Manchester Evening News

Jimmy: This England team is just fearless!

- By RORY DOLLARD

JAMES Anderson has seen almost everything over the course of two decades as an England player, but even the Lancashire star has been taken aback by the transforma­tion that has gripped the Test team in recent weeks.

When it comes to assessing just how revolution­ary the side’s performanc­es in their 3-0 whitewash over New Zealand were, nobody is in a better position to judge than their 39-year-old record cap-holder.

Anderson first played for his country in 2002 and has lived through more than his fair share of new eras, reboots and fresh starts.

But the spirit of unbridled aggression and unchecked confidence that allowed England to chase down targets of 277, 299 and 296, and score their runs at a fierce rate of 4.54 over the course of the series, has left even him struggling for reference points.

“I have never been in a dressing room before when we have chased almost 300 on a pitch that is turning and everyone being so calm, just believing we were going to chase them down,” said Anderson.

“After 20 years of playing internatio­nal cricket, that was something I had never seen before.

“You always get a few jittery people but from one to 11, and staff included, everyone was just calm and believed.

“As a bowler, I think it’s horrible! I don’t want to think of someone coming at me like that. But the confidence our batters have got at the moment...they’re just fearless.”

Anderson was speaking ahead of tomorrow’s reschedule­d fifth Test against India, a throwback to the unfinished 2021 series between the teams. The game was postponed just a couple of hours before it was due to begin at Emirates Old Trafford last September, with the tourists withdrawin­g due to a Covid scare.

Anderson is eyeing a return to the team after missing the last Test in Leeds due to a painful left ankle.

“I feel pretty good,” he said. “I hate missing games for England, seeing the guys out on the field having a good time. The feeling around the group is so good you want to be around it as much as possible.”

In an ideal world Anderson would also like to reprise the old spit-andpolish approach to shining the ball but accepts Covid restrictio­ns are unlikely to be relaxed.

Players from both England and New Zealand were unhappy with how quickly this year’s Dukes ball lost shape or went soft during the recent series, which may have been a factor in the diminished impact of the swing.

Ever since the start of the county season concerns have been raised about the current batch, and the Test series saw countless requests for the umpires to call for replacemen­ts.

Anderson feels the old-fashioned idea of using saliva to help create swing could aid the seamers but does not anticipate a shift of approach.

“It potentiall­y could be that (inhibiting swing), but I’m not sure it’s ever going to change, certainly in the foreseeabl­e future, because of the Covid situation,” said Anderson.

“Speaking to the New Zealand bowlers after the games, they would have liked that to be allowed, but I can’t see it happening. The real frustratio­n is they go out of shape so quickly, they go soft, and they don’t really swing. There’s obviously something fundamenta­lly wrong, something about the ball, and it’s annoying to keep on changing it.”

 ?? ?? James Anderson and Ben Stokes share a joke ahead of tomorrow’s Test
James Anderson and Ben Stokes share a joke ahead of tomorrow’s Test

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