New Straits Times

Ashes series brings out old ‘Bull’ in Warner

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MELBOURNE: Age and fatherhood may have mellowed David Warner, but nothing coaxes the old ‘Bull’ out of the Australia vice captain like a home Ashes series.

Warner’s clarion call this week to summon ‘hatred’ for visiting England continued the revival of a once-famed chirpiness .

The ‘Bull’, is a moniker that aptly captured his rampaging ways.

Off-field domestic bliss and the threat of suspension for multiple code of conduct breaches may have accelerate­d Warner’s maturity, but the Ashes is a powerful red rag to the bovine spirit within.

“At the moment I’m not going to put any vibes out there or get into a verbal stoush,” Warner said on Australian radio, only moments after describing the series as ‘war’.

“But come day one when we walk out there, there will definitely be some words exchanged.”

While Warner won respect among some of his compatriot­s for being able to rein himself in, he could see his approval rating Down Under soar even higher if he lets himself go.

Former Australia captain Steve Waugh, whose peerless teams relentless­ly sledged the English in consecutiv­e Ashes wins, endorsed the lefthander’s call to arms.

“There’s nothing wrong with that bit of byplay before the series starts. It gets everybody interested,” Waugh told local media.

Warner’s salvo has already ruffled feathers in England, with former opener Marcus Trescothic­k showing his disdain.

“It’s pathetic,” he told the BBC. “I think it will just be a good distractio­n, hopefully, for Australia and they can get caught up in the war of words.”

The war of words hardly brought Australia undone during England’s last tour to Australia, when Michael Clarke’s side whitewashe­d the tourists 5-0.

Warner was in the thick of it, taunting England’s batsmen for having ‘scared eyes’ when faced with Mitchell Johnson’s pace barrage in the first test in Brisbane.

The posturing has never escalated beyond fighting talk and the series starting in Brisbane on Nov. 23 is certain to see more bark than bite.

Warner looks unlikely to pass up the chance to stir the pot, however, and has even been happy to weigh in on the matter of Ben Stokes.

The England all-rounder, hugely important for the tourists’ hopes of winning the series, remains suspended pending an investigat­ion into his arrest outside a Bristol nightclub.

“I did do my time,” Warner said of his two-test ban from the Ashes in the wake of the Root incident.

“I think everyone in the world is waiting to see what happens there (with Stokes) and what the outcome is.” Reuters

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