According to a report in the Daily Mail, the untried Middlesex trio of Tim Murtagh, Alan Richardson and Steven Finn would be part of the England team which is scheduled to fly to Abu Dhabi tomorrow to join the camp there before the two-Test series against India.
The Abu Dhabi Cricket Club, which hosted the recent Pakistan-West Indies ODI series, would be the base of the England team before the Test series against India, the report claimed.
The move to put the rookie bowlers, all possessing up-to-date Indian visas, on stand-by came following reports that pacers Steve Harmison and Andrew Flintoff, apart from spinner Graeme Swann, are reluctant to tour India following the Mumbai terror attacks. Pacer James Anderson is also likely to stay back to be with his pregnant wife. To make it worse, injuries to pacers Ryan Sidebottom and Stuart Broad have further depleted England’s pace bowling department.
Prior willing to tour
England wicketkeeper Matt Prior is willing to return to India for next week’s Test series as he is desperate to hold on to his place in the national side. Already under-fire for his lacklustre show in the one-day series, Prior does not want to lose his spot in the side by pulling out of the two-Test series. “He takes the view that he’s a professional cricketer and it’s his job to go back with the team. He’s discussed it with both Sussex and his family and along as he gets the right assurances, he’ll return,” Prior’s agent Andy Smith told BBC.
“The mere fact of being out of the team last year has made him think him how badly he wants to be England’s wicketkeeper. Despite the results that were had out in India in the one-dayers, he actually performed really well behind the stumps and he doesn’t want to miss out on any opportunity to prove he’s England’s number one,” he added.
Monstrous to send team: Boycott
Former England captain Geoff Boycott has hit out at the ECB saying it was “monstrous” even to be thinking of sending players back to the terror-stricken sub-continent. “Given what has just happened in India, it is monstrous for the England and Wales Cricket Board even to be thinking about sending the team back out again,” he said.
“The ECB are showing a lack of moral judgment by pressing ahead with all these meetings and security inspections. The whole thing is just too raw,” he was quoted as saying by The Daily Telegraph. “No one should underestimate the scale of this disaster. The aftershocks are not going to die down quickly.