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Hard Yakka For Harmy

By Luke Edwards on Dec 12, 07 12:34 PM

Given the England cricket team is still perilously close to a series defeat against Sri Lanka and considering the fact his three wickets came at a cost of 111 runs, it might seem strange to talk about the salvation of Steve Harmison.

It is no secret that Harmison has always received more support from his native North-East than he has from the rest of the country, because, put simply, people in the North-East like to see one of their own doing well on the national and international stage.

But it is also no secret that some factions of the cricket fraternity have always been, and are perhaps increasingly, keen to write off the Ashington Express as a fragile, inconsistent northern upstart who would be better off staying with Durham while more media-friendly, southern-based bowlers get the chance to play for their country.

Harmison’s performance in the early hours of Wednesday morning in conditions which were about as much use to a fast bowler as an ice lolly on the moon was full of pace, bounce and venom. In other words, precisely the qualities he is expected to bring to the attack with ball in hand.

The nature of his wickets, the work-rate and the economy rate in searing heat which drained the life out of the pitch, as well as the England players, was the perfect riposte to those who have begun to call time on his England career. Including my older brother, who, some would say, knows about as much about cricket as he does about quantum physics!

It wasn’t quite vintage Harmy, there wasn’t the regular tumbling of wickets which might have put England in a winning position in the Second Test, but there was consistency in line and length and, with it, a consistent threat to the Sri Lankan batsman. His figures are unspectacular in many ways, but this was arguably the rebirth of a player who, three years ago, was ranked the best in the world.

Significantly, although his 41.5 overs cost more than 100 runs, they went for just 2.65 runs each, with no wides and just one no ball. His rival for the fast bowler slot, the younger and leaner Stuart Broad were slightly more economical, but he was less threatening and, as a result, Harmison was asked to bowl more by captain Michael Vaughan.

It is difficult to assess England’s tour so far. In one respect, there should be criticism. They are one-nil down in the series and need to save the Second Test on the final day to avoid losing the series with one Test left to play. Sri Lanka were annihilated by Australia Down Under just a few days before the start of this Tour and England have failed to get anywhere near that now the Sri Lankans are back on home soil.

However, the beauty of cricket is that the stats never tell the full story. England have held their own in Sri Lanka, if not quite ever managing to dominate their hosts in a way which would put them into a winning position.

Had Ryan Sidebottom not been given out in a dreadful decision by the umpires late on the final day of the First Test, England may well have saved that game. In the Second Test, they have flirted with victory at times only to allow Sri Lanka off the hook at crucial times, particularly with the ball on Wednesday.

If I’m being brutal, England deserve to lose this match because they were not ruthless enough when it mattered, but this is a young team which is, to some extent, having to learn on its feet. Sri Lanka are a formidable side at home and, if England can force a draw on Thursday, they still have the chance to square the series in the Third Test. In the circumstances that would represent success - particularly if SJ Harmison is the match-winner!

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5 Comments

Mike Ashburn said:

As you rightly say in your article,the stats don't tell the full story.
With a bit more fortitude(and luck)we could have been one up and this one still to play for.
The worrying aspect of the two matches so far,is an all to familiar collapse from the middle order batsmen,once the top order have gone.
Some of the guys coming to the crease just appear weak,and also appear to have their mind on other things.
Facing Mulli doesn't help either.
Harmy hasn't exactly set the world on fire with his performance so far,but his aggression is there and his pace is not that far behind it.
Cheers,
Mickmike!

Note From Luke
Have just switched ontoday's play and there is rain so looks like we'll still have plenty to play for in the final Test. That really would be the perfect time for Harmy to do something special if he is going to rebuild his reputation.

Commulus said:

I've never found Yakkas to be hard, in fact you can dispel them with a Huniyam mask, a brief dance, an incantation and a pointy stick! Oh I see what you mean, the Aussie term for ‘hard work’, not a Sri Lankan name for a Devil, but then again maybe Harmy could do with a pointy stick!


Note From Luke
I thought you didn't like cricket! Your knowledge of Australian slang and the Sri Lankan language are very impressive. Are you back from the jungle yet?

Commulus said:

Thanks, Yes!

Did you know people from Ashington are also called Yakkas? But you need more potent incantations to remove them!

Note From Luke
I didn't know that either!

Mike Ashburn said:

Note to Commulus & Luke;Yakka is Northumbrian pitspeak for a coal face hewer(hand-worker)which is still in fairly common usage at the regular dinner paties and soirees that I attend in the Ashington area.
A woz a grease monkey meesell like!

Note From Luke
Thank you Mike for the clarification. As an uneductaed southerner I need these sorts of lessons. Didn't realise they had dinner parties and soirees in Ashington mind!

Commulus said:

Note to Mike,

Thanks Mike…yes I knew it was a term solely attributed to the ‘face worker’ and despite my name (blame the parents), I’m also a Northumbrian…with pipes and all. I put that in for a sort of ‘comic effect’, that is a sort of humorous aside type of thing if you like!

The story ‘Hard Yakka for Harmy’ (Harmy being an Eshingtun lad) and I’m guessing that wor Luke didn’t appreciate the inadvertent (but slightly inaccurate) pun, having swiped the headline seemingly from the Guardians story ‘Hard yakka for England…’ on Tuesday.

Yuletide felicitations to you all.

Note From Luke
What makes you think I read the Guardian!?
It was all my own work, although I had recently seen a book on a shelf at home by former cricketer Simon Brown (I think) of the same name.

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