Anderson sends out warning to Australia
Ahead of Ashes
England pace bowler James Anderson has warned Australia that he is
only just beginning to fulfil his potential ahead of the Ashes series
later this year. Anderson has taken 22 first-class wickets already this
season in just three matches, including nine in a man-of-the-match
display in the second Test victory over the West Indies last week.
That impressive form has seen the Lancashire star tipped by experts,
including former England coach Duncan Fletcher, as the man capable of
helping England regain the Ashes when the Test series starts in July.
The 26-year-old has a chance to fine-tune his game for the titanic
clashes with Australia when the second match of the one-day series
against the West Indies takes place at Bristol on Sunday.
“I don’t think anyone has seen the best of Jimmy Anderson yet,”
Anderson said.
“I think I’ve still got improving to do - and I hope I can do that,
whether it’s through the Ashes series or beyond that.
“I hope I’ll be in similar form. It’s not that long away, and if I
can have a good series here and the Twenty20 World Cup, then it’s time
to start thinking about the Ashes.”
Anderson’s status as England’s attacking spearhead represents quite a
contrast to earlier this year when he was left out of the first Test
against the West Indies in the Caribbean.
England derailed the Australians in 2005 by creating detailed plans
tailored to each individual batsman and Anderson will be integral to
their effort this time with his ability to swing the ball whether new or
old.
“I’ve got my own expectations,” Anderson said. “I know what I can
achieve in the Ashes; I know how big a part I can play and how important
I am to this group of lads here; I’ll just be hoping to meet my
expectations.
“It’s going to be crucial that we can get some plans nailed down
early on and not wait for them to come at us. We’ve got to try to strike
the first blow.
“All of us bowlers have input, everyone chirps up in meetings.
“But everyone is different in their bowling styles - so what might
work for me might not work for Stuart Broad.
“We all have to have individual plans as well as having a team plan.
“My skills have always been there - I have always been able to swing
it both ways and reverse-swing it both ways.
“It has been more to do with consistency in my line and length which
has improved. “So in the past when it was swinging I wasted quite a few
balls whereas now I feel I am asking questions with pretty much every
ball I bowl.”
BRISTOL, England, Sunday (AFP)
Fulham close to landing ‘unwanted’ European prize
The joke currently doing the rounds among the clubs just outside the
Premier League elite is that it is easier to get out of next season’s
Europa League than into it.
The prospect of having to play a minimum of 19 matches to win the
rebranded UEFA Cup is enough to deter most sides from making a concerted
bid for qualification, but it appears almost inevitable that Fulham have
drawn the short straw.
The west Londoners boast a two-point lead over their closest rivals,
Tottenham, in seventh place and, thanks to their superior goal
difference, need only a draw against Everton on Sunday to dust off their
passports, although the chances are that they could lose to David Moyes’
team and still qualify.
Spurs, after all, travel to Liverpool, where Rafa Benitez’s side
remain unbeaten this season.
Fulham boss Roy Hodgson’s enthusiasm for the Europa League is hardly
overwhelming.
Hodgson boasts one of the smallest squads in the top flight and one
of the major factors behind their success this season has been the lack
of injuries to key players.
The extra physical demands placed on teams involved in European
competition would represent a major test of Hodgson’s managerial skills
and could also precipitate an overhaul of the club’s transfer policy.
Club owner Mohamed al Fayed has been relatively reluctant to spend
significant sums in recent seasons, with Fulham’s net outlay of 10
million pounds from the previous two transfer windows placing them near
the bottom of the table of Premier League’s spenders.
But that might have to change if Hodgson is to have a squad capable
of competing on both domestic and European fronts, particularly if, as
expected, Norwegian international Brede Hangeland is snapped up by one
of the Premier League elite following his impressive displays at
centre-half this term.
His enthusiasm for Europe may be lukewarm, but Hodgson freely admits
that leading Fulham there would rank with any of his achievements during
a long and successful career in management.
“It would certainly be up there,” he said. “There have been a lot of
good years for me but it is difficult to rank achievements. People like
to say the best is yet to come.
“When I went to Blackburn we finished sixth and got into Europe. I
remember running round the pitch at Ewood Park in front of 28,000 people
but it didn’t help me the following season when we were at the bottom at
Christmas and I got sacked.”
Everton’s participation in Europe next season is already
rubber-stamped, not only through a guaranteed top-seven finish in the
league, but also by reaching the FA Cup final, where they face Chelsea
on May 30. Moyes is likely to have at least one eye on that date when it
comes to naming his starting line-up at Craven Cottage, although in the
long term the Scot’s attention is likely to be fixed on securing more of
his players on long-term contracts to ensure his squad does not break
up.
“I think stability is something we have had in recent years,” he
said. “What we want to do is secure the people we already have at the
club and then keep adding on top of that and I think we have been doing
our business in a real good fashion over the last few years.
“We have to make sure we are continually building and the next bit is
to get the finances to keep building on top. These players won’t go on
forever and we need to keep replenishing behind and make sure we keep
bringing in other players as well.”
LONDON, AFP |