Bermuda name Under-19 World Cup squad

Bermuda have announced their squad for the Under-19 World Cup which kicks off in Malaysia in February. Fifteen players will have further training in India at the end of January, while one extra, Kevon Fubler, will remain on the island on standby.Rodney Trott will captain a side which includes Malachi Jones, who played for the national team in last year’s World Cup. Jones is vice-captain. Another member of the World Cup squad, Stefan Kelly, is also in the 16 for Malaysia.Squad Rodney Trott (capt), Malachi Jones, Chris Douglas,Kyle Hodsoll, Stefan Kelly, Tamuari Tucker, Regino Smith, Jordan DeSilva,Gregory Maybury, Jr, Lamar Richardson, Deunte Darrell, Dennico Hollis,Pierre Smith, Tre Govia, Terryn Fray. Standby: Kevon Fubler.

Players not under threat – Snedden

Jeff Wilson is expected to play his fifth one-day international against Australia at Christchurch tomorrow© Getty Images

Ground security will not be increased for tomorrow’s one-day match at Christchurch after Martin Snedden, the New Zealand Cricket chief executive, reassured the Australia team they would not be under threat from unruly spectators. But the match will hold extra interest for local fans as Jeff Wilson, the former All Black, was named in the starting line-up to replace Scott Styris, who was ruled out with a recurring knee injury.Wilson played four ODIs against Australia in 1992-93 before embarking on an international rugby career and is the only change to the side that lost the opening match by 10 runs. James Marshall, the twin brother of Hamish Marshall, will be 12th man and the squad for the final three matches will be settled after the game tomorrow.Snedden said the crowd’s behaviour during the second innings of Saturday’s match was “unacceptable”, but he was satisfied with the security and police numbers at Christchurch. “All we wanted to emphasise was the need for security to be more proactive, which I don’t think was the case in Wellington.”Ricky Ponting had requested more policing throughout the rest of the tour following the ugly crowd behaviour that briefly stopped the opening match. Matthew Hayden said he was spat on while Simon Katich and Glenn McGrath argued with security guards after plastic bottles were thrown at them. “I assured Steve [Bernard, the Australia manager] we are taking it seriously and he has acknowledged it’s not a major issue,” Snedden told NZPA. “I’m confident there won’t be a problem.”New Zealand 1 Stephen Fleming (capt), 2 Nathan Astle, 3 Mathew Sinclair, 4 Craig McMillan, 5 Hamish Marshall, 6 Chris Cairns, 7 Brendon McCullum (wk), 8 Jeff Wilson, 9 Daniel Vettori, 10 Kyle Mills, 11 Daryl Tuffey, 12 James Marshall.

Canterbury cricket main draw – November 1

The Pub Charity CCA Club Cricket Draw – November 1MENS CRICKET1st Grade Men:R3 – 1 & 8 Nov (2 Day)Ricc v St A Hag 3,HSOB v OC Hag 1,Syd v ES Syd 1,LPW v BWU Burn 1,Mar Bye.2nd Grade Men:R3 – 1 & 8 Nov (2 Day)Ricc v St A Hag 4,HSOB v OC Elm 1,Syd v ES `A’ Burw 1,LPW v BWU Gar 1,Mar v ES Budgies War 1.3rd Grade Gold Men:R3 – 1 & 8 Nov (2 Day)St A v OC HC 1,BWU Maroon v Ricc HC 2,HSOB Cavaliers v BWU Gold Hag 6,LPW v ES Gold Ensors 1,ES Blue v Syd Syd 2.3rd Grade Red:R2 – 25 Oct & 1 Nov (2-day)2nd day of 23rd Grade Black (Grade has been redrawn):R2 – 25 Oct & 1 Nov (2-day)2nd day of 24th Grade Men:St A A v Mar Ilam 3,BWU v Syd Muppets Burn 2,OC Cavs v St A B HC 3,LPW Yabbage v ES Hooters Burw 3.5th Grade Men:St A v Ricc Gold HC 9,BWU Blue v Mar Green Burn 3,BWU Maroon v OC Gold Elm 2,LPW Yaks v Ricc Hogs Ensors 2,BWU SNCC v BWU Gold Burn 4.6th Grade Men:Syd Blue v Mar Fozzie B’s Ilam 5,Mar Gold v St A Polo 4a,OC Tan v LPW Ensors 3,Parklands v OC SGC Polo 3a,BWU v Syd Red Syd 3.Presidents Men:St A Gold v HSOB Gold HC 8,St A Blue v Mar Ilam 1,BWU v Ricc+ Ilam 2,OC v Hospital Elm 4,LPW Gladiators v ES Gold Avondale 1,Syd v LPW Red Wool 1,Sum Misfits v ES Blue Bar 1.(+ Indicates G. Frampton Challenge Trophy holder)WOMENS CRICKET1st Grade Women:R3 – 1 Nov (1-day Cup)ES v LPW Burw 2,OC-Country v St A Elm 3.1st Reserve Grade Women:R1 – 1 Nov (1-day)St A v OC Country Malvern 1,BWU v ES Clare 1,Syd v Ricc HC 7.2nd Grade Women:St A v LPW Wool 2,Syd v Hare Malvern 2,OC Country Bye.3rd Grade:Ricc v Horn Horn HS,LPW v St A HSC,BWU v Syd Polo 2a.4th Grade Primary Girls:Senior Trad:St A Gold v LPW HC 8 ,ES v St A Grammar HC 9,OC Country v Horn HC 3.Junior Trad:St A v Nb HC 7.Junior Average:St A v LPW HC 4,HSOB v Syd HC 5,Syd Selwyn H v Cath G HC 6.

