Kuwait Times

Clarke believes Aussies can cause Ashes upset

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SYDNEY: The Australian­s are getting the civil formalitie­s out of the way early ahead of the Ashes, starting with yesterday’s very cordial morning tea in a jet aircraft hangar to formally farewell the team - several days before they leave for England.

Because the minute Michael Clarke and his lineup board the plane on the weekend, it’ll be all business. The Australian­s go into the series as rank underdogs after a 4-0 series defeat in India and back-to-back Ashes series losses to England.

They haven’t won the Ashes in England since 2001, and face the prospect of 10 tests in away-andhome series against their oldest foes between July and January.

“We have probably the most exciting 12 months of our careers ahead of us,” Clarke said Wednesday. England “are certainly the favorites, but we look forward to that challenge.

“There is not one cricket game where I’ve walked out onto the field with the Australian team and not expected to win, and this series will be no different.” The Australian­s have been training in Brisbane to prepare for a tour which starts with them try- ing to defend the Champions Trophy title, starting June 6, and then four tour matches against County teams before the first test at Trent Bridge on July 10. There’s been a lot of criticism of the Australian squad since the woeful tour to India in March, when three players were suspended for the third test for minor off-field issues, and Clarke missed the last test through injury. Shane Watson has quit as vicecaptai­n, prompting selectors to recall veteran wicketkeep­er Brad Haddin as his replacemen­t, and opening batsman David Warner got into a social media stoush with two senior cricket journalist­s. Warner wasn’t among the 12 Australian players at the morning tea Wednesday - he was scheduled to face a disciplina­ry panel later in the evening.

With an inexperien­ced batting group struggling to score runs consistent­ly, Australia’s best hope of being competitiv­e in England revolves around its strong seam bowling attack.

“There’s a lot of talk about our fast bowlers and we have plenty of talent,” Clarke said. “But it will come down to the batters making runs, the spin department doing their role and our fast bowlers maximizing conditions.

“Without doubt the Ashes tour is the most special, but it does take a whole squad of 16 players to have success.” Haddin’s recall adds some experience following the retirement of former skipper Ricky Ponting and reliable middle-order batsman Michael Hussey. Haddin hasn’t been Australia’s first-choice keeper since Matthew Wade took the gloves on the tour to the West Indies last year, but is determined to regain and keep his spot in the team and concentrat­e on “getting that urn back.”—AP

 ??  ?? AUSTRALIA: A handout photo shows Australian cricket captain Michael Clarke (second right), Qantas CEO Alan Joyce (second left) and two flight attendants on the steps of a Qantas A380 plane at an official farewell event as the Australian cricket team...
AUSTRALIA: A handout photo shows Australian cricket captain Michael Clarke (second right), Qantas CEO Alan Joyce (second left) and two flight attendants on the steps of a Qantas A380 plane at an official farewell event as the Australian cricket team...
 ??  ?? Indian cricketer S Sreesanth
Indian cricketer S Sreesanth

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