Michael Clarke to miss rest of Test series against India

By Steve Larkin / Wire

Australian captain Michael Clarke has been ruled out of the Test series against India.

Clarke was sent for scans after limping from Adelaide Oval on Saturday’s final day of play in the first Test against India with a right hamstring injury.

He said the scan results were “not fantastic”, and he was unlikely to don white again this summer.

Clarke was passed fit to play the series opener in Adelaide after overcoming a left hamstring strain suffered in a one-day match on November 14.

But he suffered recurrence of his long-term back injury while batting on Tuesday’s opening day which forced him to retire hurt.

Clarke had injections to soothe spasms in his back and returned to the crease the next day to complete a century.

But he was injured again when fielding a ball in India’s second innings on Saturday.

Clarke collected a ball in his left hand and shaped to throw but didn’t release the ball, instantly pulling up lame.

He limped from the field accompanied by Australian team physiotherapist Alex Kountouris and briefly grabbed his right hamstring while exiting.

After Clarke suffered his back injury, Kountouris described it as “significant”.

Clarke has three degenerative discs in his lower back which were first diagnosed when he was aged 17.

“This is his right lower back. This is his old injury, what he’s had in the past,” Kountouris said on Wednesday.

“I don’t think it’s directly related to his (left) hamstring (strain) because it’s the other side.

“We believe it’s related to his old disc injuries. With that comes a lot of muscle spasms and other things that cause pain.”

The injury is sure to jeopardise Clarke’s participation in the World Cup, starting February.

The Crowd Says:

2014-12-13T11:30:42+00:00

strayan

Guest


oh dear. either Clarke is a really selfish individual or he's been pushed into playing test match cricket for straya when clearly not fit and unable to prove his fitness. It could be head office who need him to maximise its coffers during the summer or perhaps TV networks and broadcasters who need him to headline their commercial interests. This has become such a wonderful ongoing soap opera, and all relevant stakeholders certainly have benefited in that this issue has kept cricket in the news

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