England v Zimbabwe - Test Series
- Donny
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England's debutant, Richard Johnson is certainly having a good day !!
He scored 24 from 14 balls, hit a six and then, when he took the new ball for the second over of the Zimbabwe innings, took a wicket with his 3rd. ball in Test cricket. He took another with his 4th. as well.
His opening partner, Jimmy Anderson, joined in the fun with the next two wickets so Johnson took another two !!
6/31 from 14.1 overs. Amazing. Johnson has 4/14 and Anderson, 2/12.
Oops, spoke too soon. Johnson just took his 5th. wicket (4 lbws) and now has 5/18 from 8 overs.
He scored 24 from 14 balls, hit a six and then, when he took the new ball for the second over of the Zimbabwe innings, took a wicket with his 3rd. ball in Test cricket. He took another with his 4th. as well.
His opening partner, Jimmy Anderson, joined in the fun with the next two wickets so Johnson took another two !!
6/31 from 14.1 overs. Amazing. Johnson has 4/14 and Anderson, 2/12.
Oops, spoke too soon. Johnson just took his 5th. wicket (4 lbws) and now has 5/18 from 8 overs.
Donny.
It's a game. Enjoy it.
It's a game. Enjoy it.
- Donny
- Posts: 80334
- Joined: Sun Aug 04, 2002 6:01 pm
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Zimbabwe reached 94 due to some late order hitting and a patient 31 from their keeper, Tatenda Taibu. At one stage, they were 8/48.
Richard Johnson took 6/33 from 12 overs on debut. Anderson (2/30) and Harmison (2/22) did the rest.
Zimbabwe followed on and lost Mark Vermeulen in the first over. He faced three balls in the first innings for his duck and went for a 'golden' in the second. Welcome to the big time, Mark. This is his third Test.
They held on for 1/41 at stumps and are treating Johnson with much respect. He has 4 maidens from his 5 overs. Anderson took the wicket.
Richard Johnson took 6/33 from 12 overs on debut. Anderson (2/30) and Harmison (2/22) did the rest.
Zimbabwe followed on and lost Mark Vermeulen in the first over. He faced three balls in the first innings for his duck and went for a 'golden' in the second. Welcome to the big time, Mark. This is his third Test.
They held on for 1/41 at stumps and are treating Johnson with much respect. He has 4 maidens from his 5 overs. Anderson took the wicket.
Donny.
It's a game. Enjoy it.
It's a game. Enjoy it.
- Donny
- Posts: 80334
- Joined: Sun Aug 04, 2002 6:01 pm
- Location: Toonumbar NSW Australia
- Has liked: 65 times
- Been liked: 28 times
A pitiful procession
The Wisden Verdict by Steven Lynch - June 6, 2003
England v Zimbabwe, 2nd Test, Chester-le-Street, Day 2
After writing Zimbabwe off yesterday, when they'd had quite a decent day in the field, I felt a bit of a heel. They had bowled reasonably tightly, after all, the ground fielding was excellent, and only the catching let them down a bit. Surely not really worst-ever material?
But today they had to bat. Hard-wicket technique, pushing the hands boldly at the ball and playing around the front pad, isn't ideal for early-season England, and the Zimbabwean batsmen were found out. Again. They weren't helped by a couple of dodgy lbw decisions - Dion Ebrahim got a big inside edge, and Heath Streak's leave-alone leg-before looked less out than to a confident shout a few balls before - but none of the batsmen exuded any confidence during a pitiful procession on a pretty good pitch.
It's not surprising, when you look at the figures. Stuart Carlisle is playing in his 29th Test, and has a highest score of 77 and average of 25. Grant Flower may be the only tourist with a Test century under his belt, but his 8 today matched his overall average in England. And Tatenda Taibu at No. 5? He has the potential to be a handy Test No. 7 or 8, but he's overplaced any higher.
Richard Johnson had a field day, starting with two wickets in his first over and finishing with 6 for 33, the best debut performance for England since Dominic Cork swung his way to 7 for 43 at Lord's in 1995. Johnson did the simple things right, pitching the ball up and darting it about at a waspish pace.
So is Johnson the new Cork, or just another Ed Giddins (5 for 15 against the Zimbos in 2000, hardly seen since)? It's too early to tell, but after the injuries he's suffered since first being called up for England nearly seven years ago he deserved a good start, and he did the basics well. The South Africans will show his true worth. It's tough on Zimbabwe, but their current side is taking the test out of Test cricket.
The Wisden Verdict by Steven Lynch - June 6, 2003
England v Zimbabwe, 2nd Test, Chester-le-Street, Day 2
After writing Zimbabwe off yesterday, when they'd had quite a decent day in the field, I felt a bit of a heel. They had bowled reasonably tightly, after all, the ground fielding was excellent, and only the catching let them down a bit. Surely not really worst-ever material?
But today they had to bat. Hard-wicket technique, pushing the hands boldly at the ball and playing around the front pad, isn't ideal for early-season England, and the Zimbabwean batsmen were found out. Again. They weren't helped by a couple of dodgy lbw decisions - Dion Ebrahim got a big inside edge, and Heath Streak's leave-alone leg-before looked less out than to a confident shout a few balls before - but none of the batsmen exuded any confidence during a pitiful procession on a pretty good pitch.
It's not surprising, when you look at the figures. Stuart Carlisle is playing in his 29th Test, and has a highest score of 77 and average of 25. Grant Flower may be the only tourist with a Test century under his belt, but his 8 today matched his overall average in England. And Tatenda Taibu at No. 5? He has the potential to be a handy Test No. 7 or 8, but he's overplaced any higher.
Richard Johnson had a field day, starting with two wickets in his first over and finishing with 6 for 33, the best debut performance for England since Dominic Cork swung his way to 7 for 43 at Lord's in 1995. Johnson did the simple things right, pitching the ball up and darting it about at a waspish pace.
So is Johnson the new Cork, or just another Ed Giddins (5 for 15 against the Zimbos in 2000, hardly seen since)? It's too early to tell, but after the injuries he's suffered since first being called up for England nearly seven years ago he deserved a good start, and he did the basics well. The South Africans will show his true worth. It's tough on Zimbabwe, but their current side is taking the test out of Test cricket.
Donny.
It's a game. Enjoy it.
It's a game. Enjoy it.
- couragous cloke
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