MacGill likely to play in series opener


Adam Gilchrist: up off his sickbed
© Getty Images

Steve Waugh has dropped a hint that Stuart MacGill is likely to be named in Australia’s XI for the first Test against India at Brisbane which starts tomorrow (Thursday).Although the Gabba track is green and widely expected to favour the seamers, Waugh argued that it was vital to have a balanced attack. And he added that MacGill will still get turn even on a grassy pitch.Waugh’s views were shared by Kevin Mitchell, the groundsman, who said there was a “real good even grass coverage” that should produce “good bounce and pace”. But he added that there would be enough in the pitch for the spinners.MacGill’s inclusion would probably mean that Nathan Bracken would be left out of the side.Australia were boosted by the sight of Adam Gilchrist at training after he missed Tuesday’s session because of a viral infection. “He’s a bit run-down but he should be fine,” Errol Alcott, the team’s physiotherapist, told reporters.And Brett Lee joined in the practice, although he is unlikely to be fit until the third Test. He has recovered from strained stomach muscles and ankle surgery, and will make his return for New South Wales at the weekend.Australia (probable): 1 Matthew Hayden, 2 Justin Langer, 3 Ricky Ponting, 4 Damien Martyn, 5 Steve Waugh (capt), 6 Simon Katich, 7 Adam Gilchrist (wk), 8 Andy Bichel, 9 Jason Gillespie, 10 Stuart MacGill, 11 Brad Williams.

Ponting earns new Wisden accolade

The new cover featuring Australian captains past and present, Steve Waugh and Ricky Ponting© John Wisden and Co.

Australia’s captain, Ricky Ponting, has been named as the Leading Cricketer in the World by Wisden Cricketers’ Almanack, whose 141st edition is published on Thursday, April 8.Ponting is the first recipient of the new Wisden accolade, started as a counterpart to the traditional Five Cricketers of the Year award, which dates back to 1889. This year’s Five Cricketers include two Englishmen – Andrew Flintoff of Lancashire and England, and Chris Adams, the Sussex captain – two South Africans – Graeme Smith and Gary Kirsten – and the Australian Ian Harvey.No-one can be among the Five more than once and, with the arrival of the new honour, the Five are once again being chosen on the time-honoured criterion “influence on the English season”.But the Leading Cricketer award can be won an unlimited number of times. The almanack has also named The Wisden Forty, including Ponting and his 39 nearest rivals, based on their form in 2003. The list includes 14 Australians, seven South Africans, five Indians, four Pakistanis, three Englishmen – Flintoff, Marcus Trescothick and Michael Vaughan – three Sri Lankans, two New Zealanders and one each from West Indies (Brian Lara) and Zimbabwe (Heath Streak).Ponting shares the cover with his predecessor as Australian captain, Steve Waugh. This follows Wisden’s first-ever pictorial cover in 2003, which featured Michael Vaughan. This year, the front has been redesigned to re-incorporate the famous woodcut by Eric Ravilious. Readers who object to pictures on the cover (or to Australians) can write off to Wisden for a picture-free version.The Notes
Wisden’s Notes by the Editor, cricket’s traditional fire-and-brimstone annual sermon, breaks with precedent by praising the game’s administrators. Matthew Engel – returning as editor after three years’ absence, spent mainly in the US – says “the game has been better run for the past few years than at any time in history”.But Engel then attacks both the International Cricket Council (ICC) and the England & Wales Cricket Board (ECB) over the current crisis involving Zimbabwe and the Champions Trophy tournament, scheduled to be held in England in September.Describing Zimbabwe as a “wretched tyranny”, he says the majority of cricketing countries will earn “the contempt of thoughtful individuals across the globe” if sanctions are invoked against England for refusing to tour there. But he adds that the English position has been “incoherent and inconsistent” and says the ECB’s plans for the Champions Trophy look like producing something “between a squandered opportunity and a total fiasco”.

