Razzaq robbed of passport, valuables

Pakistan allrounder Abdul Razzaq was robbed of his passport, and large quantities of gold and cash by burglars who broke into his house early this morning, the player said. Razzaq resides in the upmarket Defense Housing Society in Lahore.

According to the FIR lodged with the police, Razzaq claimed to have lost 38 ounces of gold, $12,000 and documents. He said the incident took place around 5.00 am, when the occupants of the house were asleep. "It's unfortunate," Razzaq told reporters. "I am not sure who did this but it's the responsibility of the police to find out." Police said they suspected the thieves had inside information of the details of the house.

Razzaq was at home only because he had returned from Pakistan's ongoing tour of South Africa with a hamstring injury. Earlier this month, he had made a comeback to Pakistan's Twenty20 team after a gap of one year, against South Africa in the UAE.


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McDermott and Richardson pulled from England tour game

The bowling attack England will face in the two-day tour match in Alice Springs this week has been weakened further, with the withdrawal of Alister McDermott and Kane Richardson. The two fast men will return to play for their states in this week's round of Sheffield Shield matches and have been replace by Victoria's Jayde Herrick and Western Australia's Simon Mackin.

McDermott and Richardson would have been the two strongest members of the pace attack. Richardson made his one-day international debut for Australia against Sri Lanka at the Adelaide Oval in January and McDermott has also been part of Australia squads, although he is yet to play a match for his country.

Herrick, 28, has not played for Victoria this summer but has taken 77 first-class wickets at 31.55, and played for Victoria against the touring England side in a practice match on the 2010-11 Ashes tour. Mackin, 21, holds a Western Australia rookie contract but is yet to represent the Warriors in a first XI match.

Michael Beer will captain the Cricket Australia Chairman's XI for the two-day match at Traeger Park in Alice Springs, which runs from Friday to Saturday this week.

CA Chairman's XI Steve Cazzulino, Marcus Harris, Michael Hill, Alex Keath, Jake Doran, Ashton Turner, James Muirhead, Michael Beer (capt), Josh Lalor, Jayde Herrick, Simon Mackin, Luke Robins (NT).


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Pawar restrained from discharging MCA president duties

Sharad Pawar, the Mumbai Cricket Association (MCA) president, has been restrained from discharging his duties by a Mumbai court. Pawar, who is also the union minister for agriculture, was granted a week's time to appeal the decision in a higher court.

The Mumbai city civil court's order came after a suit was filed by senior Bharatiya Janata Party leader Gopinath Munde, who had been prevented from contesting the MCA elections on the technicality that he was not a permanent resident of Mumbai. Though Munde owned property in Mumbai, he is on the electoral rolls in the Beed district of Maharashtra.

Munde's lawyer argued that former union minister Vilasrao Deshmukh had faced a similar issue in 2011 but was allowed to contest the MCA elections.

After Munde was not allowed to stand for election, Pawar was the only candidate and he was elected unopposed on October 18.


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White 'desperate' to return to international cricket

Ten years ago, Cameron White was the next big thing, the youngest captain in Victoria's history and an allrounder of immense potential. Five years ago he was a Test cricketer asked to play an unfamiliar role as specialist spinner. Two years ago he was his country's Twenty20 captain. Now, he is none of those things and is fighting hard not to become the forgotten man of Australian cricket. And yet, he feels his best cricket is ahead of him.

White has been around so long, played so many different roles, that it is easy to forget he is only 30. George Bailey made his Test debut last week at 31. Chris Rogers made his Test comeback this year at 35. Of Australia's 11 from the Gabba Test, only Peter Siddle, David Warner, Nathan Lyon and Steven Smith are younger than White. That is not to say White should have been in the side, just that his days as a Test cricketer may be far from over.

