Wednesday, 30 November 2011

V England Sri Lanka: conditions help the hosts to win, not necessarily their talent

It is probably the first who took the field Wednesday, bowling with verve and skill, stick with elan for complete annihilation of the sri Lanka with more than half the overs unused.

Performance of Alastair Cook was reminiscent of Marcus Trescothick in the way he strikes the ball cleanly, without fuss, send scudding square window on both sides. There was nothing manufactured on its sleeves. It was studded with crunchy drives, punched in the soil and careful evaporating. He picks up everything short as a cat would be a stray mouse. Its purpose was total, and that is the essence of one-day batting. Play your normal but game, with the intention. Now, Cook scored 656 runs in eight tests and one day sleeves against Sri Lanka this summer, to go with its meteoric ash. It must feel invincible.

It will be concerned by the unpredictable nature of the performances of England . They went hand in hand with the terms and conditions. Headingley and Lord's, dry, bland, enough Sri Lankan-type surfaces, they looked poor. Tracks application power and finesse of the bat and some bawdy and disappointment with the ball. The stick of England did not have sufficient vitality, bowling had destructive capacity. Whenever they lost by a distance, Sri Lanka, a raffle, a team kept producing something unexpected from their bin of talent.

At the oval here at Trent Bridge in wet and juicy conditions more typical of English may, the home bowlers had a spring in the step and their bowling was loaded with the threat. Jimmy anderson, who, at Headingley and the Lord appeared cranky and dull, turned the ball just to the first on and takes no time to see off the coast of Tillakaratne Dilshan dangerous, who, since the breakdown of his thumb in his epic 193 in the Lord's test, did not have a race.

Anderson partner, Tim Bresnan, had considered, in the last two matches, almost helplessly as a worker for work at a College of art. The Sri Lankan batsmen were much too agile for him. But here, with some early swing available, he presented overall first poll above and soon connected to the price window as the elegant Mahela Jayawardene fished outside off the coast of the strain.

The only England player left the field less satisfied a Stuart Broad. He finally took his first two wickets of the series, but both were slightly fortuitous. Suraj Randiv, unexpectedly, was captured off the coast of the glove down the legside, and Jeevan Mendis tried to uppercut a bouncer and fine lined with Craig Kieswetter.

It was two times isolated from relief for large, who also worked hard but only revealed how toothless his bowling is at the present time. You cannot blame its will or its persistence, but there is little deception. Because he throws his left arm on the scale, the drummer has a clear vision of the ball in his right hand and if it finds a swing it tends to move in early flight. It does not appear to get the drummers position or surprised by anything whatsoever.

Bowling is going like that. The more you try to achieve success by force, you lose the fluidity of your natural rhythms. A lot of cricket in the county where he can relax and rediscover the pleasure of taking the wickets is imperative.

During this time, the debate continues on whether England should prepare green shots on which they can flourish, or dead sites on which they will be initially becomes unstable, but finally learn more about themselves. For the moment, they must focus on the exploitation of advantage. Because the winner is contagious.

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