Mike Atherton – critical of the county game© Getty Images

Engel points out that the competition is due to go on almost until October – far later than any major cricket has ever been staged in England – and that the final will be at The Oval rather than Lord’s. Even The Oval will not be properly ready: it is being rebuilt for the 2005 Ashes. He adds that the England team will be “knackered” after a non-stop six-month programme, thus endangering any prospect of a home win to build popular support for the game.Engel also criticises the ECB’s domestic opponents, the Cricket Reform Group, headed by the former England captains Mike Atherton and Bob Willis. After analysing their manifesto, which proposes a greater emphasis on club rather than county cricket to produce England cricketers, he concludes: “I am gobsmacked that Mike and Bob expect English cricket to be more competitive by becoming more amateur.”The Articles
The lead article of Wisden 2004 is a graceful tribute to Steve Waugh, the most successful Test captain of all time, by the former England captain Nasser Hussain. Another ex-captain, Mike Atherton, profiles Graeme Smith as one of the Cricketers of the Year.The other articles all add to the long tradition of Wisden as a repository for some of the best writing in sport. They cover such subjects as the future of wicketkeeping, Over-Forties in Test cricket, the role of players’ agents and a comparison of the lives of footballers and cricketers. (“I reckon the only advantage they have over us is that their game lasts 90 minutes not five days,” says Graham Thorpe, the former England Schools midfielder and current Test batsman.)There is a tribute to Sussex, the county champions, by their former captain, and trenchant journalist, Robin Marlar. The weatherman Philip Eden shows that 2003 was not quite such a long, hot summer as people believe. This year’s book reviewer is Barry Norman, who chooses No Coward Soul, the biography of Bob Appleyard, by Stephen Chalke and Derek Hodgson, as his book of the year.The Round the World section includes reports from inside one of Saddam Hussain’s palaces on the Baghdad Ashes (four for the first landing of the marble staircase, six for the second landing), from the salt plains of East Timor and the lava fields of Rwanda, where the players learned about volcanic bounce the hard way. The Chronicle section reports on Darren Gough’s debut in The Beano and on the player who missed most of the season after breaking his collarbone – in the fathers’ sack race.And Wisden also attempts to answer the one cricketing question the book has never tackled before: What

India name unchanged squad for Kolkata Test

Sourav Ganguly: will he get to play in front of his home crowd?© Getty Images

The Indian selectors have named an unchanged 14-man squad for the second Test against South Africa at Kolkata, which starts on Sunday (Nov 28). With the Eden Gardens pitch traditionally not as spinner-friendly as the others in India the think-tank will probably include an extra medium-pacer – Irfan Pathan, perhaps – in the playing XI.Sourav Ganguly’s hearing regarding the two-match penalty imposed for slow over-rates is scheduled for tomorrow, and he will play at Kolkata if he is cleared. If Ganguly is suspended, the selection committee will draft in a replacement.Apart from Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman the rest of the batsmen made runs at Kanpur. And with Gautam Gambhir making an assured 96 in only his second Test the debate over the opening combination can rest for a while now.Dinesh Karthik is still on probation, but the selectors seem determined to give him a proper opportunity to cement his place. But more than anything else India will hope for a pitch that gives them more joy than Green Park had on offer.India squad for second Test
Virender Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir, Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar, VVS Laxman, Sourav Ganguly (capt), Mohammad Kaif, Dinesh Karthik (wk), Anil Kumble, Harbhajan Singh, Murali Kartik, Zaheer Khan, Ashish Nehra, Irfan Pathan.

