Lillee questions Australia's pace core

Australia’s fast-bowling great has questioned whether the current batch of fast men are more interested in looking good than looking after themselves properly

Brydon Coverdale at the WACA17-Dec-2009Australia’s fast-bowling great Dennis Lillee has questioned whether the current batch of fast men are more interested in looking good than looking after themselves properly, as Australia’s injury list keeps growing. Peter Siddle was the latest member of the pace attack to be sidelined by injury when a hamstring problem ruled him out of the Perth Test.Siddle has joined Ben Hilfenhaus (knee tendonitis), Brett Lee (elbow), Stuart Clark (back) and Nathan Bracken (knee) on the casualty list, which has left Doug Bollinger and Mitchell Johnson as the only Cricket Australia fast bowlers fit and available for Test cricket. Lillee, who was inducted into the ICC Hall of Fame at the WACA on Thursday, said his observations led him to wonder if the bowlers were training appropriately.”I think there’s more soft-tissue injuries now,” Lillee said. “You’re getting groins and elbows and I think a lot of it is the amount of cricket that’s played, and I’m not sure that fast bowlers in particular do enough training distance-running and real heavy sprinting work. I’m not sure they do enough of that.”That’s only a gut feel – I’m not that involved in the game and I’m not a scientist and I’m not a doctor. My gut feel is that maybe a lot of the training is more about maybe looking good rather than looking after the core, which is more essential than having a nice beach look.”For the older members of the attack like Lee and Clark, the injuries have raised the serious possibility that they may not play Test cricket again. There have been questions over whether Lee could still be an effective weapon if he cut back his speed in an effort to prolong his career and Lillee, who did that himself in his later years, gave Lee hope that it might be an option.”As you get a bit older you can’t actually bowl it as quick,” Lillee said. “If you’re going to cut your speed you’ve got to have other tricks, and the other tricks are learning about the trade of fast bowling. It is an art-form.”Anyone can do that, as long as they’re prepared to work on the trade itself. You can have an extended career and not just be an outright fast bowler by moving into the next phase.”

Silicon Valley consortium values London Spirit at £295 million in Hundred coup

Deal is set to make London-based club the most valuable in the Hundred

Matt Roller and Nagraj Gollapudi31-Jan-2025English cricket has landed a multi-million pound windfall after a Silicon Valley tech consortium won a bidding war with the Sanjiv Goenka-owned RPSG Group for a 49% stake in London Spirit, the Hundred team based at Lord’s.The winning bid made by the consortium, headed by Nikesh Arora of Palo Alto Networks, valued the Spirit at £295 million, more than twice the price paid by Reliance Industries Limited (RIL) for Oval Invincibles on Thursday. It means they will pay £144.55m for a 49% stake in the Spirit, with MCC intending to retain its position as majority shareholder.The price is more than double the floor valuation set for London Spirit based on investors’ indicative bids and represents a significant injection of funds into English cricket. The revenue raised in the sales process will be split between the 18 first-class counties, MCC and the recreational game and is designed to “future-proof” county cricket for the next 20 years. RPSG Group is understood to have quit the race at the £292 million mark.The consortium – under the name Cricket Investor Holdings Limited – includes Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, Shantanu Narayen and Egon Durban, the CEOs of Google, Microsoft, Adobe and Silver Lake Management respectively, as well as Arora and Satyan Gajwani, who is one of the co-founders of the US-based Major League Cricket and vice-chairman of Times Internet, the Indian digital giant.It is understood that the consortium’s bid was spearheaded by Arora and Gajwani, after they were among the last investors to enter the race. ESPNcricinfo understands that there are 11 individuals involved in the consortium in total, five of whom are yet to be named publicly.Related

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Mark Nicholas, MCC’s chairman, told members on Friday evening: “We are delighted to have found partners who share our values and understand the power and mystique of Lord’s. We look forward to building on the happy relationship we have already established over the past few weeks.”Nicholas said that there had been “remarkable interest” from investors, and wrote: “Today’s announcement shows what we as Members have always known: our Club is special. It’s why people want to be involved with us. I hope that all Members are as proud as I am and excited at the opportunities that lie ahead.”Goenka, whose company RPSG Group run Lucknow Super Giants in the IPL, was considered the favourite to buy a stake in the Spirit but was beaten in a three-hour bidding war on Friday afternoon, which lasted so long that the start time for the same process at Welsh Fire – which was later won by the owner of Washington Freedom – was delayed by an hour.Sanjiv Goenka’s RPSG Group pulled out of the race at a £292m valuation•Sportzpics

