Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Pace spearheads Anderson and Starc hoping to swing it their way

- Devarchit Varma

MUMBAI: From Fred ‘Demon’ Spofforth to Jim Laker’s record 46 wickets in a series to Harold Larwood in the famous ‘Bodyline’ series, the Ashes have witnessed legendary bowlers turn around matches, or even series, on many occasions.

In recent years, Aussie Mitchell Johnson’s thunderbol­ts in Ashes 2013-14 Down Under remains the latest example of a bowler making a lasting impact over five Tests. For England, Stuart Broad’s spell of 8 for 15 at Nottingham in the last edition highlighte­d how one bowler, or even a spell, could turn the course drasticall­y.

This Ashes involves some of the finest Test bowlers: world No 1 James Anderson will spearhead England’s quest to retain the Urn, while the Mitchell Starc-led Australian pace attack will take the field with the sole objective of ‘hurting’ the visitors, when the series gets underway at The Gabba on Thursday.

Anderson has his exploits of 2010-11 to fall back on for inspiratio­n. Mastering the Kookaburra ball in a land where high temperatur­es, parched wickets and sunny skies do not let bowlers generate a lot of swing, Anderson had showed his class while scripting history.

He was the only bowler from either side to finish with more than 20 wickets, 24 to be precise, but his controlled movement helped England win a series Down Under after 28 years.

Johnson’s pace in short bursts, playing on the psyche of England got him 37 wickets, which won Australia the series.

But the greatest bowling display in Ashes history which made a lasting impact over generation­s was Larwood’s in Ashes 1932-33.

Larwood, operating on a dangerous line, had even managed to get the better of Sir Don Bradman. In fact, English skipper Douglas Jardine’s Bodyline bowling tactics saw even the diplomatic relations between the two countries become strenuous.

To put it in perspectiv­e, only once in Ashes history has a bowler taken 40 or more wickets in Australia. Australian fast bowler Rodney Hogg’s 41 wickets in 1978-79 remains a record.

A similar impact can be expected from Mitchell Starc, who claimed two hat-tricks in one match for New South Wales against Western Australia to prove his destructiv­e instinct in home conditions.

Jim Laker’s 10/53 at Manchester in 1956 set a world record which only one bowler could match. Anil Kumble is the only bowler after Laker to have taken 10 wickets in an innings. But even before Laker, Arthur Mailey had come close to taking 10 wickets in an innings when he claimed 9/121 in Melbourne in February 1921.

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