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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, July 24, 2001 |
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Thorpe out of third Test
By Ted Corbett
LONDON, JULY 23. England's star left-hander Graham Thorpe was
today ruled out of next week's third Test against Australia at
Trent Bridge with a cracked bone in his right hand. Thorpe made a
trip that he and captain Nasser Hussain have become familiar with
in recent years to visit a bone specialist whose surgery lies
within the shadow of Windsor Castle. The verdict is also a
familiar one.
The specialist who saw Hussain on Monday a fortnight ago
confirmed that Thorpe has an undisplaced fracture in his right
hand. He is the only batsman England expected to provide long
stable innings in the fight for the Ashes. Instead he will, at
best, play in no more than one of the last three Tests.
Thorpe, who received the injury from a Brett Lee delivery on
Saturday, will be out of cricket for around three weeks. The
specialist's report on Thorpe is bound to give the selectors an
additional headache as they are already without Michael Vaughan
who has a calf injury, and skipper Nasser Hussain who also has an
undisplaced fracture in the little finger of his left hand.
Hussain has had two broken fingers this summer and is not sure to
be fit for the third Test although the England and Wales Cricket
Board spin doctors have tried hard to convince everyone that his
own three-week spell out, which ends on the day training for the
Trent Bridge match begins, means he can play immediately.
Thorpe's poor showing at Lord's last weekend, when he made 20 and
2, proves it is unwise to bring a batsman, however talented, back
into Test cricket too quickly. The Australian fast men, and the
raw Brett Lee in particular, roughed him up in the second innings
before he was late on a ball and lbw. No-one doubts that he
needed a couple of innings to get him back into form.
Thorpe, who was out for six weeks with a calf strain before the
Lord's Test, now faces the same problem as Hussain. Three weeks
from today takes England to within a few days of the fourth Test
at Headingley, England's best chance of victory since the pitch
is unreliable and the scene of small scores. But will it be fair
to select him again for the fourth Test when he will have batted
only twice - for a total of less than two hours in 10 weeks.
Add those injuries to three successive Test defeats by Pakistan
and Australia, twice, and it is not difficult to imagine David
Graveney, chairman of selectors, reaching for a headache powder
each time his phone rings. Of his batsmen, only Michael Atherton
and Mark Butcher have consistently made runs while Marcus
Trescothick and Ian Ward have still not shown they can cope with
this aggressive, powerful Australian attack.
Presuming that the selectors keep most of the batting intact - on
the basis that they cannot make too many changes - they still
have to find adequate replacements for Thorpe and possibly
Hussain in the Trent Bridge match. Owais Shah of Middlesex,
Nottinghamshire's Usman Afzaal and Paul Collingwood of Durham
have all been given a trial without conspicuous success and as
one selector said to me recently, ``the cupboard is bare. There
is no-one in county cricket who is scoring such a weight of runs
that he demands a place in the Test side.''
The idea of the Ashes returning to England after 12 years now
seems out of question.
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