Robert
Test Star
- Joined
 - Nov 4, 2007
 
- Runs
 - 37,604
 
- Post of the Week
 - 1
 
My initial answer is no. He will be 39 years old and has a moderate record there. I think a pace attack of Archer, Wood, Broad and Stokes is the way, and a much more effective attack that the medium pace array that was murdered by Smith etc. on the last Ashes tour.
Then I think again....

On Anderson's first tour, the ill-fated Flintoff 0-5 reverse, he was a tyro and pitching too full.
On the second he was very effective, though he never took a fivefer, anchoring the bowling while Finn and Tremlett took wiclets. It is important to remember that he had a mountain of runs from Strauss, Cook, Trott, KP, Bell, Collingwood and Prior to bowl at.
The numbers look less attractive on Captain Cook's tour, but consider that he had Australia in touble in the first innings all five tests. But then Haddin would scrap fifty, the England bowling would ablate against Johnson and Harris, and Anderson would be bowling again in two sessions. He played the last two matches with a cracked rib.
Most interesting is the Root tour where Anderson did a good containing job, going at just 2.11 an over and averaging a respectable 28. But there was no fast bowler to exploit these tight overs. Of course he was helped by the pink ball test.
I don't think England should play him every match but maybe on a horses-for-courses arrangement - try to pinch a win with the pink ball at Adelaide, strike at Perth with the quicks, and hang in for draws eleswhere.
Of course the England batting is nowhere as good as that Strauss lineup. I suspect that Crawley, Root and Stokes will have to spend a lot of time at the crease to keep England in the series.
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			Then I think again....

On Anderson's first tour, the ill-fated Flintoff 0-5 reverse, he was a tyro and pitching too full.
On the second he was very effective, though he never took a fivefer, anchoring the bowling while Finn and Tremlett took wiclets. It is important to remember that he had a mountain of runs from Strauss, Cook, Trott, KP, Bell, Collingwood and Prior to bowl at.
The numbers look less attractive on Captain Cook's tour, but consider that he had Australia in touble in the first innings all five tests. But then Haddin would scrap fifty, the England bowling would ablate against Johnson and Harris, and Anderson would be bowling again in two sessions. He played the last two matches with a cracked rib.
Most interesting is the Root tour where Anderson did a good containing job, going at just 2.11 an over and averaging a respectable 28. But there was no fast bowler to exploit these tight overs. Of course he was helped by the pink ball test.
I don't think England should play him every match but maybe on a horses-for-courses arrangement - try to pinch a win with the pink ball at Adelaide, strike at Perth with the quicks, and hang in for draws eleswhere.
Of course the England batting is nowhere as good as that Strauss lineup. I suspect that Crawley, Root and Stokes will have to spend a lot of time at the crease to keep England in the series.