Recovering Trott will face Ashes barrage from Aussies

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

England look set to make a risky selection for the Ashes, with veteran batsman Jonathan Trott a strong chance to stare down Australia’s aggressive pace unit in a new role: opening for England.

After stepping down before the second Test of the last Ashes because of mental health problems, Trott has fought his way back into the England setup and is favoured to open with Alastair Cook in the first Test against the West Indies starting on Monday.

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Trott made his Test career as a first-drop batsman, but England are gambling that the 33-year-old can form a sturdy alliance with his skipper at the top of the order.

Given that their alternative opener, Adam Lyth, has never played a Test, England would be loath to blood him against New Zealand or Australia – their opponents this European summer. So if Trott plays this week, as expected, he would have to be a massive failure in the West Indies for England to make yet another change to their opening partnership ahead of the Ashes.

The second opening position has been a major weakness for England since the retirement of Andrew Strauss two-and-a-half years ago. Since then, Nick Compton, Joe Root, Michael Carberry and Australian Sam Robson have all tried and failed to fill that void.

When Robson was jettisoned after being exposed for too often fishing at balls outside off stump, Yorkshireman Lyth appeared his most likely replacement. Although he looks as old as Strauss, at 27 Lyth has youth in his favour.

The left-handed opener was included in England’s 16-man Test squad for their three-Test tour of the West Indies this month. But so was Trott, and the more experienced man got first crack at pairing with Cook in England’s first warm-up game. The old stagers added 158 for the first wicket, albeit against a woefully weak St Kitts Invitational XI last week.

After Trott’s steady knock of 72 in that match, most of the UK press have suggested he is very likely to open with Cook.

Given the manner in which he broke down during England’s 5-0 thrashing in Australia, handing Trott a recall is a risky move by England. It’s also a defensive one.

In both of the last two Ashes, England’s top order were continually shackled by the Australian pacemen. In the 2013 series it was only the ineptitude of the Australian top six that allowed England’s batsmen not to be punished for their laboured efforts.

A major part of this problem was that their top-order batsmen were very one-paced – and that pace was glacial.

Joe Root scored at the extraordinarily low strike rate of 37 from his nine Tests across those series. Cook and Carberry’s strike rates of 40 were similarly awful, while Trott, at a tick over 50, was the best of a bad bunch.

Together, England’s top order scored at about 2.5 runs per over during this back-to-back series. In an era when the best sides typically score at 3.5 rpo-plus, unless conditions are in favour of the bowlers, such a limited rate of scoring is a severe hindrance.

England’s top order never put the pressure back on the Australian bowlers. They rarely attempted to assert their authority, rarely hit boundaries, and rarely even ran aggressively to ensure the strike was turned over. As a result, Australian captain Michael Clarke was able to set extremely aggressive fields and his quicks held the ascendancy more often than not.

When Australia secured the second new ball after 80 overs, often England barely had more than 200 on the board, as opposed to the 260 to 300 which is commonplace for other sides. That put huge pressure on their middle order.

England desperately need someone in their top three, preferably partnering Cook, who can play with some controlled aggression.

Now, Lyth is no David Warner or Virender Sehwag, but he is a known as a more free-flowing batsman than Trott. He also has no scars inflicted by the marauding Australian quicks. Lyth would have been the positive, attacking selection, and three Tests on flat decks against the weak West Indian attack would have been the perfect soft landing for him.

Instead, England have picked a player in Trott who not only is a defence-first batsman but who has been manhandled by Australia’s two leading bowlers, Mitchell Johnson and Ryan Harris.

In England, Trott was flummoxed by the ceaseless accuracy of Harris, who continually caught him on the crease. Trott fell four times in four Tests to the Australian at an average of just 12 runs per dismissal.

Where Harris’ dissection of Trott was clinical, Johnson’s was a veritable bloodbath. Unable to counter Johnson’s bodyline tactics, Trott meekly surrendered his wickets.

The disturbing background to this one-sided battle emerged when Trott left the tour due to mental health problems. He had a decent stint away from cricket and, fortunately, appears to have recovered. Certainly this is what he has told his teammates and coaches.

Putting aside his health issues, the pressure on Trott would be immense. Trying to adapt to a new role as opener in the overwhelming glare of an Ashes series against two bowlers who have haunted him would be a colossal task.

The Australians will be in Trott’s ear constantly, although hopefully reminding him of his struggles with the bat the past two series rather than making any references to his mental state. It is going to be a fierce examination of Trott’s skill, technique and character.

Cricket fans all over the world will be rooting for him, although I’d imagine quite a few English followers will be wondering why their selectors didn’t make the more assertive move of promoting Lyth.

England made a habit of playing safety-first Test cricket over the past five years, and they had a lot of success in the process. But that was due to the wonderful quality and depth of talent they possessed rather than the shrewdness of their cautious approach.

