Daily Dispatch

Crane may spin his way into England Test team

- By ROSS ROCHE

LEG-SPINNER Mason Crane’s experience playing in Sydney may prove the clincher to earn him a debut as England try to salvage their Ashes series with a win over Australia in tomorrow’s final Test.

Trailing 3-0 and the Ashes lost, England are considerin­g a possible team change for the fifth Sydney Test, with Moeen Ali’s place under threat and Crane pushing for his first cap.

Moeen has played 48 Tests and came to Australia as an accomplish­ed all-rounder, but he has under-performed, taking only three wickets and averaging 19 with the bat.

The Sydney Cricket Ground has a reputation as a turning wicket, enhancing Crane’s chances of playing.

The 20-year-old Hampshire leggie also boasts a five-wicket haul playing at the famous ground for New South Wales last year.

Crane, who was impressing in Sydney club cricket, was called up by NSW and took five wickets in the Sheffield Shield victory against South Australia.

“With the series lost it gives us the opportunit­y to look at some different people,” England’s Australian coach Trevor Bayliss said this week.

Asked if Crane was ready for Test cricket, Bayliss added: “There’s maybe no time like the present to find out.

“We think he’s a guy that has got the goods and the more he plays at this level the better he will get. You have got to start somewhere.”

England outplayed Australia for large tracts of last week’s fourth Test in Melbourne, only for Steve Smith to bat out the entire last day with an unbeaten century for a draw.

Prior to Melbourne, experience­d pair Alastair Cook and Stuart Broad were having lean series and under pressure for their spots.

But Cook carried his bat with an unbeaten 244 in the highest Test score at the Melbourne Cricket Ground by an overseas player, while Broad bounced back to form with five wickets in the match.

“We are a better team than what we’ve played on this trip and that is a benchmark for our side moving forward,” captain Joe Root said after the Melbourne draw.

“We will try to make sure that we go one better in Sydney and get the win that we want.”

But to break through in Sydney, where they have won twice in the last four Ashes Tests, England must find a way of shackling the freescorin­g Smith.

Smith has enjoyed a phenomenal series, scoring three centuries – including a Test best 239 in Perth – to amass 604 runs in six innings at an astonishin­g average of 151.

The Australia skipper, who averages 63.55 in his 60 Tests, is now in outright second place for the highesteve­r ICC ranking points behind Don Bradman.

“I’m adapting to each of the bowlers. I’m changing my plans to them and how they’re trying to get me out,” Smith said.

Pace spearhead Mitchell Starc, who missed the Melbourne Test with a bruised heel, is vying with recalled off-spinner Ashton Agar to likely replace Jackson Bird in the final Australia Test team. — AFP

ABUMPER month is on the cards for East London cricket fans as five top-class matches will be played at Buffalo Park to keep everyone suitably entertaine­d.

The Warriors are scheduled to play three Momentum One Day Cup games over a two-week period in the city, while Border will also be back in action, playing Sunfoil 3-Day Cup and CSA Provincial One Day Challenge matches, as they get the second half of their season underway.

 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES ?? ALMOST THERE: Mason Crane of England has enjoyed some success playing at the Sydney Cricket Ground – the venue for the fifth and final Ashes Test – and may thus be called up for his England Test debut.
Picture: GETTY IMAGES ALMOST THERE: Mason Crane of England has enjoyed some success playing at the Sydney Cricket Ground – the venue for the fifth and final Ashes Test – and may thus be called up for his England Test debut.

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