Australia look for plans in reverse

Simon Jones takes care of Ricky Ponting in the first innings at Old Trafford © Getty Images

Australia plans to spend the lead-up to Trent Bridge in reverse-swing protection mode as the batsmen try to find ways of countering England’s stunning use of the tactic. Andrew Flintoff and Simon Jones have combined for 29 wickets in the first three Tests and have regularly confused the opposition order with their wild movement.Simon Katich, who has 143 runs in six bats, and Adam Gilchrist, who collected 120 with a top score of 49 not out, have struggled to absorb the method and Ricky Ponting said after his 156 at Old Trafford that he would prefer going in early than dealing with the middle-order danger. “There is no doubt it is the most difficult time in the game to bat,” he said in the Sydney Morning Herald. “I would take facing a brand new ball that’s swinging than facing a 10-over-old ball that’s reversing the way it has in this game.”Ponting said Flintoff had used the tactic well and made it tougher by going over and around the wicket. “He swings it both ways as much as anyone in the game,” he said. “And he does it at 90 miles an hour. `Gilly’ is in the same boat. Any of the left-handers that he has had a chance to bowl to in the last couple of Tests he’s really troubled.”Mark Taylor said in the batsmen should try not to strike so firmly when the ball was swinging. “They’re so used to hitting the ball hard and hitting boundaries,” he said. “When you’ve got a couple of quality bowlers and they’re swinging the ball late it’s not always possible to bat that way.”Taylor said Allan Border tried a short back-lift to Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis to counter the movement. “The best way he found was almost to play French cricket at times,” he said. “A really short back-lift and just hit the ball in the gaps and pick up ones and twos and deflect the ball more so than try and hit it.”As well as looking at it from a batting perspective, Australia’s bowlers will also try to find a way of copying it. “We’ve got to work out how we can do it better,” Ponting said. “There is no doubt in the last couple of games it’s played a key role.”Michael Vaughan said Jones had always been able to move the old ball and he was teaching his team-mates. “Some of our bowlers are new to reverse-swing and controlling it,” he said. “Simon is helping all the bowlers. In both games we have used it very well.”Australia have arrived in Scotland and will train today before a one-day match at The Grange tomorrow. Ponting told the batsmen had to start turning starts into big scores.”There haven’t been any real extravagant shots that have cost us our downfall, we’ve just made little mental errors more than anything,” Ponting said. “Matty Hayden probably has got 30 every time he’s batted in the series, Justin Langer has been a bit the same, Damien Martyn has made 20 every time, so guys are getting in and getting starts – we’re just getting out from there.” The fourth Test begins at Trent Bridge on August 25.

New selectors have to choose new captain for women's Indian tour

Women’s cricket in New Zealand will have a new look to it this year with a new selection panel named today, and a new captain necessary after World Cup-winning captain Emily Drumm made herself unavailable for the tour of India next month. The new captain will be named on Friday.Drumm said her decision was due to work commitments as she is in a new job. “No-one really want to miss a tour, and this is the first one I have missed, but it was the best thing to do at the time,” she said.However, Drumm was still intending to be available for the six-match series against Australia early next year. She wasn’t prepared to commit beyond that, saying her intention at this stage was to concentrate on this season.Two long-standing selectors, Lesley Murdoch and Eileen Badham, and the more recent appointment Kirsty Flavell, have stood down from their positions and two leading players from the past Debbie Hockley and Julie Harris will join convener and coach Mike Shrimpton on the selection panel. Hockley was New Zealand’s finest batsman, and the world record holder for most runs by a women when she retired, while Harris was a leading bowler, taking 62 wickets in one-day internationals.The panel has been appointed through until the end of the 2005 World Cup in February-March in South Africa. New ZealandCricket women’s manager Catherine Campbell said the new selectors had complementary skills.”Mike has played Test cricket for New Zealand and has coached the WhiteFerns since 1998. He knows what is required to be successful in women’s cricket having coached the team to victory at the 2000 Women’s World Cup.”Debbie was an outstanding player for New Zealand over a number of yearsand holds iconic status internationally in women’s cricket. She was renowned for her meticulous preparation as well as her mental discipline and application in the middle.”Julie also brings considerable international experience to the tablehaving represented the White Ferns in 10 Tests and 45 one-dayinternationals between 1988 and 1996 and her expertise complementsDebbie’s skills and knowledge. Julie is also an NZC Level 3 coach who has coached the State Wellington Blaze for three seasons.”Campbell said the selectors’ first job would be to pick a new captainfor the upcoming tour of India with Drumm’s unavailability. The team for the tour will be named on October 14. The team leaves for India on November 17.

