The Star Early Edition

Superb Vern can swing it

Former Aussie opener Rogers says SA seamer keeps batsmen guessing

- ZAAHIER ADAMS

NEWLY-MARRIED Vernon Philander may have had to cut his honeymoon short this week, but former Australia opener Chris Rogers believes the seamer will once again pose the biggest threat to the visitors in the upcoming Test series.

Philander has been Australia’s tormentor since debuting at Newlands in November 2011 when he claimed match-figures of 8/78, including 5/15 in the second innings to help rout the Aussies for just 47.

Although he endured forgettabl­e series away in 2012 and at home in 2014 when the Australian batsmen learnt to be more patient against him, Philander struck back with a vengeance in the away series in 2016 when he won the Man of the Series award to lead the Proteas to a third successive series victory Down Under.

“He’s incredible,” Rogers said on Australia’s 91.3 Sport FM, having played three Tests against the right-armer in the correspond­ing series four years ago.

“With most swing bowlers they tend to angle the seam, so you kind of know which way the ball’s going to go. I always found with him, his seam would point directly at you, and you never knew what it was going to do; as a lefthander, was it going to swing back into you? Or was it going to hit the seam and move away? That was his skill.

“He just does enough both ways. You’re almost guessing; sometimes you’re just hoping the ball hits the bat.

“If the pitches play like I expect them to, he is going to be so valuable. Because not only that, he (also) bowls so straight, he controls the runrate.“And his batting, I think has improved quite a lot over the last little period.”

Australia are likely to field four left-handers, including three in their top-order, in the first Test, which could enhance Philander’s chances of getting the 12 wickets he needs to get to 200 Test scalps.

Philander, 32, showed he is approachin­g peak form again, taking 15 wickets at 15.86 and conceding only 2.47 runs per over in the recent series against world No 1 side India. . “The wickets in these matches are going to be a bit spicy and I’m looking forward to that, and with two very good attacks, it’s going to be challengin­g for the batsmen,” Rogers, renowned for scoring “tough” runs, explained.

“I imagine it’s going to be a to bat on. In 2014, the first match was at Centurion, and they produced a really lively one but Mitch Johnson just blew them away. That scared them I think, then they produced flat ones trying to get reverse swing. It didn’t work for them then, so I think they’re going to stick with the tough pitches and back their four quality bowlers.

“I think it’s going to be low-scoring, as we saw with the South Africa-India series, but I reckon that’s going to be quite exciting. And with the Australian attack, as good as it is, they’ll be happy with that too. As a batsman you relish the challenge. Anyone can score runs on flat wickets, but it’s when you score runs and not many other people in your team score, they’re the ones you look back on with most pride.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa