The Herald (South Africa)

Bairstow eyes wicketkeep­er role ahead of Windies Tests

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Jonny Bairstow believes he can regain his role as England’s Test wicketkeep­er as players prepare to go head-to-head for a place in the side to face the West Indies.

England are gearing up for a three-Test series against the Caribbean side next month that will mark the return of internatio­nal cricket after the coronaviru­s shutdown.

With no first-class matches in the run-up to the series, they will use warm-up games at Southampto­n, the venue for the first Test, starting on July 8, to assess players’ form.

Bairstow was dropped from last year’s tour of New Zealand, with England selection chief Ed Smith indicating his internatio­nal future was as a specialist batsman.

He played just one Test in SA in December and was rested from the tour of Sri Lanka, with long-time rival wicketkeep­er Jos Buttler and gloveman Ben Foakes selected instead, before the coronaviru­s cut short that trip in March.

But while the 30-year-old multi-format internatio­nal said he wanted to play Test cricket again, he also made clear his preferred role. “Over a period of time, I’ve been really happy with my ‘keeping,” Bairstow said on Tuesday in a conference call.

“That was the bit at the start of my career that people questioned but people have stopped speaking about it over the last couple of years.

“I’ve looked at the stats and my stats are very good.

“So there’s no reason that isn’t an area I want to be coming back into.”

The son of the late former Yorkshire and England wicketkeep­er David Bairstow, Jonny has been England’s wicketkeep­er in 48 of his 70 Tests.

Bairstow, however, averaged just 18 with the bat in his last seven matches with the gloves.

Bairstow said being dropped as England’s wicketkeep­er had stung.

“You can only be judged on your last performanc­es and I like to think they were good and I hope they will get me back in the side as long as I score enough runs,” he said.

Bairstow, feeling refreshed after a lengthy absence due to the Covid-19 shutdown, has no doubts about the competitiv­eness of England’s upcoming camp.

“We’ve got some guys that can bowl at serious pace, we’ve got guys that are wanting to be proving themselves so I don’t think the intensity side of things is going to be a problem,” he said.

Nor does Bairstow believe the West Indies will benefit in a series where there will be no spectators on health grounds.

“I think it’s a level playing field,” he said.

“It’s the internal motivators that you will really see come through when these games are played behind closed doors. ”—

 ?? Picture: OLI SCARFF/AFP ?? GLOVES OFF: England’s wicketkeep­er-batsman Jonny Bairstow
Picture: OLI SCARFF/AFP GLOVES OFF: England’s wicketkeep­er-batsman Jonny Bairstow

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