Prime Minister's XI match rescheduled for December

The annual Prime Minister’s XI tour match has been switched from January to December 2 and will be played against West Indies at Manuka Oval in Canberra. Cricket Australia said scheduling changes forced the rearrangement of the fixture, which is a tradition dating back to Sir Robert Menzies and was re-introduced by Bob Hawke in the 1980s.West Indies will play their first game of the three-Test tour against Queensland in Brisbane, starting on October 27, before the first Test at the Gabba on November 3. The second Test begins at Hobart on November 17 before the series finishes at Adelaide.Tickets for the tour match at Canberra will be available through ACT Cricket from October 4. Mark Vergano, the ACT Cricket chief executive, said the game would give local residents an opportunity to see international stars in action.

The colossus of bowlers

Glenn McGrath looks like a well-preserved middle-aged fast bowler rather than a greybeard © Getty Images

Throughout Australia’s dominance of world cricket, there has been much talk of the batting genius of Ponting, the broadening skills of Martyn, the determination and luck of Langer, the relative decline of Hayden and the striking purity of Gilchrist. The batsmen have broken records in huge volume, increased their scoring pace to unmatched levels and returned more newspaper and magazine column inches than their bowling counterparts. It is true that dynamic and aggressive batting have been significant ingredients of Australia’s table-topping position. Other countries manage it only in spits and spurts – and, until this year, not consistently against the world champions. However, what is regularly overlooked is the performance of quality bowlers and Glenn McGrath, the attack’s durable and outstanding leader.Old timers would say “batsmen save games, bowlers win them”. The one-day contest has bent that maxim out of shape, but when it comes to the longer format very little has changed. Yes, Australia score quickly. Yes, they give themselves more time to bowl out the opposition. But – it is an important but – they must still knock over their rivals twice. Having a quality leg-spinner is handy; owning the bowler of the century is much better. But before Shane Warne gets the ball, the swing, seam and snarl of McGrath and his first-class sidekicks come into play. It is something that has happened with astounding success for more than a decade.At 35, McGrath looked at the start of the Ashes series, like a well-preserved middle-aged fast bowler rather than a greybeard having his last tilt at the English windmills. Not many international pacemen bowl into their mid-30s. A small number such as Courtney Walsh and Sir Richard Hadlee have become legends at a similar age, but they are the exceptions justifying Rule 1a of the quick brigade: “The more overs you bowl, the faster you will fall apart.” For most of his career McGrath has kept himself together. While his colleagues have fallen to deteriorating backs, knees and shoulders – repetitive strain injuries are common in teenagers, not just 35-year-olds – McGrath’s recent weakness has been the ankles.From mid-2003 McGrath was forced into a 12-month hiatus due to problems with three bone spurs causing unbearable pain when he put his left foot down. Two operations were required and while his comeback was reportedly aborted on many occasions, McGrath was happy that it went to plan. However, by the time of his selection for the Sri Lanka Top End series in July 2004 there were doubts over his powers of recovery – except from the man himself.The decision was controversial as his main gallops were limited to an end-of-season Pura Cup match, the one-day tour to Zimbabwe and a warm-up against the Sri Lankans for the Northern Territory Chief Minister’s XI. McGrath’s performances were not impressive, but as a veteran of more than 400 Test wickets he had up his sleeve a benefit-of-the-doubt card. Already a couple had been played, but he was entitled to another and the national selectors agreed. Fast bowlers rely on their legs and they gain strength from matches, not just the nets. McGrath needed more work and, most importantly, had to test his vital feet, which would carry him to the crease and support the pressure of up to 20 times his body weight at release.Bleeding toes and aching ankles are part of the job description, but he had to know if his cleaned-up bones could sustain the Test load. While struggling to find quickly the death-and-taxes rhythm, McGrath openly doubted his ability to make a full comeback aged 34. In his initial outings his pace was down on the modest 130 kph he usually bowls; it was not the only thing that had seemingly diminished. The hitherto infallible radar was finding the middle of the bat instead of the edge. As he hit the crease he looked to be decelerating, he was lacking energy, his body was creaking and the results were poor. Pundits saw all the signs of rust and retirement.