They no longer have the same ability in their ranks. Gone is their greatest Test batsman of the modern era, Kevin Pietersen, their second-most successful spinner of all time in Graeme Swann, and one of their all-time great wicketkeeper-batsmen in Matt Prior.

Meanwhile, Cook, Trott and swing bowler James Anderson are not the supreme players they were three years back.

England came to Australia two summers ago with a defensive mindset. Their rigid approach was brutally exposed by the bullishness, relentlessness and inventiveness of the Australians.

Australia will be delighted if England play with similar excessive caution in the upcoming series. Selecting Trott to open with Cook would suggest that is likely.

The Crowd Says:

2015-04-18T02:42:12+00:00

Sanjay Poojar

Guest


You are racist as is Warner. Nex time in India our pacers Yadav and Sami will distroy him Mark my words. Now I watching IPL the worlds best Sanjay

2015-04-17T03:42:55+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Yeah. The missus told me to stop hiding in there and do some work in the garden.

2015-04-17T02:25:26+00:00

Another Pom in Oz

Guest


Is Don out of the closet? Good for you mate...

2015-04-16T12:43:32+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


'Some of YOU...' What do you mean by that Donny?

2015-04-16T09:54:39+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


I'm glad you added that. Some of you try to use it as an insult. Be careful of projection.

2015-04-16T09:52:37+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Poo Jar is not English?

2015-04-16T09:45:09+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


Of course.

2015-04-16T09:02:59+00:00

Frank Private

Roar Rookie


HaHa...I knew there was something funny about him, Jimmy. The love of romantic comedies; the bromance with the Marsh boys; the pretence of being manly. Yes, it's all falling into place. Not that there's anything wrong with that, of course.

2015-04-16T07:25:06+00:00

Sanjay Poojar

Guest


Please not remove my comment. You Auzzie are bad loser. Sanjay

2015-04-15T14:01:00+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


Thanks for the invaluable advice as always Don, however I feel a bit uneasy about you watching me 'explode' though, but whatever floats your boat sailor.

2015-04-15T12:59:21+00:00

Tom from Perth

Guest


Gold.

2015-04-15T12:53:51+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


You'd have much richer discussions if you weren't so angry and combative, JimmyB. Aussies pounce on inferior sledging and never take an angry person seriously. It's fun to watch you explode though.

2015-04-15T06:49:00+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


You're an arrogant so and so aren't you Jimmy? Prior wasn't in that team and Root has hardly been a mainstay for years but hey facts and all that. If you can't accept that England were and still are in a period of transition then that's up to you fella and no doubt you're fully up to speed with the County championship and the lack of talent therein. It was less than 18 months ago that many Aussie posters on this very site were lamenting the seemingly never ending downward spiral of Australian cricket. Things can change very quickly in sport and it pays to remember that mate, when mouthing off from your pedestal.

2015-04-15T06:21:02+00:00

Jimmy

Roar Rookie


To beat india outside of india is hardly an achievement especially considering england actually managed to somehow lose a test to them...Not so sure about a period of transition considering 6 (Cook, Bell, Root, Prior, Broad, Anderson) of the players in that team that lost to Sri Lanka have been main stays for years and years it seemed more a case of the experienced players not putting their hands up (although admittedly england can't do much about this due to not having a lot of depth in talent at the moment). The only way the ashes won't be a walkover is if the curators seem to be more concerned over another trashing rather than trying to produce pitches conducive to exciting cricket but we will see.

2015-04-14T23:26:09+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


Your right Sri Lanka did beat England in England, however Australia haven't won a series in England for nearly 15 years and the World Cup has no bearing on Test cricket (except to improve Australia's already brimming confidence). England were in (still are actually) a period of transition and the loss to Sri Lanka was quickly followed by a comprehensive defeat of India. Jimmy I expect Australia to retain the Ashes especially given England's team for the first test in the Windies, however you may be disappointed if you're expecting a walkover. Still assertions like that kind of illustrate my point about the arrogance of some posters on here. Thanks for that.

2015-04-14T11:51:39+00:00

Nudge

Guest


As Davey Warner would say, speak english mate

2015-04-14T07:39:19+00:00

Sanjay Poojar

Guest


Aussie will struggle in england just like agenst our pacers on sub continent. India will beet them next time at home Mark my words. Also Aussie are bad loser Sanjay

2015-04-14T06:36:37+00:00

Jimmy

Roar Rookie


Considering Sri Lanka just managed to win a test series in England and England are coming off their worst year in cricket in working memory whilst Australia is coming off one of their most successful years I think the assumption that the Ashes will be a walkover is completely warranted

2015-04-13T03:50:37+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


White Anglo Saxon Protestant? What's wrong with them at picnics? They usually bring the good wine!

2015-04-13T01:26:18+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


What do you reckon? Frankly I think you're the proverbial wasp at a picnic.

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