Avram Glazer, the co-owner of Manchester United, and Cain International, who are run by Chelsea director Jonathan Goldstein, were also involved in the auction process on Friday afternoon but pulled out early on. It is thought that what one source described as “the Lord’s factor” played a significant role in the unexpectedly high price for the Spirit.The consortium will now enter into a period of exclusive negotiations with Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), the host venue’s owner, and complete an agreement in the eight-week window set by ECB from the completion of the final round of the bidding process. MCC has maintained throughout that it intends to retain its 51% share in the franchise.The Spirit are defending champions in the women’s Hundred, with England captain Heather Knight leading them to their inaugural title last year and India’s Deepti Sharma hitting the winning runs in the final. Their men’s team, by contrast, have only won three games in the last two Hundred seasons, and finished bottom in 2024.RPSG Group are now expected to refocus their attention to Manchester Originals next week, having held detailed meetings with Lancashire over the past nine months. RIL were also understood to be on the shortlist for the Originals but are out of the running after buying a stake in Oval Invincibles.

Impressive Strikers bowling attack sets up victory over Thunder

The top four is taking shape ahead of finals with three teams level on 14 points

AAP and ESPNcricinfo staff15-Nov-2023Adelaide Strikers 119 for 4 (Wolvaardt 47, Patterson 36*, Smith 3-16) beat Sydney Thunder 118 for 6 (Athapaththu) by six wicketsAdelaide Strikers’ bowlers were outstanding in a six-wicket win over Sydney Thunder, now in fourth on 13 points, with stylish opening batter Laura Wolvaardt leading the successful run chase at Karen Rolton Oval.Strikers have a bowling attack which boasts economy and variety and as a collective they found their groove to restrict Thunder to 118 for 6.Related

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Former Zimbabwe international Anesu Mushangwe began her spell with a double-wicket maiden. Megan Schutt and skipper Tahlia McGrath kept it tight. Nearly half the deliveries in the innings were dot balls.When Heather Knight fell to Jemma Barsby, Thunder were 32 of 3 in the seventh over. In-form opener Chamari Athapaththu was graceful but well contained by the bowlers. McGrath, who removed Athapaththu, also bowled a maiden to Marizanne Kapp in the ninth over.Strikers paced their run chase to perfection. Wolvaardt and opening partner Katie Mack anchored the innings and Bridget Patterson finished the win off superbly despite the best efforts of spinner Lauren Smith.Smith had found herself on a hat-trick when she removed Mack and bowled McGrath with a beauty that spun between bat and pad.Three teams are now level on 14 points with Perth Scorchers leading the way on net run-rate. There is significant incentive to finish top as that means a direct path into the grand final while the team in second gets to host the Challenger final. Those in third and fourth have to win two knockout matches to reach the final.

