The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Scots aim to bowl over World Cup opponents

- JAMIE DURENT

Scotland wicketkeep­er Matthew Cross reckons they are capable of achieving something special at next month’s cricket T20 World Cup.

Cross, who was also selected for the 2016 tournament, believes they are capable of advancing from the group stages to face the world’s best.

There is a healthy representa­tion from the north of Scotland in Shane Burger’s 17-man preliminar­y squad, announced last week.

Dundee-born wicketkeep­er Craig Wallace is off to his first World Cup while Forfarshir­e team-mate Michael Leask, who played at the 2016 T20 World Cup, is also in the 17-man squad.

A final squad of 15 will be named on October 10. Scotland face Bangladesh on October 17, Papua New Guinea two days later and Oman on October 21.

All of their group games will be played at the Al Amerat Cricket Stadium in Muscat, Oman.

There are two groups of four, with the top two in each group advancing to the Super 12 where they will face the top eight ICC nations: India, Afghanista­n, Australia, England, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa and the West Indies. All matches will then be played in the United Arab Emirates.

“Last time there was only one spot so it was going to be a tough ask,” said Cross, who started his career with Aberdeensh­ire. “It’s good they’ve opened it up so more teams can qualify.

“There’s no expectatio­n we’re going to walk-over any side and we need to hit the ground running once we get into the tournament. If we do that, we’re confident not many teams are going to be able to beat that.

“We’ve beaten both Oman and PNG – we’ve played them in a lot of 50over stuff recently.

Bangladesh are a strong team and just beat New Zealand but, given our strengths, we have an opportunit­y to take them down as well.

“We’ve had qualifiers in similar conditions in Dubai and Oman, so we know what we’re expecting. We’ve covered areas we need to do well in, in hot conditions, and we feel like we’re able to do something special.”

It is the start of a busy period for the Scotland national team. They play the first of three T20s against Zimbabwe tomorrow in Edinburgh, with Josh Davey dropping out of the squad for those games due to county commitment­s with Somerset.

Nairn seam-bowler Adrian Neill has been included in that squad.

Scotland also face Oman and Papua New Guinea in four 50-over 2023 World Cup qualifiers – as part of the Cricket World Cup League 2 – prior to the T20 World Cup getting under way. Coetzer, Cross and Leask will take part in those games.

“I guess it means there’ll be no surprises (in the World Cup),” added Cross.

“We know they’ve got a lot of dangerous cricketers and we have to be at it to beat them.”

The Scotland management team have been boosted by the addition of former England test regular Jonathan Trott, who will act as a batting consultant during the tournament.

Cross said: “It’s pretty exciting – he’s been working in areas of the England setup and The Hundred recently and it’s a different level of experience.

“We saw the impact Paul Collingwoo­d coming in gave us. It’s not only bringing his own ideas but he was taken aback by what a talented group we have here. I hope he (Trott) sees the same.

“It’s awesome when these guys can come in and help us for these big competitio­ns. I’m sure he will fit into the group easily and these guys have always brought something different to the table.”

Off the field Cross made a pretty significan­t move, relocating from London to Edinburgh to ensure he remained in Burger’s thoughts.

It has been a successful domestic season as he won the Eastern Premier League with Heriot’s and Cricket Scotland’s regional series with the Western Warriors.

“I wanted to give everything to my Scotland career and it wasn’t easy living in London,” he added. “It worked for a period but it wasn’t easy with all the travelling.

“I didn’t want to be ‘out of sight, out of mind’. Joining Heriot’s was good for me as I pretty much knew everyone through regional and junior Scotland set-ups.”

 ??  ?? RARING TO GO: Scotland wicket-keeper Matthew Cross believes they are capable of achieving great things at the T20 World Cup next month.
RARING TO GO: Scotland wicket-keeper Matthew Cross believes they are capable of achieving great things at the T20 World Cup next month.

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