against them they were just as bad, the Ashes here [in 2015] they were worse actually. Not intimidating, just rude. Individually they are fine and the Aussies we’ve had at Worcester have been fantastic, lovely guys.”
“The match at the Ageas Bowl felt like my debut again,” he says. “I was really excited. It was funny, I knew I needed a break from Test cricket but I found it hard to watch when I was out of the team, missed it more than I imagined.
“As soon as I started bowling I knew it was coming out well. I’d been bowling well for the club, been working with Saqqui [Saqlain Mushtaq, the part-time England spin coach]. He’s really good. Basically I don’t think we bowl enough as spinners in England and he’s always on at me to do more. I’d bowled 16 overs and didn’t have a wicket but almost for the first time as a spinner I wasn’t worried. I knew the wickets would come if I stayed patient.”