The Chronicle

I’m just having too much fun to be ill!

HIS TRAUMA OVER

- CRICKET By RORY DOLLARD

THE last time Jack Leach toured New Zealand a bout of sepsis left him hospitalis­ed in Hamilton, but the spinner insists England’s newly-relaxed approach to Test cricket has left him healthier, happier and readier than ever to perform.

The spinner, who takes immunosupp­ressants to combat Crohn’s disease, was taken seriously ill during the 2019 trip and developed blood poisoning brought on by gastroente­ritis.

An ambulance was called when his heart-rate shot to 190 and his temperatur­e to 40 degrees, and Leach later revealed he feared he would not wake up.

His recovery was full and swift, but when England this week checked into Hamilton’s Novotel on the eve of a two-day Test warm-up at Seddon Park, Leach took a moment to recall his previous visit.

“When I came back to this hotel I was like ‘ah, there’s bad memories coming here’,” he said.

“I was on a drip and had antibiotic­s in the other arm. It slowly got worse and worse. I was really struggling for a bit. It wasn’t great, but that’s all in the past now, I’m having too much fun to get ill now.

“It can be stress related, so maybe being a little bit more relaxed is actually helping that side of my health as well.

LEACH REVEALS

LAST TRIP TO

“Fingers crossed it stays that way.”

Leach’s positive outlook is another example of the buoyant mood that has swept the camp in the nine months since Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum took the helm.

Emboldened by a run of nine wins in 10 games, England have just enjoyed a team bonding break in Queenstown, making the most of an impressive array of golf courses and indulging an itinerary put together by their Kiwi head coach, McCullum.

The tourists’ week in the Waikato region initially had room for a full practice session followed by four days of warm-up cricket against a New Zealand XI, but training was cancelled yesterday and the playing time cut in half, leaving just two days of pink-ball action under floodlight­s.

It means England will be light on competitiv­e overs when the series proper gets going with a day/night match in Mount Maunganui on February 16, but Leach sees plenty of benefits to the new approach.

“We’ve been spending more time together and (building) that team atmosphere. I always felt like cricket was an individual sport within a team but actually this feels like such a team,” he explained.

“It’s something I feel very lucky to have experience­d because its a lot more enjoyable.

“We’ve spoken about memories that we’ve created over the last bit of time and that’s been great fun but otherwise it was mainly enjoying Queenstown. We haven’t spoken much about this series.

“Everyone is very clear on how we’re going about things: it’s going to be more of the same.That’s a good sign that we don’t need to do too much chatting. We’re working a lot smarter as a team.

“I don’t feel like I need a load of game time to be ready. We’re just trusting ourselves and trusting each other a lot more. I certainly feel in previous tours because I’ve worried more, I’ve probably overdone it and peaked too early.”

 ?? ?? Jack Leach is enjoying England’s new approach to Test cricket
Jack Leach is enjoying England’s new approach to Test cricket

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