The Citizen (KZN)

‘Anderson won’t swing it in Perth’

WACA PITCH IS NOT THE MONSTER IT WAS Early assistance, but then it is set to flatten out.

- Sydney

England opening bowler James Anderson is unlikely to get the same swing and movement that made him “very damaging” during the second Ashes Test but will still be a handful early on in Perth, Australia’s Cameron Bancroft has said.

Anderson was at his unplayable best with the pink ball in Australia’s second innings in the day-night Test in Adelaide and took 5/43 to bowl the hosts out for 138 and give his side an outside chance of squaring the series.

“When he’s able to swing the ball like that, he’s extremely hard work and he’s very, very damaging,” Bancroft said yesterday.

“No matter what’s going on, it’s bloody hard work when the ball is swinging like that.”

Bancroft added that the pressure Anderson applied in the twilight on the third day of the second Test had stymied the free-flowing Australian batsmen and made them work for every run.

Anderson’s performanc­e, his first five-wicket haul in Australia, turned out be in vain in the end, though, as the hosts steadily chipped away at England on the fourth day when they were chasing 354 for victory.

Josh Hazlewood then took two quick wickets early on the fifth day before Mitchell Starc ripped through the tail to bowl England out for 233 and give Australia a 120-run victory.

Perth local Bancroft was looking forward to playing on his home ground, having scored a career-best 228 not out there against South Australia before he was called into the national side to make his debut in the first Test in Brisbane.

While the Waca pitch had flattened and become more batsmenfri­endly compared to the past when it provided steepling bounce and express pace, Bancroft said it would still give the swing bowlers like Anderson some assistance early on. –

 ?? Picture: Getty Images ?? LIVING IN HOPE. Batsman Cameron Bancroft is praying England bowler James Anderson (above) gets less swing than he did with the pink ball in Adelaide during the third Ashes Test in Perth.
Picture: Getty Images LIVING IN HOPE. Batsman Cameron Bancroft is praying England bowler James Anderson (above) gets less swing than he did with the pink ball in Adelaide during the third Ashes Test in Perth.

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