McGrath celebrates his 500th wicket with a special pair of shoes at Lord’s © Getty Images

Who would begrudge the most successful Australian seam bowler of all time a cup of tea and a good lie down? He had surely earned it. But that was not his way. McGrath soldiered on with the kind of self-belief that is at the core of any real champion. The recovery improved, the pain in the ankle faded and he was rapidly back to his best. In his first Test innings he took five wickets against Sri Lanka and then passed 450 on the unfriendly pitches of India, where a serious drought that started the year before he was born ended. Back in the southern hemisphere he destroyed New Zealand with 27 home-and-away wickets at 17.29 and sandwiched career-best figures of 8 for 24 against Pakistan in Perth. Each series was won and there were no longer arguments about his health. The feeling was so good that he even hit 61 not out against New Zealand at the Gabba.The body that had been brittle as a NSW rookie had become resilient through hard work with Kevin Chevell, his fitness training mentor who had once again whipped him into shape. Through the programme the thigh, hamstring and calf strains that beset the pigeon legs have been eradicated. McGrath’s work ethic has always been strong; his training load, just like his bowling, might embarrass a Benedictine monk. Kostya Tszyu and Mike Tyson recently realised that comebacks on the edge of the age envelope were not easy, but McGrath showed they were possible with a steel-trap mental approach.There was also another incentive: his Cricket Australia contract ranking dropped while he was injured and his earnings and ego were affected. Money certainly acts as a carrot to the contemporary cricketer and McGrath makes millions from the game. Players of not-so-long-ago would retire so they could earn a living that didn’t require the body to be a temple rather than spend months or years recuperating and rehabilitating. McGrath had the support of Cricket Australia’s medical team, the board and a full-time contract that allowed him to train, recover and still pay the mortgage. He used the resources well. The dedication and discipline came as no surprise – the completeness of the comeback surely has.Leaving for England with 499 wickets, he became the second fast bowler to step to 500 at Lord’s in July. Only then did his body begin to betray him. What had helped propel McGrath so far is an advantage that few other bowlers have carried. Simply, it is simplicity. The simplicity of his action, his bowling mechanics, is a large part of this successful comeback. He puts a minimal amount of stress on his body because he has an action that doesn’t have a lot of stress points. He doesn’t bowl fast because he doesn’t try to bowl fast, therefore the pressure on his frame is low. McGrath’s front leg – the left one – rises only centimetres above the ground in delivery. The true fast bowlers such as Lillee, Thomson and Hogg had theirs almost parallel to the turf, spikes pointing menacingly at the trembling batsmen. This position created huge strain on the hamstrings, groin and the back.McGrath has a principally front-on action with almost no trunk rotation so his back has been preserved. When he delivers he uses all of his 183 cm height with a braced and extended front leg: there is little impact on the crease because of that lack of leg-lift, the long, tensile arms rotate smoothly and the whip-cord wrist keeps the seam perfect and adds the maximum pace. It is a beautiful and simple movement, the Swiss watch of the timekeepers and the Ernie Els of golf. Perhaps it is the deceptive yet stealthy action that has batsmen not quite cocked to repel another line and length delivery. The term “false sense of security” comes to mind, but how could any rational batsmen feel secure with `Pigeon’ creeping to the crease?Tactic-wise McGrath’s methods are similarly simple. He hits the wicket hard, unlike the kissing-the-pitch and sliding-along styles of Brett Lee or the late Malcolm Marshall. This way he makes the margins for error larger and the “good length” a wider concept. Aiming just outside off-stump, he lands the ball on the seam almost every time, increasing the chances of late movement, and in between delivering a loose ball every leap year waits for batsmen to err. He has been helped by wonderful support bowling and some of the best fieldsmen and catchers of all time, who contribute to the never-slackening pressure. The quality of his opponents could be legitimately questioned with strong arguments pointing to the decline in world batting standards, but his victories over the superstars of any era – Lara, Tendulkar, Kirsten, Fleming et al. – are significant.

Wisden Australia 2005-06 © Wisden

McGrath, who grew up in Narromine in central NSW, comes from an uncomplicated rural background where hard work and perseverance were essential for survival in a harsh and unforgiving climate. They are conditions similar to elite sport. While the dash and flair of Australia’s batsmen are up in neon lights, McGrath has helped haul the side to the top with his simplicity, hard work, adherence to a fundamental yet almost unique bowling discipline and wonderful tactical sense. He is the true colossus of the early 21st century bowlers., Hardie Grant Books, RRP $55, is available in bookstores.

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