James Sales' career-best puts Northants in box seat

Gloucestershire up against it despite Zafar Gohar’s five-for

ECB Reporters Network27-Jul-2022 Gloucestershire 317 and 135 for 5 (Harris 62) trail Northamptonshire 479 (Rickelton 95, Procter 78, Sales 71, Young 61, Gohar 5-134) by 27 runsJames Sales hit a career-best 71 to help Northamptonshire build a winning position on the third day of the LV= Insurance County Championship match with Gloucestershire at Cheltenham College.Unbeaten on 21 overnight, the 19-year-old shared a key ninth-wicket stand of 78 with Ben Sanderson as the visitors extended their first innings score from an overnight 353 for seven to 479 all out, a lead of 162.Left-arm spinner Zafar Gohar finished with 5 for 134. But his efforts looked to be in vain as Gloucestershire slipped to 135 for five in their second innings, still 27 behind, by the time bad light ended play 15 overs early.Despite a defiant 62 from Marcus Harris, the hosts were relieved when the action was curtailed, Tom Taylor having claimed two of the wickets on a wearing pitch.Trailing by 36 runs at the start of the day, Gloucestershire needed to back their bowlers with tight fielding to restrict the deficit to a manageable level.Instead, they dropped Sales twice when he had added only a single to his overnight score, David Payne the unlucky bowler on both occasions. First Harris spilled a chance two-handed to his right at gully. Then Ollie Price failed to capitalise on an edge to second slip.Despite Zafar’s four wickets on day two, Gloucestershire bowled seam for the first 11 overs, only introducing their specialist spinner after 30 runs had been added. Three runs later he made the breakthrough, Simon Kerrigan, on 14, driving a catch to extra cover.Sales moved to fifty with a pulled four off Zafar, having faced 121 balls and hit 6 fours. Sanderson then extended the lead to three figures before the pair took 12 off the only over of the innings bowled by Gloucestershire captain Graeme van Buuren.By lunch, Northants had reached 454 for eight, having added 101 in the morning session. Sales’ vital contribution ended when he was unlucky to edge a leg side delivery from Zak Chappell through to James Bracey, whose wicketkeeping throughout the innings was exemplary.A couple of sixes by last man Jack White off Zafar added to Gloucestershire’s frustration and Sanderson was only four short of his career best score when spooning a catch to cover off Chappell.The home side had progressed their second innings to 37 when Chris Dent departed for 16 in careless fashion, chipping a catch to short mid-wicket off Taylor.Ollie Price was caught behind off White for a seven-ball duck and at 42 for two, Gloucestershire trailed by 116.Harris went on the counter-attack, lofting Kerrigan for two sixes over wide long-on as he and Miles Hammond took the total to 82 for 2 by tea in poor light.With only a run added, Taylor beat Hammond’s defensive shot and trapped him lbw. Harris was beaten by successive balls from Sanderson, but then took a single off him to reach a 67-ball half-century, with two sixes and five fours.Gloucestershire’s hopes of saving the game were dealt a severe blow when Harris advanced down the pitch to Kerrigan and was bowled between bat and pad.James Bracey followed for 23, bowled by offspinner Rob Keogh’s first delivery of the innings, a full one which crept under the bat, and the hosts were in dire trouble at 132 for five.

Mitchell Swepson sends final warning before rain forces stalemate

The legspinner was a threat throughout the final of what will be a rematch for in the decider

Daniel Brettig06-Apr-2021Though rain curtailed his chances of delivering an outright victory, Mitchell Swepson showed why he looms as a major threat to New South Wales in the Sheffield Shield final with another outstanding exhibition of wrist spin bowling on the final day of the drawn match in Wollongong.A rematch between these two teams was confirmed when Western Australia were bowled out at the WACA having been set 480 by Tasmania. With the Covid-19 situation having now improved in Brisbane the five-day final appears set for Allan Border Field from April 15-19.Swepson finished with 4 for 59 to take his season tally to 29 wickets at 22.44 from just four Shield matches – either side of a neck injury – and again spun the ball expansively on a deteriorating surface to keep the Blues batsmen wary throughout a day that ended shortly after lunch due to persistent showers.Nathan Lyon was named Player of the Match for his workmanlike figures of 6 for 128 in the Bulls’ first innings of 433, but it was Swepson’s improvement across the course of the game to be the standout threat on the final day that would have excited the Australian selectors most of all.One early leg break that pitched around leg stump and then fizzed past the defensive bat of Jason Sangha underlined the difficulty of facing Swepson. Matt Gilkes was fortunate to survive a vehement lbw appeal when he padded up on the back foot to a delivery that spat out of the footmarks and appeared destined to hit the stumps in the same way Daniel Hughes had been bowled on the third evening.Sangha made it as far as 29 before he flicked Swepson from around the wicket into the lap of the short leg fielder Bryce Street, who somewhat fortuitously hung on. Gilkes went on to his second half century of the match, as part of a young NSW batting line-up that functioned rather better than the older top six that had been routed in their previous game against Tasmania, before edging Brendan Doggett behind in the last over before lunch.When play resumed, Swepson made short work of the debutant Lachlan Hearne, tempting the left-hander into a drive and then zipping a leg break back between bat and pad to rumble the stumps. At this point, the Blues led by only 84 runs with five wickets remaining and more than half the day’s allotted overs to be bowled.Wicketkeeper Baxter Holt eked out 18 deliveries without scoring as the lead advanced by another nine runs, before the rain that briefly interrupted the morning session returned more steadily to hasten the abandonment.