While the Australians were wrapping up victory at the Gabba, White was in Perth compiling his first century of the Sheffield Shield summer, a fighting 131 that could not prevent a loss for Victoria. He was a stand-out batsman in the Ryobi Cup last month, finishing third on the run tally with five half-centuries from six innings, and that was enough for him to be named the Australian Cricketers' Association's Player of the Month for October.

The form has carried on into the Shield: he has started the first-class campaign with scores of 83, 61, 48, 70 not out, 33, 21, 0 and 131. Only Marcus North has more runs so far in the Shield season. But on domestic pitches that are offering more for the batsmen than over the past few summers, White knows that one hundred may not be enough to grab the attention of the national selectors, and not since 2008-09 has he managed more than one hundred in a Shield season.

"I feel as though especially over the last few years, I don't think I've played more than seven or eight Sheffield Shield games, because you're always in or out if you're in the one-day side or playing Twenty20 matches here or there," White told ESPNcricinfo. "I don't think I've played ten full Sheffield Shield games for quite a long time [since 2005-06]. It's good to get a good run of games under my belt to give myself a chance to make that amount of runs.

"That's one good thing about the formats and the way the schedule is this year, you get the one-dayers and get into a bit of a rhythm there and then you can focus on the four-day stuff and the switch into Big Bash and then finish off the year again. Hopefully I'll play all ten games and give myself the best chance to make as many runs as I can and hopefully get some big scores.

"I still feel as though my best cricket is in front of me. I feel as though over the last couple of years I've only improved. I'm desperate to get another game for Australia. Hopefully the selectors haven't put a line through my name in any of the formats, really. Hopefully I'll keep pumping out the runs in all the formats and hopefully I can take a few wickets, which I have done this year as well."

White credits his form to a strong off-season spent at the IPL and then playing for Northamptonshire in county cricket, but he returned home to the unfamiliar role of being a player only for Victoria after Matthew Wade was given the state captaincy. Although he believes that focusing solely on his own game has been an advantage this summer, he does not subscribe to the theory that there is a direct link between handing over the leadership and his return to form.

"In the last little period when my form was off I felt as though I was still batting okay but mentally I wasn't really on the job," White said. "That's been the biggest change, just to really clear my mind and play with freedom. That's something I've concentrated on and it seems to be working at the moment.

"Everyone keeps saying [the captaincy has played a part] but I played eight really good years when I was captain, and had maybe one bad one when I was as well. No one really said anything for the first eight years. I think it's more coincidental. I'm enjoying my role now that I've got with the Victorian team, Matt is doing a great job and the team is in a happy place. One bonus is I can really concentrate on my own game and my own preparation and getting ready for matches."

Oddly enough, his form seems also to have extended to his bowling, for he has six Shield wickets already this year from only 44 overs. That's a bigger wicket tally than he took in the entire 2008-09 season, which had started with him playing four Tests for Australia as a specialist legspinner in India. It was similar to the way fellow legspinning allrounder Steven Smith was introduced to Test cricket, as a bowler despite his batting being his greater strength.

Smith has already returned to the Test outfit as a batsman; for White, that day has not yet arrived. At different times, White has been everything and nothing to Australian cricket. He has played as a batsman, as a bowler, as captain, and has always been a star fielder. For the time being, he is the forgotten man, having not played for his country in any format for more than a year. But White remembers his brief Test career fondly, and hopes that at 30, it is not yet complete.

"I'd never take that moment away, it's something I really enjoyed and fought hard at the time, but it was a bit of a surprise at the time when personally I didn't think my bowling was in a great place," White said of the Test tour of India in 2008. "I think probably now I could do a better job, to be honest. I definitely wouldn't take it back, I loved having a crack and I'd love to have another go at some stage, maybe in a slightly different role."

White polled 25% of the votes to win the ACA Player of the Month title for October, ahead of David Warner on 21.7% and Ben Cutting on 16.3%.


