Cape Times

Nevill tunes up for the Ashes

- Sudipto Ganguly

LONDON: A guitar-strumming rocker when not keeping wickets, Australia’s Peter Nevill will hope to hit the right note when he makes his surprise Test debut against England in the second Ashes match today.

Brad Haddin’s decision to skip the Lord’s Test due to family reasons has cleared the deck for Nevill’s Test debut and this is not the first time the 29-yearold had to fill in for his mentor.

He flew to West Indies in 2012 as a reserve for secondchoi­ce Matthew Wade when Haddin was forced to return home due to his daughter’s illness.

The competitio­n with Wade for a playing spot in the Victoria team prompted Nevill to move to New South Wales in 2008 and that is where he blossomed both with gloves and bat and developed a close friendship with Haddin.

“Brad has had a massive impact on my career, he’s always so generous with his time,” Nevill, who often carries a guitar with him, he said during a News Corp interview in March. “He’s helped me out a lot and he’s got a great eye for wicketkeep­ing and understand­s the technical aspects of it so well.

“Just little things like talking to him about scenarios or mentally what he’s thinking and his keys as a keeper. He’s certainly helped me become a better wicketkeep­er.”

Nevill had his strongest Sheffield Shield showing last season for NSW, which earned him the Steve Waugh medal for the state’s best player.

He scored 764 first-class runs at an average of over 76, including an unbeaten 235 against Tasmania in Hobart, and his form with the bat meant he played as a regular batsman for NSW when Haddin was available for domestic cricket. Nevill also had 34 Shield dismissals in the last season, enough to earn a spot in the Test squad as the second keeper behind Haddin on the tours of West Indies and the Ashes.

“I need to be on top of my game and ready to go should that opportunit­y arise,” Nevill said. – Reuters

 ?? Picture: BACKPAGEPI­X ?? LOTS TO ROAR ABOUT: England's Ben Stokes was a vital cog for the Three Lions in their first Test Ashes win against Australia in Cardiff last week.
A second stringer no more
Picture: BACKPAGEPI­X LOTS TO ROAR ABOUT: England's Ben Stokes was a vital cog for the Three Lions in their first Test Ashes win against Australia in Cardiff last week. A second stringer no more

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