Will Pucovski, Nic Maddinson named in Victoria's Shield squad after mental health breaks

James Pattinson was also named, subject to being released from the Test squad, in the 13-man side to face New South Wales

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Nov-2019Will Pucovski and Nic Maddinson have been named in Victoria’s Sheffield Shield squad to face New South Wales at the MCG starting Friday after receiving medical clearance to return following a break to treat mental health and well-being issues.Both Pucovski and Maddinson had taken breaks from the game within a space of six days earlier this month, just after Glenn Maxwell opted out of the T20I series against Sri Lanka for the same reason. Maddinson and Maxwell returned to club cricket in Melbourne over the last weekend, with positive returns.Both Pucovski and Maddinson trained with the Victoria squad on Wednesday at the MCG while Maxwell did a running session. Cricket Victoria general manager Shaun Graf confirmed that both Pucovski and Maddinson had been cleared to play; however, Maxwell has not been cleared yet.”We are looking forward to having Nic and Will back playing for Victoria after receiving clearance from our medical staff,” Graf said. “We’ll continue to support all our players through their return to play.”Victoria team-mate and Australia’s T20I captain Aaron Finch has been in constant contact with Maxwell during his time out of the game including after his return to club cricket on the weekend.”He was OK. It probably took him a bit longer than he thought to get back into it,” Finch said.”I don’t want to speak on his behalf. But no doubt it’s going to be a gradual process to get back, and whether that’s next week, or next month or next year I think it’s something that with the amount of awareness around mental health and stuff like that these days I think that you have to be mindful of the player making the right decision in their best interest and not trying to rush them back for a particular game or set a defined date on it. I think it’s just a case-by-case scenario.”I know in Maxy’s case a lot of the time he passed it off as tiredness and [being] run down from the game. A lot of the time’s there’s more to it than that.”Fast bowler James Pattinson was also named in the 13-man squad, subject to being released from the Test squad, after missing the Gabba Test against Pakistan through suspension.Marcus Harris also returned for Victoria having missed their last Shield match because of Australia A duty.Victoria chairman of selectors Andrew Lynch was pleased to have a few big names back into the side as the defending Shield champions currently sit bottom of the table without a win in four games. “To bring Marcus Harris, Nic Maddinson, Will Pucovski and potentially James Pattinson back into the squad is really positive as we move into the final two Shield matches before the [BBL] break,” Lynch said. “We’re now looking to get some results on the board to put ourselves in a better position for the second half of the season.”Victoria left out recent debutant Jake Fraser-McGurk and Eamonn Vines. Fraser-McGurk, 17, remarkably will play for Victoria at the national Under-19s championships in Perth just a week after making half-centuries on both Sheffield Shield and List A debut.Victoria are also without acting head coach Lachie Stevens who is on paternity leave. Former Victoria and Australia batsman Brad Hodge has been called in as a short-term senior assistant coach for the game against New South Wales in Stevens’ absence.Squad: Peter Handscomb (capt), Andrew Fekete, Aaron Finch, Sam Harper, Marcus Harris, Jon Holland, Nic Maddinson, James Pattinson, Will Pucovski, Matthew Short, Peter Siddle, Will Sutherland, Chris Tremain

Andrew Strauss steps down as director of England cricket

Former England captain Andrew Strauss to spend more time with family while his wife Ruth undergoes treatment for cancer