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Fun turns to fear for Jonathan Trott

A joyous debut century is now a world away for Jonathan Trott as the complexities of international cricket catch up with him

A couple of weeks after Jonathan Trott's Test debut, he remarked that the experience of playing in the game, even before his match-defining century, had been "the most fun" he had ever had.

But somewhere in the intervening years the fun has disappeared. Instead of fun, there is fear. Instead of joy there is anxiety. It was telling that Alastair Cook spoke of the Ashes as being like "a war". No one enjoys wars.

Trott might seem, at first glance anyway, an unlikely candidate for a stress-related illness. He took to international cricket with apparent ease. Having scored that century at The Oval against an attack similar to that which he came up against in Brisbane over the last few days, Mitchell Johnson and all, he moved to the upper echelons of the world rankings in both ODI and Test cricket and made a habit of producing nerveless innings when they were most required. It all looked as if it came so easily.

But stress does not discriminate. Perhaps you can care too much. Perhaps, if you try too hard, you are more likely to fail. Perhaps a period of success can build not just confidence, but expectation and pressure.

Cricket means a great deal to Trott. With a cricket coach for a father and a cricket player (Kenny Jackson) as a big brother, he was steeped in the game from the start. It seemed natural when he breezed through the age group teams in South Africa and moved to England to pursue his career full time.

He flourished. With nothing to lose, he made a habit of producing match-turning contributions and seemed to have the perfect temperament. As he explained, when he was batting well, he hardly thought at all. He just played each ball on its merits and had the hunger to do so all day. He made a century on debut in 2003 and soon became a fixture in a strong Warwickshire side.

But then came the first of the serious setbacks. In the summer of 2007 he lost form so completely that he barely managed 20 and, at times, looked unrecognisable from the Jacques Kallis-like batsman who had previously dominated. It is not easy for a perfectionist to accept failure.

He reacted the only way he knew how. He worked harder; he pushed himself more. He could be seen in the nets as early as 7am on the day of games.

And the more he pushed, the more he failed. Even on nights away from the game, he could be seen practising his trigger movements and back lift in the glass of restaurant windows, in bathroom mirrors on holiday, in clothes shops and coffee bars. He talked of the absurdity of a game in which, when in the best of form, you can play and edge a ball to slip but in the worst of form you can miss and survive. He talked of "worms in his head" that were eating away at his confidence and forcing him to overthink something that had once been so natural. He talked about giving up the game and pursuing a different career.

But he found a way through all that. Partly through the support of Ashley Giles and partly through the support of his wife, he found the stability to deal with the inevitable setbacks that occur in a career as a batsman. He learned to accept that, as long as he had prepared well, he had to accept the occasional failure.

To prevent those intrusive thoughts entering his head, he settled upon a formula. He would make that famous trench in the pitch between deliveries; he would fiddle with his pads; bend his knees; check his boots and gloves. Anything it took to ensure there was no time to let those thoughts creep back.

He was mocked by some. They found him compulsive and robotic, missing the point that it was a tactic to deal with an excess of emotion. It was a tactic to avoid the dark thoughts that have always circulated but have only now settled upon him.

It worked, too. He produced some magnificent innings for England. Innings that shaped matches and series; innings that earned him respect from opponents around the world. Great innings.

"You should talk to me after I've failed," he said, one day after making a century. "There's no point talking to me after I've got runs. You won't learn anything that way. I don't think anything when I'm scoring runs. It's when I'm not scoring them that you could learn something."

There were some setbacks along the way. They were always away from home; nearly always towards the end of a long tour. Without his normal routine and without the comforting influence of family and home, there was no one to tell him it was one bad innings or one bad game; no one to limit the scale of the failure or remind him of the perspective. No one to tell him to turn off the TV and get some sleep. The England management knew this and managed it well. While there are times the England camp can be somewhat cliquey, there is no more anyone could have done - players and support staff - to be supportive and sympathetic in the last few days.

