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'Worn out' Warne continues English love affair
LONDON, JULY 9. Shane Warne, so his critics suggested before the
Ashes, was half the bowler he once was. Statistically speaking,
they have been proved right.
On his first visit in 1993, it took the leg-spinner one delivery
to take his first wicket. The 2001 model needed two.
Aesthetically speaking, the criticism also holds. Warne's
delivery eight years ago at Old Trafford has gone down in
cricketing history, dubbed the ``ball of the century'' after it
pitched well outside the bemused Mike Gatting's leg stump before
clipping the top of the off.
His dismissal of Mark Butcher at Edgbaston was a far more prosaic
affair, a routine bat-and-pad catch which would certainly not
merit a tag of ``ball of the last 50 years''. Half a Warne,
however, clearly remains too good by half for the best the
English can muster.
The 31-year-old Australian, hammered to all parts in India at the
start of the year, took five wickets in the first innings and
eight for 100 overall off 29.1 overs as England crashed to an
innings and 118 runs defeat.
``I got a few revs on the ball - I'm pretty happy,'' he said,
while captain Steve Waugh added: ``it shows Warne is still a
great bowler, even if some people have written him off.''
Warne, of course, is not the man he once was following finger,
shoulder and knee surgery in recent years. The action is more
round-armed, there is less bounce to the bowling stride and the
joints take longer to warm up. The wickets, generally, come in
twos and three now rather than fives or sixes. And the team are
less reliant on him.
Warne, one of Wisden's five players of the century and now with
384 wickets, seems to have accepted that his role has changed,
more a foil today to the pace of Glenn McGrath, Brett Lee and
Jason Gillespie than the attacking spearhead of old.
`Save the whale'
Writing off great players, however, is hazardous. Some tried it
before the 1999 World Cup only for Warne ``save the whale!'' the
crowds had chanted - to end up the tournament's leading wicket-
taker, including four in the final.
Some tried it after India earlier this year, when Warne took 10
wickets for 505 as Australia went down to a 2-1 defeat.
But then they had also tried it in 1998/99, when he took 10 at an
average of 54, again in India, again in a losing cause.
When coach John Buchanan also criticised Warne for his fitness
during the Indian tour, many presumed that the leg- spinner could
miss the Ashes trip altogether, with Australia perhaps opting
instead for spinners Colin Miller and Stuart Macgill.
The affair, however, hurt Buchanan more than the bowler. Waugh
backed Warne and Buchanan, despite retaining his job, lost his
role as a selector. Despite all this, however, the scale of
Warne's success at Edgbaston did come as something of a surprise.
It may have been helped in part by the absence of the likes of
Graham Thorpe and Michael Vaughan from an England batting line-up
which seemed to have taken giant strides in combating the spin of
Saqlain Mushtaq in Pakistan and Muttiah Muralitharan in Sri Lanka
at the turn of the year.
England, however - or English batsmen - have always agreed with
the man.``I always enjoy playing here. It brings out the best in
me,'' Warne said at the start of the tour. In 1993 he took 34
wickets at 25.79 apiece. In Australia in 1994/95 there were 27 at
20.33 and 24 more on his return to England in 1997, at 24.04.
Perhaps the would-be obituary writers should have consulted
former Australian spinner Terry Jenner, Warne's coach in his
formative years and who has helped him subsequently during his
career.
Jenner agreed before the Ashes that Warne, indeed, had become
worn - ``it's a fair assessment Shane isn't the bowler he was'' -
before adding, however: ``the great thing is Shane knows if he's
not at his best, he just comes back to the level of other
players.''
English players excluded, presumably.
- Reuters
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