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Oct-2018Andrew Strauss has stepped down as director of England cricket after three-and-a-half years in the role, in order to spend more time with his family while his wife Ruth undergoes treatment for cancer.Strauss, who handed over many of his day-to-day duties to Andy Flower during the 2018 home summer, will take on a more flexible role with the ECB, and will play a part in assisting Tom Harrison, the ECB chief executive, in recruiting a full-time successor ahead of England’s tour of the Caribbean in the New Year.It means, however, that he will not now be at the helm as England enter a defining year in 2019, when they host the World Cup for the first time in 20 years, then take on Australia in a home Ashes campaign.”After three-and-a-half incredible years with the ECB, I have taken the difficult decision to step down from my role as Director of England Cricket,” said Strauss.”Next year is potentially the most important the game has had in this country, with the World Cup on home soil and a home Ashes series, and we have an incredible opportunity to do something special. It is vital that the Director of Cricket can give consistent guidance and support to England Cricket through this period.”Strauss’s appointment in May 2015 came in the wake of England’s disastrous showing at that year’s World Cup, and he endured a gruelling first few weeks in the job, including terminating Peter Moores’ second spell as England coach, as well as drawing a line under any prospect of Kevin Pietersen earning an international recall.On his watch, England have taken significant strides towards becoming a genuine force in white-ball cricket – following his appointment of Trevor Bayliss as head coach in 2015, England reached the final of the World T20 the following year and go into next summer’s World Cup as favourites.The Test team’s fortunes have plateaued in the same period, although Strauss’s appointment of Ed Smith as the new national selector has seen the beginnings of a revival in the long-form game. This summer’s 4-1 series win over India atoned in part for a disappointing display during the Ashes, a tour that was at times overshadowed by the circus that surrounded the squad in the wake of Ben Stokes’ arrest in Bristol last September.Dawid Malan chats with England director of cricket Andrew Strauss•Getty Images

Strauss had intended to remain on the tour throughout the series, but chose to fly home in the wake of England’s defeat in the second Test at Adelaide after hearing the news of his wife’s diagnosis.”Taking time out this summer to support my wife and kids, as Ruth goes through treatment for cancer, has given me the chance to fully consider what’s right for England and what’s needed at home,” he said. “The role in cricket requires total focus and commitment to deliver the best results, yet right now I need far more flexibility than could ever be possible in my position in order to support my family.”I will not be leaving the game completely – initially helping Tom to shape the role for my successor, then supporting a range of other ECB projects – but it’s important to see someone else in place for a crucial summer in 2019.Harrison responded to the decision on behalf of the ECB. “We’re very sad to see Andrew step down from the role and we all wish him and his family the very best,” he said. “He deserves huge respect for the way he has managed his role, fully supported Ruth and their boys and calmly considered this decision. And it’s hard to overestimate his contribution since joining us in May 2015.”He is an exceptional talent and it is easy to see how he has made a success of each step in his career – moving from dressing room, to captaincy, to commentary, to a key role in the governing body – and all the while being the most popular of colleagues.”Andrew has brought enormous credibility, measured thinking, strong leadership and exceptional insight and we have been extremely fortunate to have worked so closely with him for the last three and a half years. He has improved the ways we work and set the direction for the men’s Test, one-day and T20 teams.”

Injury-hit Northants suffer under Wessels assault

With two batsmen heading to hospital and a bowler hobbling off, the last thing Northants needed was to come face to face with Riki Wessels at his most destructive

ECB Reporters Network29-Aug-2017Riki Wessels celebrates his century•Getty Images

A scintillating century from Riki Wessels has put Nottinghamshire in total command at the halfway stage of their Specsavers County Championship match against Northamptonshire at Trent Bridge.Fading light forced the players from the field before tea, with 37 overs remaining in the day, with Notts on 317 for 8 in their second innings, an overall lead of 389.Wessels remains unbeaten on 107, having reached his hundred from 77 balls, with 14 fours and three sixes. The former Northants man raced from 50 to 100 in only 21 deliveries and has shared in an unbroken ninth wicket partnership of 90 with Jake Ball, whose contribution is 10.Rory Kleinveldt (3-81) and Richard Gleeson (3-107) have each taken three wickets to try and keep Northants in the contest but Wessels’ knock, the 22nd century of his career, finally appeared to knock the stuffing out of a side that were handicapped, for varying times, by the absence of three key players.Samit Patel made 64 from 59 balls, setting the platform for Wessels’ brutal assault.

Wessels ‘exceptional’ – Wakely

Alex Wakely (Northants captain):
“We’ve been thoroughly outplayed on both days. It was an exceptional innings today from Riki Wessels. That’s as good a knock, especially in the situation, that you are going to come across. At the moment his two innings have been the defining moments in the game.
“The injuries have not been great for us. Me and Adam Rossington have both had x-rays. Touchwood, mine’s OK, I did it catching Alex Hales in the slips on the first day but Rosso’s doesn’t look too promising.”
Riki Wessels (Notts):
“The 10,000 first class runs is a nice milestone to tick off and to get a hundred with it just adds to the occasion and it is something I am immensely proud of. Batting at six seems to suit my game. I can come in and take it to the bowlers and put them under pressure.
“It’s always nice to get runs against Northants. There were some brutal comments thrown around in 2010 when I left but those people are no longer there and now I’ve got plenty of friends in the current side – but it’s still pleasing to get runs against them.”

