England’s main Ashes job, getting use to the Kookaburra
November 24th, 2010 - 6:08 pm ICT by ANIBrisbane, Nov.24 (ANI): Could a cricket ball be the difference between England retaining or losing the Ashes?
The answer to that question comes in the form of England coach Andy Flower, who has instructed his fast bowlers to become accustomed to the Kookaburra, the ball of choice in Australia, for the past five months.
England, according to the BBC, has been use to the Duke cricket ball, and bowling coach David Saker wants his bowlers to focus on old-fashioned principles.
James Anderson’s unrivalled ability to manipulate the ball, to make it swing in or out to a right-handed batsman with a subtle change of grip and wrist position, earned him 23 wickets against Pakistan in the summer at a measly average of just 13.74, one wicket every 36 deliveries.
England fans will be salivating at the prospect of a repeat in the Ashes but commentators have been more cautious.
England use a hand-stitched ball manufactured by Kent-based company Dukes while Australia, and most of the Test-playing world, utilise the Kookaburra “Turf” ball made in Victoria.
Side by side and these two balls are almost identical - bits of cork wrapped in string encased in red leather stitched together by thread. But there are differences - and significant ones too.
“The Dukes ball tends to be slightly darker in colour,” former Australia fast bowler Jason Gillespie told BBC Sport.
“A brand new Kookaburra swings immediately whereas the Dukes probably swings more from about six to 10 overs old.”
The seam, the stitching around the middle of the ball, is key. it acts as a ‘rudder’ for the fast bowler, enabling them to move the ball in the air depending on their grip.
The overhead conditions play an enormous factor in the condition of the ball. The lusher, greener outfields of England, kept verdant by the inevitable summer rain showers, help to preserve the Dukes ball after the initial sheen has worn off.
In complete contrast, the sun-baked Australian pitches are hard and abrasive, which quickly scuffs up the Kookaburra and its brand-new sheen, which means any opportunity for swing must be seized within the first 10 to 15 overs. (ANI)
- Hitting wicket hard key to mastering Kookaburra ball Down Under: Broad - Nov 11, 2010
- England bowlers to practice with Kookaburra balls to come out swinging - Aug 01, 2010
- Flower lauds England bowlers for successfully utilising Kookaburra balls - Dec 31, 2010
- England cool, calm and ready for Ashes storm: Broad - Nov 23, 2010
- The two balls that led to Tremlett's Ashes heroics - Jan 29, 2011
- Anderson will be a force to reckon with during Ashes regardless of conditions: Flower - Aug 03, 2010
- Saker hails Anderson as world's best fast bowler - Dec 30, 2010
- Anderson contradicts Pietersen, attributes his success to Moores - Jan 01, 2011
- Saker signs new contract, to be with England for next two Ashes series - Jan 07, 2011
- The Ashes 2010: Ten reasons why England retained the urn - Dec 30, 2010
- Flintoff backs 'Jekyll and Hyde' character Anderson to bowl England to Ashes glory - Jul 27, 2010
- Pattinson taps England bowling coach to tackle India - Dec 23, 2011
- 10 million reasons for not returning to Australia: Saker - Jan 05, 2011
- Oz fast bowlers' inability to swing the ball cost Ashes series: Mark Waugh - Jan 07, 2011
- Siddle credits England's bowling coach David Saker for hat-trick - Nov 27, 2010
Tags: andy flower, batsman, bowling coach, coach andy, cricket ball, england coach, england fans, fast bowlers, james anderson, jason gillespie, kookaburra, rain showers, red leather, subtle change, summer rain, two balls, unrivalled ability, wicket, wickets, wrist position