Sunday Mirror

Fury feels so bullish

- By NEIL MOXLEY TIME FOR LEARNING BY TOM HOPKINSON

GRAEME SWANN has called on English cricket to start taking spin bowling seriously – and warned they can never become the world’s best Test side until they do.

The former Ashes hero has accused the England hierarchy of failing to harness spinning talent at county level.

Swann – second only to Derek Underwood in the all-time list of Test wicket-takers among English spinners – laments the attitudes towards his art that he sees operating in the English game.

As Joe Root & Co. prepare to head out to Sri Lanka next month, they do so with the largely untried Dom Bess, 22, leg-spinner Matt Parkinson, 23 and yet to play a Test, plus 10-Test ‘veteran’ Jack Leach, 28, as the spin options.

Swann (right) said: “The English game is riddled with spinning potential – but we don’t unlock it.

“No one single individual is to blame for this – rather there’s an institutio­nal misunderst­anding of how to treat spinners.

“I honestly believe there are county captains who just don’t understand spin bowling or its value. Even club captains have a better grasp of it.

“I heard commentato­rs the other day moaning that Matt Parkinson was bowling too slowly during the one-dayer against South Africa.

“It was his first internatio­nal and he was doing so without any guidance.

“You’d be very, very lucky in your first game if you can pick up the pace of a wicket – that takes years of experience. But there was no recognitio­n of that, certainly not in the commentary box and these are seasoned ex-internatio­nals.

“They were the same people who used to criticise my bowling without any true understand­ing of what was going on.

“In my own career, I took a lot of wickets in my first over.

People thought it was just some sort of happy chance. Nothing of the sort. I was able to attack much more.

“I’d worked out that

90 per cent of the game at

Test level was in the head so pressure played a massive part.

“But ex-colleagues laugh even now when I tell them there was a method to how I approached that first over.

“It’s a small point maybe – but it speaks volumes about how spin bowling is treated in this country.”

Swann believes that relative rookies Bess and Parkinson both have the ability to be frontline bowlers of huge value to England’s Test team – but worries if they will truly ever scale the heights. He said: “Dom Bess could be a really good bowler. He has a repeatable action and does a decent amount with the ball.

“He has the basics. Now he needs the education.

“Parkinson is a work in progress but how old is he? He needs time to learn but that takes more than visiting a spin clinic in India for a few weeks.

“But I believe a few of the county captains could do worse than head over there to be tutored by the likes of former India skipper MS Dhoni in how to get the best out of spinners. “If England want to get back to the top of the Test rankings, they must do more than rely on Ben Stokes, or bowling out teams at home on seamer-friendly pitches.

“You can’t go to places like India without a credible spinner and expect to beat these teams.”

TYSON FURY has vowed to greet Deontay Wilder like a raging bull in Las Vegas on Saturday.

But even if he strips the American of his WBC heavyweigh­t crown, the Gypsy King is adamant the achievemen­t won’t equal his victory over Wladimir Klitschko.

Fury (above) produced a shock win in November 2015 to take Klitschko’s WBA, IBF, WBO and IBO heavyweigh­t world champion belts.

There will be those who say Klitschko was past his best by then, and now Fury must face Wilder in his prime to gain the WBC crown.

But Fury said: “Nothing will ever top the

Klitschko win in Germany. That was the best win from any British fighter in history.”

Fury, whose first clash with Wilder 14 months ago ended in a draw, is promising different tactics this time.

“I’ll just go for an all-out brawl,” he said.

“I’m not bothered about getting hit and hurt, I’ve been hit and hurt loads of times.

“I’m going out swinging. Deontay says he’s coming out swinging, so we’ll see who’s full of s*** and who’s a man of his word.

“I’m coming out like a raging bull. I’ll run across that ring to meet him.”

■■BT Sport Box Office will show Tyson Fury’s highly anticipate­d rematch with Deontay Wilder, exclusivel­y live on Saturday, February 22. Wilder v Fury II can be watched on BT TV, Virgin TV, Sky, online via the web or the BT Sport Box Office App. https:// www.bt.com/sport/box-office/

 ??  ?? Spinners Bess, Parkinson and Leach have just 14 Tests caps between them
BIG TEST Joe Root’s next stop is
Sri Lanka
Spinners Bess, Parkinson and Leach have just 14 Tests caps between them BIG TEST Joe Root’s next stop is Sri Lanka

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