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Can England go toe to toe with the world's best?
By Paul Andreacchio for CricInfo/NineMSN
November 19 1998
In recent times, predicting the outcome of an Ashes series has been a no-brainer
- Australia has won 17, and England just four, of the past 27 Tests played
between cricket's oldest foes. Australia's emergence as the premier force
in Test cricket has coincided with the flagging fortunes of the England side, which many
rated in the doldrums with minnows like New Zealand, Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe.
But since their last Ashes series in England in 1997 (which Australia won 3-2), the
Englishmen replaced Michael Atherton as captain with Alec Stewart, settled on a veteran
side and developed a new mettle, culminating in a come-from-behind 2-1 home series victory
over the formidable South Africans in August. There have been hiccups along the way,
including another series loss in the Caribbean and a mauling at The Oval in August when
Muttiah Muralitharan's 16 wickets inspired a famous Sri Lankan victory.
But Australia, too, was on the wrong side of the ledger in India in March when the
incomparable Sachin Tendulkar led the home side to a 2-1 series victory. However,
they rebounded with an historic 1-0 win in Pakistan in September, their first series
triumph there since Richie Benaud's touring team of 1959, to justify their rating as
the world's best. England's form in the lead-up games has been patchy, and bookmakers
have installed the tourists 6-1 series outsiders. But if Atherton's suspect back can
stand the rigours of five tests and add stability at the top of the order to complement
the undoubted class of Stewart, Nasser Hussain and Graham Thorpe, the English batsman
could provide stout resistance to an Australian bowling attack minus the great Shane Warne.
Glenn McGrath aside, the local attack of Stuart MacGill, Damien Fleming, Jason Gillespie
and Michael Kasprowicz lack the experience of their veteran counterparts like Angus Fraser
and Darren Gough, who have proved an outstanding success in Australia before. But Fraser
and co will have to be on their game otherwise they could be put to the sword by an
imposing batting line-up featuring the rejuvenated and inspirational captain Mark Taylor,
Michael Slater and the Waugh brothers, who have all feasted on English attacks in the past.
And any side that can afford to omit Darren Lehmann based on recent form must be feared.
So as the focus shifts to Brisbane's Gabba ground for the first Test starting Friday, the big questions are:
- Who will carry the drinks for Australia - Gillespie, Kasprowicz or Fleming?
- Will Atherton's back pass a fitness test?
- Will England go on the defence and pick seven batsman, or take a risk and play five bowlers?
AUSTRALIA: Mark Taylor (capt), Steve Waugh (vice capt), Michael Slater, Justin Langer, Mark Waugh, Ricky Ponting, Ian Healy, Damien Fleming, Stuart MacGill, Jason Gillespie, Glenn McGrath, Michael Kasprowicz (12th man to be named).
ENGLAND: Alec Stewart (capt), Nasser Hussain (vice capt), Michael Atherton, Mark Butcher, Graham Thorpe, Mark Ramprakash, John Crawley, Dominic Cork, Robert Croft, Darren Gough, Alan Mullally, Angus Fraser (12th man to be named).
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