Why has the situation now peaked? The struggle against Mitchell Johnson in Brisbane may have been a catalyst but it is not the cause. It may have unmasked the problem, but it is not the underlying issue. It is more likely that this has been an accumulative issue which has been building and subsiding for many months. Maybe this Ashes series, coming so soon after a high-pressure tour to India, a Champions Trophy campaign that meant more to this England team than many realise and then back-to-back Ashes series have taken their toll.

When he should have been relaxing, ahead of this tour, he returned to the nets for extra sessions to ready himself for the challenge he knew lay around the corner. When he should have been sleeping, he was worrying. He simply needs down time. Time not to think about batting. Time not to think.

It would be simplistic to blame David Warner for this. But, in time, perhaps we should reflect on whether there is anything about the England set-up - its intensity and its relentless schedule - that contributes to this problem. The fact that Trott, Marcus Trescothick and Michael Yardy have all suffered a broadly similar issue within seven years is remarkably coincidental. Several others, including Andrew Flintoff and Matthew Hoggard, have struggled to up hold the pretence when all they wanted to do was stop.

Perhaps those of us in the media should reflect, too. Some of the comments following Trott's second innings were disproportionately harsh. They questioned not just Trott's ability and technique, but his bravery and his masculinity. There is always pressure on journalists to find the most memorable description and it often seems as if the Devil has the best lines. But we do need to remind ourselves that sports personalities - usually young people with their dreams and livelihoods at stake - are as fragile and flawed as the rest of us.

For a man of Trott's background - raised in a macho environment where fears and insecurities are to be denied - to ask for help is a major undertaking. There is a certain bravery in doing so. He knows some will mock him and accuse him of weakness and that will hurt him. But there's a certain selflessness in his actions, too. He could have battled on, living on reputation and not allowed anyone else an opportunity in his place. But he knew he wasn't in the mood to help the team as much as he would have liked. He knows there is no guarantee of a return to the side.

In time, Trott will come to realise he is a lucky man. Whatever happens in the rest of his career - and it would be disingenuous to pretend that this may not be the end of his international career - he has touched heights that few manage. He has played some great innings; he has won games for his country; he has been part of a team that reached No. 1 in the world in all formats and he has won the ICC Player of the Year award, arguably the highest accolade in cricket. He has achieved a great deal.

More importantly, he has a healthy, happy family who love and value him. In the weeks ahead, he will have time to spend with them and the "worms in his head" will gradually fade away. There will be regrets and there will be pain, but there will also be a realisation that he has handled a horrible situation as well as he could and that his blessings far outweigh his problems.


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Payment delay leaves Ervine and Williams stranded

Zimbabwean cricketers Sean Ervine and Sean Williams have been left stranded in a Dhaka hotel after Brothers Union, the team they represent in the Dhaka Premier Division, failed to pay the accommodation costs on time. The passports of the players have been confiscated by the hotel, Tropical Daisy, because of the unpaid bill, making it impossible for them to leave. Ervine and Williams are also awaiting outstanding match fees.

Amin Khan, the Brothers Union manager, said the problem would be resolved tomorrow and that the players would be paid as well.

Ervine and Williams arrived in Dhaka on October 29 and have had to stay seven days longer than planned because of this issue. Ervine is due to fly to the UK as soon as his documents are in order, while Williams is supposed to head to Chittagong to play in a corporate Twenty20 tournament. They have been told that until the account is settled, their travel papers will not be released.

Brothers Union also booked Ervine on an economy-class ticket to London. His contract, which has been seen by ESPNcricinfo, contains a clause that states he will be provided with a "return business-class ticket," and that is not the only provision Ervine said the club had breached.

He claimed he had been paid for only three of the five matches he played, and received 14 days worth of daily allowance, although he had been in the country for almost a month. Williams said he was owed US$1500 in match fees, US$100 for his visa costs, US$320 as reimbursement for a flight from Bulawayo to Johannesburg, which he said the club agreed to pay, and 18,000 taka in daily allowance.

