The Citizen (Gauteng)

Crane ready to spread his wings

FUTURE: SPINNER’S INCLUSION PART OF LONG-TERM PLAN

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Investing in leggie overdue as England hand youngster Test debut at SCG.

Mason Crane’s introducti­on to Test cricket for today’s fifth and final Ashes clash with Australia is perhaps a sign that England are finally prepared to invest the time it takes to develop a decent leg-spinner, whatever the short-term cost.

At 20, Crane will be the youngest England spinner for 90 years to make a Test debut when he wins his first cap at the Sydney Cricket Ground today in a series that England trail by an irretrieva­ble 3-0.

In the correspond­ing fixture on the 2013/14 Ashes series, when England were 4-0 down, Scott Borthwick, Boyd Rankin and Gary Ballance were all handed debuts with only the latter going on to play a second Test.

Crane’s elevation after taking 75 wickets at 44 in 29 first-class matches could be seen in the same vein, but for Joe Root’s assertion to the contrary as he plots a win that he thinks is vital to England’s success on their next trip Down Under.

“I want us to be the best side in the world ... and it’s not going to happen by chucking guys in for the last game of a series,” he said.

“So it’s really important that we do it in a way which, over the next four years, gets us in the best place to perform well here, but throughout that period being as successful as we can be.”

The art of spinning the ball away from a right-handed batsman using the fingers and a full flick of the wrist can produce spectacula­r results but is also difficult to control.

It has provided two of the most memorable moments in Ashes cricket – the Eric Hollies googly that bowled Don Bradman in the great Australian’s final innings and the “Ball of the Century” with which Shane Warne dismissed Mike Gatting in 1993.

It can also be expensive, though, as Warne had discovered on his Test debut at the SCG the previous year when he took 1/150 against India.

While Warne was the greatest in a long line of top class Australian “leggies” also including Bill “Tiger” O’Reilly, Richie Benaud and Stuart MacGill, the English have often been accused of lacking the patience to develop the skill.

Borthwick’s return of 4/82 from his leg spin in a losing cause at the SCG in 2014 was decent enough but he never played another Test, while Adil Rashid has since ended up on the Test scrapheap after 10 matches, all abroad.

Crane’s developmen­t may mark a sea change to this attitude. – Reuters

 ?? Picture: Getty Images ?? HISTORIC. At the tender age of 20 Mason Crane will be the youngest spinner in 90 years to make his debut for England during the fifth Ashes Test in Sydney.
Picture: Getty Images HISTORIC. At the tender age of 20 Mason Crane will be the youngest spinner in 90 years to make his debut for England during the fifth Ashes Test in Sydney.

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