Yorkshire Post

England falter as Pope stands tall at Lord’s

- RORY DOLLARD AT LORD’S Email: yp.sport@nationalwo­rld.com Twitter: @YPSport ENGLAND v SOUTH AFRICA FIRST TEST MATCH

PAUL COLLINGWOO­D hailed Ollie Pope for his unbeaten halfcentur­y and insisted England have the capacity to fight back after a difficult opening day of the first Test against South Africa at Lord’s.

South Africa’s charge was halted by the rain which ultimately forced an early close of play with England up against it at 116-6.

Pope offered the only resistance for England, bringing up his 50 just before lunch, having played confidentl­y and in the spirit of the so-called ‘Bazball’ approach adopted under Brendon McCullum, finishing the day unbeaten on 61.

England assistant coach Collingwoo­d believes Pope embodied the spirit of the team instilled by head coach McCullum and captain Ben Stokes.

“I thought he was fantastic today,” said Collingwoo­d.

“Our mantra of trying to put the opposition under pressure, he did that brilliantl­y today.

“I thought he was composed, he looked busy at the crease and on a wicket that was giving them quite a lot of assistance he got us into a position at the end of the day’s play where we’re not necessaril­y out of the game, but he’s batted exceptiona­lly well and shown a lot of skill.

“Hopefully he can get back in tomorrow and get us into a position where we can see where we are in the game, and I guess we won’t know that until we’ve bowled on that same surface.”

Kagiso Rabada landed two early blows to remove opening pair Alex Lees and Zak Crawley, before Yorkshire duo Joe Root and Jonny Bairstow fell for eight and nought respective­ly to leave the hosts 55-4.

Pope and Stokes looked set to lead a recovery, but the captain and wicketkeep­er Ben Foakes fell either side of lunch to put South Africa in the box seat.

The rain forced the players off shortly after Foakes’s wicket at 2.09pm and did not ease up all afternoon before the end of play was finally called at 4:31pm.

Collingwoo­d backed England to stick to their method, after their most difficult day with the bat under the new McCullumSt­okes regime.

“Everyone’s clear about how we’re going to go about our batting. That’s not going to change,” he said.

“We’re not always going to get it 100 per cent right. I thought at times today we soaked up pressure and at times we put it back on the bowlers.”

Ahead of the game, Stokes had singled out opening pair Lees and Crawley for praise following their century stand during the victory over India at Edgbaston last month, yet there would be no such feat against the Proteas.

Crawley in particular has struggled in recent months and has not scored a half-century at all in the English summer, but Collingwoo­d insisted they are not looking for him to be consistent.

“The messaging is very clear with Zak. We don’t necessaril­y look for consistenc­y with Zak,” said Collingwoo­d.

“It’s about match-winning performanc­es and being able to do special things.

“One innings ago he had a hundred partnershi­p against India to chase down over 350 so we don’t forget about those contributi­ons in our dressing room and they are huge contributi­ons to winning games of cricket. He’s got a lot of talent, we know that. I’m sure he’s frustrated he’s not getting more runs but certainly in the dressing room ourselves we’re confident he can turn things around and have those match-winning contributi­ons.”

Rabada’s two wickets in 12 overs for just 36 runs came despite him being a doubt ahead of the game due to an ankle injury sustained during the T20 series against England earlier in the summer.

The fast bowler insisted that there is no animosity between the sides after a war of words in the build up to the first Test, believing his team have to adapt to the opposition.

“We’ve always bowled the same and there was a bit in the wicket today and I think we got rewards for putting the ball in the right areas,” said Rabada.

“Normally you tend to do the same thing over and over in Test cricket but I think you have slightly different plans to different batters.

“Different teams have different strategies and I guess it’s just about adapting to what the opposition throws at you.

“So there’s nothing really going around that brings any animosity or white line fever, but I think it’s just about adapting to the team’s strategy.”

The Internatio­nal Cricket Council has revealed its next Future Tours Program cycle with England set to play Ireland in a home Test ahead of next summer’s Ashes.

Cricket’s governing body outlined its internatio­nal calendar between 2023 and 2027 on Wednesday with England set to play 22 Tests, the most of any of the ICC’s 12 full members.

With more franchise leagues set to begin next year, it has only increased the scrutiny and pressure on the schedule.

The 2023-2027 FTP cycle confirms next summer’s Ashes will not take place in August, the month set to be dominated by the third edition of English cricket’s franchise league The Hundred.

Instead England and Australia will contest the Ashes during June and July.

A home Test against Ireland at the beginning of June will act as a precursor ahead of Ben Stokes’s side looking to win back the urn.

I thought he was fantastic today...putting them under pressure. England’s Paul Collingwoo­d after Ollie Pope emerged unbeaten on 61 at Lord’s.

 ?? ?? OLLIE POPE: Scored an unbeaten 61 as England struggled on opening day against South Africa.
OLLIE POPE: Scored an unbeaten 61 as England struggled on opening day against South Africa.

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