Both players said they received some money from Brothers Union official Amin Khan, who has since not taken any calls or answered messages. "I want this to be a warning to future players and if needs be this should to go straight to the BCB to even suspend Brothers Union from the league," Ervine said. "No one has taken the responsibility upon themselves to sort this issue out."

Williams is similarly disgruntled with the current situation and said it extended beyond him and Ervine. "No disrespect to current players of Brothers Union, who are a good bunch of guys, but they too are owed a sum of money from the club," he said.

Amin Khan said the delay was due to an internal problem that arose because the club did not make it to the Super League of the DPL. "Many Dhaka hotels keep passports of foreign sportsmen and women when they are only playing for clubs, for security reasons. We will be paying the (Tropical Daisy) hotel tomorrow and the passport will be released. As for their payment, I have talked to them and will pay them," he told ESPNcricinfo. "We have helped Williams gain a contract to play in a T20 tournament in Chittagong while Ervine will probably go home from here. We have confirmed air tickets for both. Brothers Union is a major club in Bangladesh. The club couldn't make it to the Super League of DPL so we had to deal with some internal problems. I can assure you that all foreign players will leave with their full payment."

Neither Ervine nor Williams is new to playing cricket in Bangladesh. Both are on their fifth tour of the country, having traveled there with the Zimbabwean national team twice and played in the BPL twice. They were reimbursed 75% of their fees from the BPL, although the full amounts were due to be paid in August this year.


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Vettori unavailable for West Indies series

Daniel Vettori has ruled himself out of the forthcoming series against West Indies, stating that it was too early to guarantee his fitness given the months he had missed due to injury.

"International cricket, and in particular, Test cricket, places enormous demands on the body and I simply haven't played enough recently to be confident of meeting those demands," Vettori said, in a press release. "The short-term plan is to concentrate on my existing duties with Northern Districts and Brisbane, and re-evaluate my fitness in the New Year.

"What I can't afford to do is throw myself back into the international arena prematurely and re-injure myself," he said. "It wouldn't be any good for me; it wouldn't be any good for the team."

The left-arm spinner has been dogged by a chronic Achilles tendon condition and underwent surgery in London in June to prolong his career. He also declined a contract with New Zealand Cricket due to concerns over his fitness. Vettori made a return to competitive cricket with first-class matches in the Plunket Shield in November, bowling 49 overs for Northern Districts and finishing with a match haul of six wickets, including a five-for in the first innings. Since then, he has been playing for Northern Districts in the HRV Cup, New Zealand's domestic Twenty20 tournament.

Vettori last played a Test for New Zealand against West Indies in July 2012. He was ruled out of New Zealand's tour to South Africa, due to injuries, and also missed the home series against England. He was declared unfit on the eve of the second Test against England in Headingley in May, but went on to play three Champions Trophy matches in June, the only international games he played in 2013.

West Indies are scheduled to play three Tests, five ODIs and two T20s on their tour to New Zealand. The first Test begins on December 3 in Dunedin.


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'You just can't take any more' - Trescothick

Marcus Trescothick has urged the media and public to give Jonathan Trott the time and space he needs to overcome the stress-related illness that has forced him to leave the Ashes tour.

Trescothick has first-hand experience of being in such a position having left the 2006-07 Ashes in the same situation after previously suffering on the 2005-06 tour to India. He has since been credited with helping break the sigma around mental illness, especially among sportsmen, and has said that cricket should now pale into insignificance for Trott compared to his health and well-being.

Andy Flower, the England team director, revealed that Trott had been managing his condition over an extended period of time before a decision was made at the end of the third day of the Brisbane Test that he should return home and Trescothick recalled the memories of his own traumatic experience seven years ago.

"You just can't take any more, you just can't get through the day let alone go out there and play a Test match and win a Test match," he told Sky Sports News. I sympathise with Trotty. I've been in that exact situation in '06 and '07 and tried to make that decision knowing that the consequences and all the attention it's going to bring on to you are going to be tough.

