/ 28 September 2006

Ashes: Mind games begin

Australian fast bowler Glenn McGrath has launched into the Ashes mind games, querying whether it will be possible for Andrew Flintoff to bat and bowl well while captaining England.

McGrath, who has a history of niggling opposing sides before a Test series, made the remarks less than two months before the opening Gabba Test in Brisbane on November 23.

”It’s a massive ask, there’s no doubt about it,” McGrath told the Sydney Morning Herald on Thursday.

”He’s [Flintoff] such a key player, not only with their bowling, but in the field and in the batting.

”So if you throw the captaincy on top of it, maybe it will take the focus off his bowling and batting a little bit more and onto the captaincy and have an effect on his game.

”But he’s a class player, and if anyone can handle it, he can.”

McGrath, Test cricket’s leading wicket-taking fast bowler with 542 wickets in 119 matches, said the England captaincy will drain Flintoff.

”It makes you think a lot more about the game,” he said.

”Instead of Flintoff just focusing on his batting or his bowling and putting all his efforts and energies into that, now he has to think about who’s going to bowl next, what field placements to use, where the game is going and so on. It will take a lot out of him.”

Australian captain Ricky Ponting has also been trying to undermine Flintoff’s confidence ahead of the much-anticipated return Ashes series.

”Freddie is going to have a lot on his plate now,” Ponting told the newspaper.

”Even for me, last year in that Ashes series, we were kept pretty busy as captains. He’s got to do extra training because he’s an all-rounder as well, so it will all mount up on him.” — Sapa-AFP