Official site of the England and Wales Cricket Board
England captain Michael Vaughan has warned his fellow batsman to prepare for a pace examination reminiscent of the lauded West Indies attack of the 1980s.
Vaughan leads England into a four-match npower Test series against South Africa, starting at Lord’s on Thursday, on the back of a disappointing 12 months which has failed to deliver a first-innings score in excess of 400.
Only two of the entrenched top six, Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Strauss, have averaged over 40 in that period.
Yet the most hostile bowling trio currently operating in world cricket are about to be unleashed in the form of Dale Steyn, Makhaya Ntini and Morne Morkel.
Vaughan, who has been cranking up the bowling machine in the net practice at Loughborough these past few days, paid them a huge compliment when he compared them to Windies greats Michael Holding, Joel Garner and Malcolm Marshall.
“The lads will be working the angles as you always do against the opposition, putting the machine on a similar kind of pace,” Vaughan said. “But it is how you react to the ball out in the middle and that is mostly what Test match cricket is about.
“Your preparation has to be very good but once you get into the middle it is about reacting, being focused and basically playing on the instincts and talent you have.
“We are going to need big scores, and big hundreds, and to get them against that kind of attack will be very rewarding.
“Pace bowling, like mystery spin, is always fascinating to watch and I guess this is a bit of a throwback to the 80s when the West Indies were around.
“Over the next six weeks we are going to be tested physically, mentally and in all areas of our game. That is why I find it exciting - you want to play in these kind of series as a team.”
Each of the pacemen offer different attributes with Steyn, undoubtedly the quickest, and most prolific of late with 54 wickets in seven Tests against New Zealand, West Indies and Bangladesh, Ntini angling the ball in at right-handers’ bodies and the 6ft 6ins Morkel extracting extra bounce at 90-mile-per-hour.
In contrast, England’s genuine pace threats are in the wings, either on the comeback trail or out of favour.
“We don’t have bowling of 90-95mph,” Vaughan said. “But it’s not always about that. We have an attack that relies more on the control side.
“It has not got the pace it used to have but I think they’ve got a decent amount of skill.
“Jimmy Anderson showed against New Zealand at Trent Bridge that if the ball is swinging he has a hell of an amount of skill, Stuart Broad is developing into a fine cricketer, he’s inexperienced but he bowls beyond his years and Ryan Sidebottom has probably been the find of the last year in Test match cricket.
“You add to that Monty Panesar, who can get five and six-wicket hauls, and the attack looks quietly nice.”
The last time the two countries met, England went into their 2-1 away victory in 2004-05, with an attack of genuine speed in Andrew Flintoff, Steve Harmison and Simon Jones, complemented by Matthew Hoggard’s control. Months later it was instrumental in winning the Ashes.
And although Vaughan constantly praises his current batch of bowlers, he offered faint hope for Welshman Jones, who appears to have finally overcome three years of injury hell, and Durham’s Harmison, who he faced in LV County Championship action last week.
“I have not seen Simon bowl in a match, I have just seen his figures and when a guy is getting five-fors pretty consistently, and getting them quickly - he’s getting them in seven and eight-over bursts - that is exciting,” Vaughan said.
“As captain you want someone who can change the course of a game in a few overs. If he performs like he did in the 2005 Ashes then we’ve got something special there and it’s absolutely fantastic that both he and Steve Harmison are knocking on the door again.
“Having just played against Harmy, he has definitely got his pace back.
“He bowled a 12-over spell, which suggested he wanted to get me out, and he did. “The most important thing is he looked as if he was enjoying his cricket, which was a really positive sign.
“I know he doesn’t want to play solely for Durham for the rest of his career, he wants to get back into the England team, and someone with that amount of ability and 90-miles-an-hour gas is going to be knocking on the door consistently.
“And we know what Matthew Hoggard offers. Who would have said a year ago we would be even talking about the Ashes ’05 unit potentially bowling together again?
“It certainly could happen but we ought to talk about the guys in the team at the moment who do a good job.”
Vaughan might end up backtracking, however, if the Proteas pace continues England’s batting torment and it is deemed necessary to fight fire with fire.
Want to watch some cricket? Find the matches you want to see
Enjoy our blogs, right across the cricketing spectrum, from players to volunteers
Get the news feeds you want on your PC/Mac right now on ecb.co.uk
Want to start playing cricket - or re-kindle your playing days?
Contact ECB by email, phone or fax - or feedback via ecb.co.uk
The best coverage of county cricket, all day every day, on ecb.co,uk
The best coverage of county cricket, all day every day, on ecb.co,uk
Get our news and scores feeds via RSS to your desktop or mobile
Official site of the England and Wales Cricket Board