Warne is the first bowler to claim 700 wickets Tuesday, December 12, 2006 05:48 [IST]

Perth: The forecast of a spin-friendly WACA wicket could see
champion Australian leg-spinner Shane Warne become the first bowler to claim
700 Test wickets during the third Ashes Test.
After his fifth day heroics in Adelaide, Warne is poised on 694 Test wickets
and sure to reach the milestone during the series.
While Warne would like to reach the mark in front of his
home crowd at the MCG in the fourth Test, starting on December 26, he could do
so at the WACA when the third Test starts here Thursday.
The pitch has long been regarded as the home of fast bowling
but has been increasingly helpful to spinners in recent seasons.
Warne has generally struggled at the WACA, with 32 wickets
in 11 Tests at 37.28, well below his career record.
He also struggled in Perth
earlier this season, taking 1-113 for Victoria
against Western Australia
in a match during which his frustration built to a point where he bowled
consecutive bouncers.
Warne's best Test haul in Perth is six wickets, a figure he
has achieved three times, including last year against South Africa, but this
season the leading wicket-taker at the venue is local left-arm finger spinner
Aaron Heal by a good margin.
Australian wicketkeeper Adam Gilchrist, who said Warne was a
like a 'vulture circling' on the final day of the second Test in Adelaide, doubted it
would be a traditionally fast and bouncy wicket.
"The results prove spin has worked," Gilchrist
said here Tuesday of the WACA. "Last year (against South Africa) spin was a good
option.
"We could have done with another spinner on the last
day even though we had the greatest spinner ever bowling, " he said.
"That was our approach to get into the footmarks. It seems they come
into play (at the WACA) more than they have traditionally done so," he
said.
Gilchrist said Warne would be focusing on his indifferent
record at the WACA rather than the 700 mark, but he added the milestone was
sure to cross the leg-spinner's mind.
"I'm not sure if Warney's taken more than six wickets
in a Test at the WACA," Gilchrist said.
"If he hasn't, I'm sure that's a burning goal in his
mind to better that. Ricky Ponting always asks us to try and better ourselves
every time we train or play. Warney will have that in his mind, but he'll have
700 in his mind, it's inevitable," he said.
"It's one of the two or three greatest achievements
ever in the game," he said.
Despite being the wrong side of 37, Gilchrist said Warne was
as enthusiastic as ever about his cricket.
"He's just got a real spring in his step at the
moment," Gilchrist said.
"He's quite vocal in the group, he's vibrant, he's
really energising the group. That's been his way through the whole series but
it really shone through on that last day (in Adelaide)," he said.
"He led us and we all followed that's what good leaders do," he said.
For all his greatness, controversy is never far away from
Warne and Gilchrist couldn't help but a share laugh with the media contingent
when he unwittingly reminded the gathering of Warne's one-year suspension for
taking a banned substance with an off-the-cuff comment about the leg-spinner.
"This morning in training when we all rolled in -
everyone was asking what's happened, what's he on?" he said before a
momentary pause and a chuckle. I probably shouldn't say that," he said. |