19 July,2023 08:05 AM IST | London | AFP
England’s James Anderson during a net session at Old Trafford in Manchester on Monday. Pic/Getty Images; Stuart Broad, Chris Woakes and Mark Wood
James Anderson, 40, returns on his Old Trafford home ground to lead an ageing England attack in a must-win fourth Ashes Test. It is the only change for Ben Stokes's men, 1-2 down with two to play.
England have dropped Ollie Robinson, who suffered a back spasm as the hosts won the third Test by three wickets at Headingley.
Anderson is reinstated just a fortnight short of his 41st birthday for the match starting Wednesday. Anderson's 688 wickets are the most by any paceman in Test history.
Only spinners Muttiah Muralitharan and Shane Warne are ahead of the Lancashire swing bowler. But Anderson managed just three wickets as England fell 0-2 behind.
ALSO READ
Aqua Line Mumbai Metro ticketing app crashes, causing delays and hassles
Small plane crashes into Brazilian city, killing at least 10 people
At least 10 killed as small plane crashes into Brazilian town popular with tourists
Anmolpreet smashes fastest List A hundred by an Indian as Punjab beat Arunachal Pradesh
Depression-induced rain lashes most parts of Odisha
He is now, however, set to be the cornerstone of the oldest pace attack in an Ashes match since the Australia line-up of 1928. That was the last time either side deployed four seamers aged 33 or above, with Stuart Broad (37), Chris Woakes (34) and express quick Mark Wood (33) joining Anderson in England's seam-bowling quartet.
England's seasoned campaigners also include all-rounder Moeen Ali. "I was always told that old was gold," the 36-year-old Moeen said on Monday.
"But it's not just old, it's Jimmy, it's Broady, Woakesy, Woody - they're really good bowlers. Myself...you never know what you're going to get, but with those guys, you definitely know how good they are."
Also Read: No doubt England are better with Anderson: Moeen Ali ahead of fourth Ashes 2023 Test
Only a few weeks ago, Moeen was retired from Test cricket but an injury to frontline spinner Jack Leach led to his recall. With Ollie Pope sidelined by a dislocated shoulder, Moeen finds himself in the key position of number three, with star batsman Joe Root preferring number four.
Emerging talent Harry Brook made a decisive 75 at number five at Headingley. Moeen only managed five at first-wicket down in the second innings at Headingley but England are keeping him there after resisting calls for either captain Stokes, or wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow, who has struggled with both bat and gloves this series, to move up the order. It is nearly seven years since Moeen - who has batted in every position from one to nine in his 66-Test career - scored the last of his five centuries at this level. "If I'm playing well and I get in I have made Test hundreds before and it's not like I can't do it," said Moeen, who added: "But things happen for a reason...I'm a big one on faith and destiny."
Australia have yet to name their XI as Pat Cummins bids to lead the world Test champions to their first Ashes series win in England since 2001. Veteran opener David Warner twice fell cheaply at Headingley to Broad, who has dismissed the Australian opener 17 times in Test cricket. Warner and middle order mainstays, Marnus Labuschagne and Steve Smith, have just one hundred and one fifty between them in 18 innings.
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever