The Press

Wagner returns to ‘special place’

Garden of Eden has been fertile for NZ bowler

- ANDREW VOERMAN

The last time Neil Wagner played against England at Eden Park, it was the most exciting test match he’s ever been involved in.

That one, where the visitors held on on the final afternoon to secure a draw, was his sixth match for the Black Caps. It started five years ago tomorrow, when he is set to begin his 35th test, against the same opposition at the same venue.

Eden Park has been battered like a pinata this summer, and even if big crowds are expected for the historic day-night fixture.

As far as Wagner’s concerned, the odd-shaped ground is one where he loves to play – a feeling perhaps heightened by the fact that, as one of the country’s few test specialist­s, he doesn’t go there two or three times each season in coloured clothing.

‘‘A lot of guys find it funny being a rugby field with quite short dimensions,’’ he said.

‘‘But just the history there, knowing that Richie McCaw and those guys were out there when they won the World Cup, it’s a pretty special place – when you walk out there you get goosebumps.

‘‘It’s a lovely place to play and I enjoy it, and the two test matches I’ve had there, the England one [in 2013] was probably the most exciting test match I’ve been involved with, so hopefully this can come close to that, and the Indian one [a Black Caps win, in 2014] was an awesome spectacle.

‘‘It’s a good wicket there, and it’s obviously got its challenges with small boundaries, but you just have to adapt to that as soon as you can.’’

Injury concerns have cast a shadow over both teams in the buildup to the test. England have been sweating on whether allrounder Ben Stokes will be able to bowl, and it looks like he will, while the Black Caps can’t lock in Ross Taylor just yet, as he recovers from a quad injury.

Wagner wasn’t worrying about any of that yesterday though. Asked if the Black Caps bowlers had any specific plans for the England batsmen, he said they were focusing on their own games, rather than their opponents.

‘‘It’s more about controllin­g our

controllab­les and doing what we do as a team and looking at what’s been helping us to be successful and doing it for long periods of time.’’

Wagner has crafted a reputation as a man who likes bowling short, and the England batsmen didn’t cope well with the short ball

in their last series, the Ashes against Australia, but he said it wouldn’t be his go-to approach.

‘‘If the wicket allows it, and the ball isn’t really swinging a lot, you’ve obviously got to try to find a way of getting a dismissal or challengin­g the batsman to get a bit of fault in their footwork.’’

 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES ?? Neil Wagner + Eden Park + test cricket = high drama, at least most of the time. Above, the celebrates the wicket of England batsman Ian Bell during the dramatic test in 2013; below, he’s equally exuberant after dismissing Zaheer Khan during the win...
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES Neil Wagner + Eden Park + test cricket = high drama, at least most of the time. Above, the celebrates the wicket of England batsman Ian Bell during the dramatic test in 2013; below, he’s equally exuberant after dismissing Zaheer Khan during the win...
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