After 20 wickets fell for 373 runs on the opening day it took just 13 deliveries of the morning session before that tally was increased, with Jake Libby edging Azharullah to third slip.Steven Mullaney became the first of three Notts batsmen to lose their off-poles to Kleinveldt, with Patel and Alex Hales also joining the list.Patel batted with the utmost freedom, reaching his 50 from only 42 balls before playing loosely, around a full-pitched delivery. Hales also seemed in the mood, caressing five boundaries in his 22-ball 25 before also having his stumps re-arranged by the South African all-rounder.Indian Test star Cheteshwar Pujara batted doggedly for 162 minutes in making 34, before being pinned in his crease, to fall to Azharullah for the second day running.Northamptonshire’s hopes of strengthening their position – and rekindling their promotion hopes – were damaged by a succession of unfortunate injuries, with captain Alex Wakeley and wicketkeeper Adam Rossington having to leave the action and go to hospital for x-rays on hand injuries – David Murphy took the gloves and picked up a catch, despite being given a torrid time as some uneven bounce began to show.Their resources were stretched even further when Ben Sanderson hobbled off the field with hamstring trouble after bowling five deliveries in a comeback spell.
Gleeson picked up the wickets of Chris Read, Brett Hutton and Luke Wood in the mid-afternoon gloom but that only fired Wessels up to produce another blitz against his former county.He scored 158 against them at Trent Bridge in 2014, their last championship visit, and made 146 in their one-day meeting in Nottingham last year. This time he had the satisfaction of passing 10,000 career runs early on, before launching an all-out assault on the tiring attack.He celebrated his third championship hundred of the season by clubbing the next ball from Kleinveldt for his fourth maximum, seconds before the umpires intervened and called an early halt to proceedings.

Leon Johnson to lead WICB President's XI

Leon Johnson will lead the WICB President’s XI against the touring Indians in a two-day practice match at Warner Park in St. Kitts on July 9 and 10

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Jul-2016Leon Johnson will lead the WICB President’s XI against the touring Indians in a two-day practice match at Warner Park in St. Kitts on July 9 and 10. Johnson, who has scored 275 runs in four Tests at an average of 39.28, is one of six Test players in the 12-player President’s XI squad, the others being Jermaine Blackwood, Rajendra Chandrika, Shane Dowrich, Shai Hope and Jomel Warrican.Rayon Griffith has been named manager-coach of the team, and Henderson Springer the coach.India will play two warm-up games against the President’s XI before their four-Test series against West Indies. The selectors have not yet named the President’s XI squad for the second warm-up game, a three-day match that will also be played at Warner Park from July 14 to 16.The first Test starts on July 21 at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium in Antigua.WICB President’s XI squad: Leon Johnson (capt), Jermaine Blackwood, Rajendra Chandrika, Roston Chase, Jason Dawes, Shane Dowrich, Shai Hope, Damion Jacobs, Keon Joseph, Marquino Mindley, Vishaul Singh, Jomel Warrican

Harris fights to regain his place

Ryan Harris rates Australia’s pace battery well ahead of the equivalent set of fast men who came to England in 2013. The fact he may well be missing from the XI for the first Test in Cardiff is a fair indicator of why

