Cricinfo





 





Live Scorecards
Fixtures - Results






England v Pakistan
Top End Series
Stanford 20/20
Twenty20 Cup
ICC Intercontinental Cup





News Index
Photo Index



Women's Cricket
ICC
Rankings/Ratings



Match/series archive
Statsguru
Players/Officials
Grounds
Records
All Today's Yesterdays









Cricinfo Magazine
The Wisden Cricketer

Wisden Almanack



Reviews
Betting
Travel
Games
Cricket Manager







England 'closing gap on Australia'
Wisden CricInfo staff - February 27, 2002

QUEENSTOWN (REUTERS)
England coach Duncan Fletcher believes the gap has narrowed between his side and one-day world champions Australia.

A new-look England have won 10 out of 16 one-day internationals since September, beating Zimbabwe 5-0, drawing 3-3 with India and narrowly losing 3-2 in New Zealand this week.

"For the first time since I've been involved with England we have worked as a unit," Fletcher said on Wednesday. "The gap has narrowed between us and the top teams. South Africa and Australia are still well ahead of the rest but I believe that gap has narrowed.

"New Zealand came back proud of their performances in Australia (where they qualified for the tri-nations final against South Africa at the expense of their hosts) yet we had a very close series with them. If we had got one or two wickets earlier in the final game we could have won the series."

Last summer England were whitewashed at home by Australia and Pakistan, forcing the selectors to re-think their planning for the 2003 World Cup in South Africa. Players such as Matthew Hoggard, Jeremy Snape and Paul Collingwood were given roles in the side and Andrew Flintoff re-emerged as a genuine international allrounder.

"We have got a pretty good side and there is a lot of potential. We are in the next group of teams behind South Africa and Australia," Fletcher added. "The majority of this squad have got a good chance for the next World Cup and we are ahead of where I wanted to be by the end of this winter.

"There are of course areas we have to improve such as the fielding. We need to learn how to dive and the athletic side of things in the field. If we had fielded better the results would have shown that."

Meanwhile Fletcher has given Nasser Hussain a break ahead of the three-Test series which starts on March 13.

Hussain's wife Karen and baby son Jacob have arrived in New Zealand and he will spend time with them while England play a three-day game in Queenstown. Marcus Trescothick will captain the side in his absence.

"I don't think people really appreciate how demanding his job is both mentally and physically," Fletcher said. "It's important that he gets away, clears his mind and is fresh for when we get to Christchurch.

"I've told him I don't want to see him around the place for a couple of days. We have got to make sure that in two weeks' time he is not too tired because by then it will be too late.

"Marcus might need a break when we get to Christchurch. The ones that play in this game will get a break next week."

England bid farewell to six members of the one-day squad, including Darren Gough, but have welcomed Mark Butcher, Mark Ramprakash, Usman Afzaal, Warren Hegg, Richard Dawson and James Ormond to the tour.

All six will play against Otago at the new Queenstown ground in a match which starts on Saturday. Michael Vaughan will miss the game with a shoulder strain.

© Wisden CricInfo Ltd