"I think we just need to allow a bit of time, that's the key at this point. I know there's going to be a massive media scrum over the next couple of days. We'll probably see him flying back home and seeing him arrive back at his house, but we just need to allow him that bit of time to get well again because your health is far more important than any game of cricket that we play.

There have been suggestions that Trott should not have been selected for the tour if his situation was known by the selectors, but Trescothick said the illness did not make such decisions straight forward and that emotions can sway in a short period of time.

"I've been in this position and you try to cope but it's very, very tough. I've started tours sometimes, feeling not in the right place and not in the the right state of mind but managed to get through the little period that you can carry on playing and doing well - but clearly it has got too much.''

In another interview, with BBC Radio Five Live, Trescothick added that Trott would only have made things worse for himself if he had tried to carry on.

"It would have been a horrible decision to make, to come out and talk about these things for the first time is tough, I'm sure he's not feeling great at all, but he's definitely made the right decision.

"When you're in that state of mind you get very good at hiding these things but there comes a time where you have to talk about it. It just gets too big sometimes and the best thing to do is to take some time away from it.

"It's debilitating, it grinds you down, and it's difficult to escape from, you can't get away from it in all areas of your life. There is no hiding place from it, 24/7. It's really really tough and it will take time for him to get back on track again.''


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BPL corruption hearing begins in Dhaka

The preliminary hearing into the alleged match-fixing and spot-fixing scandal in the 2013 Bangladesh Premier League began in Dhaka on Sunday. Legal representatives of eight of the nine people charged participated in the proceedings; the next hearing is scheduled for January 19, 2014.

Noorus Sadik, the legal representative of Mosharraf Hossain and Mahbubul Alam, said he had put forward a statement on the players' behalf and pleaded not guilty. Dhaka Gladiators' legal advisor Aminuddin said the team had asked the tribunal to stop its proceedings because it had already filed a case in the civil court. "We asked them to stop the proceedings as they failed to form the tribunal in 40 days and we had filed a case in the civil court," Aminuddin said. "As the case is pending in the court, we want it to end before the tribunal starts its proceeding."

ICC legal head Ian Higgins, Shelly Clarke and Jonathan Taylor were present at the hearing that was convened by Justice Khademul Islam along with panel members Azmalul Haque and Shakil Kashem.

According to the BCB's anti-corruption code, the purpose of the preliminary hearing was to "allow the convenor of the anti-corruption tribunal to address any issues that need to be resolved prior to the hearing date".


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Deeper problems than first-Test nerves for England

England's recurring first-Test failure may this time point to more ingrained issues

Had you never seen England play Test cricket before this match in Brisbane, you would be forgiven for concluding that they had no hope of fighting their way back into this Ashes series.

This defeat was as emphatic and complete as any in recent years. Indeed, only five times in history have England lost a Test by a larger run margin. It is understandable that some are suggesting that this game may be remembered as the start of a new era. An era in which Australia hold the upper hand.

But we have seen England play before. We know that they have experienced similarly crushing defeats - Leeds 2009, Perth 2010 and Ahmedabad 2012 - and bounced back to win the next games and the series in which they were played. Perhaps they can do the same thing again?

Certainly that was the view taken by Alastair Cook. England's captain conceded that his side had been "outplayed" but then insisted that "there's plenty of time to fight back".

"We've done it a lot of times in the past and that's what we're going to have to draw upon now," he said. "In Ahmedabad everyone was looking at us and wondering how we could play cricket and we bounced back to win an amazing series in India.

"The first thing we have to do is remember we are a very good side and there are some very good players in the dressing room. We've had a bad game and we can hold our hands up and say that. But we've got 10 days now. We'll stay strong as a unit and we'll come back fighting."

