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		<title>Australia seek to level Ashes&#8230;</title>
		<link>https://kitsports.com/?p=2719</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2015 00:53:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[kit-sports editor]]></dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Ases]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Australia seek to level Ashes]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Australia, reeling from the late withdrawal of wicket-keeper Brad Haddin, are reportedly set to drop Shane Watson for the second Ashes Test at Lord&#8217;s on Thursday as they bid to level the five-match series at 1-1. Watson was twice out lbw cheaply in all-too familiar fashion as England, against many pre-series predictions, won the first [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p>Australia, reeling from the late withdrawal of wicket-keeper Brad Haddin, are reportedly set to drop Shane Watson for the second Ashes Test at Lord&#8217;s on Thursday as they bid to level the five-match series at 1-1.<br />
Watson was twice out lbw cheaply in all-too familiar fashion as England, against many pre-series predictions, won the first Test in Cardiff by the crushing margin of 169 runs with more than a day to spare last week.<br />
With his medium-paced bowling barely used by captain Michael Clarke at Sophia Gardens, Australia&#8217;s Fairfax Media reported Wednesday that the 34-year-old Watson would be dropped at Lord&#8217;s and replaced by fellow all-rounder Mitchell Marsh, 11 years his junior.<br />
Watson&#8217;s lbw double in Cardiff means he has now passed fifty in just two of his past 16 innings.<br />
&#8220;My gut feeling is they&#8217;ll probably go with Mitchell Marsh,&#8221; former Australia captain Steve Waugh told Sky Sports before the Fairfax report, subsequently cited by Cricket Australia&#8217;s own website, was published.<br />
&#8220;A guy at that age&#8230; when he&#8217;s played a long time, when you make a decision like this now – it&#8217;s pretty much final. There&#8217;s probably no way back from being dropped now.&#8221;<br />
Marsh, the son of former Australia opener Geoff Marsh, has played in four Tests and impressed in the team&#8217;s opening two tour matches by scoring hundreds against both Kent and Essex.<br />
Cricket Australia told AFP Wednesday they would not comment on the Fairfax report, saying that the Test side would be announced as scheduled on Thursday morning at Lord&#8217;s.<br />
Haddin, 37, withdrew on Tuesday for what a team spokeswoman said were &#8220;family reasons&#8221;, although he will remain with the squad in London.<br />
Peter Nevill, also Haddin&#8217;s New South Wales deputy, is now set for an international debut on Thursday.<br />
This is not the first time Haddin has put his family ahead of his cricket career. In 2012, Haddin took several months out of the game after his then 17-month-old daughter Mia was diagnosed with neuroblastoma – a rare form of cancer.<br />
Meanwhile the 29-year-old Nevill faces the prospect of making his Test debut at Lord&#8217;s, which can prove tough for wicket-keepers because of how the ball can deviate alarmingly after passing the bat.<br />
But in the tour selection chief Rodney Marsh Nevill can consult one of Australia&#8217;s greatest wicket-keepers.<br />
Australia appear to be increasingly confident that left-arm fast bowler Mitchell Starc, the pick of their attack in Cardiff, will be fit for Lord&#8217;s despite suffering an ankle injury in Wales.<br />
Starc took a full part in training on Tuesday and, with Australia fast bowler Ryan Harris announcing his injury-induced retirement on the eve of the Cardiff clash, the experienced Peter Siddle appears to next in line to come in.</p>
<p>Siddle, however, was upbeat about Starc&#8217;s fitness, saying Tuesday: &#8220;Starcy got through well today, bowled out in the middle off the long run, both ends, he&#8217;s feeling good.&#8221;<br />
Australia coach Darren Lehmann said he hoped the pitch at Lord&#8217;s was quicker than Cardiff, but Siddle said adjusting to local conditions was a skill of the game.<br />
&#8220;That&#8217;s part of the challenge of world cricket. Teams come to Australia and they get fast, bouncy ones (pitches). You&#8217;ve got to adapt to other conditions if you want to be one of the best teams.&#8221;<br />
For England, whose first match under new Australian coach Trevor Bayliss resulted in a commanding victory, the challenge is to put two wins together &#8212; something that has so far eluded them this year in Test series against the West Indies and New Zealand.<br />
Alastair Cook is set to captain an unchanged England side looking to regain the Ashes after their 5-0 thrashing in Australia in 2013/14.<br />
James Anderson, England&#8217;s all-time leading Test wicket-taker, said there was no danger of complacency setting in because the team were steeling themselves for a backlash, particularly at the &#8216;home of cricket&#8217; where Australia opener Chris Rogers has become a familiar figure during his time with Middlesex.<br />
&#8220;Every opposition we play at Lord&#8217;s generally picks up their game 10 percent for some reason,&#8221; said Anderson. &#8220;When teams are 1-0 down they generally come back strong in the series, so we&#8217;ve got to be prepared for that.</p>
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