Daniel Brettig in Canterbury27-Jun-20152:21

Harris finds his rhythm in Canterbury

Ryan Harris rates Australia’s pace battery well ahead of the equivalent set of fast men who came to England in 2013. The fact he may well be missing from the XI for the first Test in Cardiff is a fair indicator of why.Over the past five years Harris has been near enough to an automatic inclusion for Australia’s Test side provided he is fit, yet this time he may find himself held back for later in the series should the selectors Darren Lehmann and Rod Marsh deem it better to stick with the trio – Mitchell Johnson, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood – who laid waste to West Indies.It was for reasons of home and hearth rather than fitness which had Harris missing from the Caribbean, and while the birth of his first son Carter was an understandable delight, he admitted it had compelled him to give away the advantage of incumbency. Long hours in the gym and in the nets at the National Cricket Centre have Harris back close to his best, but he is no guarantee of taking the new ball for the first Investec Test due to the uniformly strong performances of his peers which he believes is advanced from two years ago.”I think we’re probably ahead,” Harris said. “Mitchell Starc is bowling quicker. He was on that tour and played a couple of games, I think he’s bowling a lot better than what he was then. He’s bowling quicker and more accurately. Mitch wasn’t there, we’ve got him. We’re probably better placed I reckon, having Mitch back in. We’re definitely a better unit.”Where we are at the moment is what should happen in the Australian team. Everyone should be fighting for those spots. I haven’t thought too much about it, I’m here to play five Tests, I want to play as much as I can, but the disadvantage of that is I missed a tour.”It’s about immediate performance. You never have credits, that’s the way I look at it anyway. I wish you did, but you don’t. Missing a tour, which was my doing, you give someone else an opportunity. I’m here to play five Tests, but all I want to try and do is show that I’m bowling well. If I’m not in that first Test side, it means someone else is bowling better and hopefully we’re winning Test matches.”Two years ago, Harris was working his way back from injury, and the then brand new coach Lehmann deemed him to be unready for immediate Test match exposure. Another week of training in Nottingham proved fruitful, and from the first morning at Lord’s Harris showed himself to be the most accomplished bowler on either side. This time around Lehmann has again spoken of Harris as “short of a gallop” and needing more to do.”I think I’m pretty good, he’s probably correct in saying that because I haven’t played too many games,” Harris said. “As much as I bowled in Brisbane on centre wickets, it’s very hard to simulate match intensity. I feel like I’m going well, my knee’s going to get sore here and there, that will always be the case, but my body itself feels really good. I don’t feel like I’ve bowled many overs at all, which I haven’t felt in a really long time.”Usually after 15-odd overs or whatever I bowl I’m really sore, so it’s just showing me how the work that I did over the last four months is really helping me, and the thing now is to keep my knee up and going. I’m confident I can do that, I’ve done enough of it now I know what to do.Ryan Harris opened his wicket tally for the Ashes tour and was pleased with how he bowled on the third day against Kent•Getty Images

“Very similar to 2013 actually. I had that Australia A tour, I played the Worcester game. Darren thought the same thing, he thought I was short of a gallop and he was right. I trained a bit more at Notts, something clicked there and I bowled really well at Lord’s. Hopefully that doesn’t happen this time, hopefully I’m playing the first Test.”I worked really hard over those four months in Brisbane to get on this tour but also to get myself where I wanted to be and I’m seeing the rewards of that. It’s just a matter now of putting the ball in the right spot enough times and to come out this morning and do what I did, I was really happy with that.”In Canterbury, Harris’ first ball on the second day was a peach that singed the off bail of Joe Denly. However, he pressed a little too hard for effect after that, and went back to the team hotel feeling dissatisfied. After a quiet word with the assistant coach Craig McDermott, he found far better rhythm on the third day, as Sam Billings and Adam Ball found out to their discomfort.”I wasn’t very happy with my rhythm yesterday, had a chat to Craig McDermott last night about a few things, and came out this morning and felt really, really good. I probably just tried a little bit too hard yesterday, probably adrenaline from my first game for a while and searching for some wickets which I don’t usually do, to come out this morning and grab a couple of wickets but more importantly find some rhythm was better.”All Harris can do now is bowl and bowl some more. Most important is his ability to cope with the pain of dealing with his problematic right knee. Even after extensive clean-out surgery in 2014 it is still a source of discomfort and the occasional instance of locking up, testing Harris’ reserves of pain tolerance and earning him the admiration of many for pushing through those barriers.”There’s a bit of strapping on it,” he said. “It still clicks and gets sore in spots but I know how to deal with that now. The thing is now I haven’t been in a position playing a game where it gets sore. I have to build up that pain barrier again and get used to it. Last night it was quite sore and I came out this morning and bowled. So I’m doing that well and it’s just a matter of getting used to that again. It’s only going to get better.”