Vaughan Starts Pre-Ashes Mind Games, Reveals How Ball-tampering Saga Will Benefit England
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Former England skipper Michael Vaughan reckons that dragging the infamous ball-tampering scandal unnecessarily has shown that there are cracks in the Australian team and at the same time also opened up on how England can use it to their advantage in the Ashes series later this year.
It has been over three years since the infamous ball-tampering incident in Cape Town that shook Cricket Australia along with all the fans around the globe. The event that took place in March 2018 is once again becoming the focal point of discussion after Cameron Bancroft recently suggested that bowlers in the Australian camp were aware of the Sandpaper Gate proceedings
Dragging up the ball-tampering scandal has shown there are cracks in the Australia team that England could exploit if they start the Ashes series well later this year. David Warner, Steve Smith, and the bowlers are under scrutiny again, and it would only take a poor Australia performance in the first Ashes Test for the pressure to mount. The captain, Tim Paine, is under the microscope after defeat by India, and while some think this could galvanize Australia, rarely are such public problems good for a team's unity. "Joe Root will be enjoying this and thinking it could help. He knows an argument or two in the opposing team is always good. But fundamentally, England still has to play great cricket to win in Australia. They should not become distracted by Australia's problems. Enjoy it in private, but rise above it in public," Vaughan wrote in his column for The Telegraph as reported by The Sydney Morning Herald.
The cricketer-turned-cricket pundit also wants the English team to focus on their own game and come out strongly against a quality Australian outfit.
"England have enough to worry about in their own backyard, by making sure they arrive with a settled batting unit, a fit bowling attack, and a team who can ultimately win in those conditions. There are cracks in the England team as well, and I see two sides who are quite similar. Both are quite vulnerable and that should make for a fascinating contest," he wrote.