Whether that proves to be wishful thinking remains to be seen but it would be a mistake to dismiss the Test as an aberration. A team that has failed to score 400 for 18 consecutive innings is not in a barren run; it is in a famine. A team who continually start poorly in series and rely on their bowlers to bail them out of tough situations are not unlucky; they are flirting with danger. This result has been an accident waiting to happen.

Just as worryingly, England have only played two Tests on quick wickets in the last four years - here and in Perth - and they have lost them both heavily. It bodes ill that Perth, perhaps the fastest wicket in the world looms again just around the corner in the third Test.

By reputation, Adelaide, the location of the second Test, is something approaching a batting paradise. It might, in normal circumstances, be expected to provide a tonic for England's beleaguered batsmen. But no-one is quite sure how the fresh drop-in pitch will play and it would seem oddly hospitable of Australia to offer anything other than another pitch of pace and bounce. There may be no respite in store.

The headlines will be dominated by Mitchell Johnson and England's batsmen's struggles against pace and bounce. Probably quite rightly, too. Even his poor deliveries - and there were a few - proved beneficial as they left the batsmen unsure what to expect from his slingy, low action. His success was another example of the benefits of unorthodoxy in cricket. The debate over whether such a player could emerge through the English system can wait for another day.

There were other issues at play apart from Johnson. England also played the offspin of Nathan Lyon like novices; the lack of an effective third seamer saw them unable to exploit Australia's position of 132 for 6 on the first day and Graeme Swann, arguably the best spinner England have ever had, was out-bowled by his Australian counterpart.

The individual form of a couple of players is causing concern, too. Jonathan Trott appears most rattled by Johnson's pace and, in his last nine Tests, has a better bowling average than batting average: 21.50 with the ball and 31.94 with the bat. Matt Prior has averaged 15 in the eight Tests he has played since May and only 17.50 in first-class cricket since the start of the last English season. He has passed 50 only once in 24 innings.

England will be loathe to abandon their consistency of selection policy, but there was just a hint that changes could be made. Ironically after a defeat due to poor batting, it is the position of Chris Tremlett, the third seamer, which is most under threat, but Trott, too, is looking as insecure as at any stage in his four-year Test career.

"We are going to have to be very honest with ourselves in how we go about trying to play Johnson," Cook said. "You can't brush the issue under the carpet, he's hurt us in this game and we're going to have to come back show our ability in the next game.

"We all need to be honest with each other as a group. It's not just those three who haven't had a good game - all eleven of us really need to improve if we want to win this series.

"Trott has had a tough game and he knows that. But you have to remember the guy is class. He is a very good player. He's had a little blip in these last couple of games but he's a class player and class players bounce back.

"I know he's been working incredibly hard at playing the short ball and anyone who has seen the net sessions can see he is trying to work on it. It is just a matter of him trying to take that into the middle. When the emotion and the pressure of the game is on, it can be quite tough to think as clearly as you need to."

In the long-term, Trott has a good chance of finding a method to deal with the line of attack with which he is confronted. He will know, too, that his captain endured a similarly grim run of form in 2010 and benefitted from England's loyalty and patience. But if the team management feel that Trott is, for now, mentally shot, he may not win a reprieve for Adelaide. It may be to his benefit that none of the squad's reserve batsmen - Jonny Bairstow, Gary Ballance or Ben Stokes - is hammering at the door of the team.

England can take consolation from one area: they know they have prevailed against Australia - with Johnson - on several previous occasions. Indeed, Trott's debut century was against an attack that included Johnson.

"We've got to look at the way we're going to play him," Cook agreed. "He's bowled well in this Test. He bowled well in Perth last time and he hurt us there.

"But there have been times in the past when we've played really well against him. We can draw on that. You can't brush the issue under the carpet, he's hurt us in this game and we're going to have to come back and show our ability in the next game."

Perhaps most damaging of all for England is the fact that this result will encourage an Australian team who have been starved of success for almost a year. Motivated and now full of confidence, they may prove hard to stop.


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