England’s Kevin Pietersen believes the rebellion that led to him losing the captaincy two years ago had been vindicated by the Ashes triumph in Australia.
England retained the urn with an innings and 157-run triumph in Melbourne on Wednesday to go into next week’s final Test with an unassailable 2-1 lead in the series.
Pietersen said the captain-and-coach partnership of Andrew Strauss and Andy Flower that replaced Pietersen and Peter Moores in early 2009 had played a key role in producing that triumph.
PHOTO: EPA
“You know what? I have never said this before — I lost the captaincy, I got rid of the captaincy for the good of English cricket, and we would not be here today if I had not done what I did then,” Pietersen told British newspapers after the Melbourne victory.
“There is no way in this world that we would have succeeded under that regime and would have won the Ashes again in Australia after 24 years,” he said. “Andrew Strauss and Andy Flower need all the plaudits for an unbelievable 18 months and an unbelievable preparation for this team, and they are the right leadership for this team.”
Pietersen paid tribute to Strauss’ selflessness.
“He looks after himself after he has looked after everyone else which is a great quality of a great captain,” he said.
Pietersen slammed Moores in a report to the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) after a tour of India in late 2008 and the ECB reacted by sacking both captain and coach in early 2009, offering the skipper’s job to Strauss.
“When he gave me the phone call and said: ‘The ECB want me to captain; are you OK with that?’ I said ‘Go for it, Straussy, you’re a top man,’” Pietersen said. “I said ‘I’m a good mate of yours, go for it, do whatever you need to,’ and I’ve been proved right. It was a good decision by the ECB.”
Pietersen was England’s best batsmen on the 2006-2007 tour of Australia but still shared the ignominy of the 5-0 whitewash — a bitter experience that made this year’s triumph all the sweeter.
“It’s the best feeling in my career, nothing beats this,” the 30-year-old said.
“As an Englishman, winning in England in 2005 was amazing after it had not been done for a certain amount of years, but people always talked about the fact that when you go to Australia it is a different kettle of fish and the last time we came here we got hammered,” Pietersen said.
“This time we have come here knowing the preparation has been right, knowing what to expect from the crowds, from the public in the street, people in hotels and taxi drivers to players out in the middle,” he said. “We were told to beware of this and we knew what to expect. We always thought we would do a lot better than last time, I was confident of that and that has proved right.”
Pietersen said he had noticed a difference in the approach of the Australian public on this tour.
“We felt that respect before we started the Tests,” he said. “The last time we came here we got hammered. As we got off the aeroplane people in hotels, taxi drivers, everybody just abused us.”
“This time before the first Test, we were talking about it among ourselves, we were saying: ‘No one is abusing us here, this can’t be a bad thing.’ Australia’s confidence was down,” Pietersen said.
Former world No. 2 Paula Badosa has withdrawn from this week’s Wuhan Open, organizers said on Tuesday, amid a racism row over an online photograph. Tournament organizers said the Spaniard had pulled out of the WTA 1000 tournament, citing a gastrointestinal illness, hours before her first-round match against Australian Ajla Tomljanovic. News outlets including Britain’s the Telegraph earlier reported that Badosa had posted a photo on Instagram in which she appeared to imitate a Chinese face by placing chopsticks on the corners of her eyes. The photo was taken last week in a restaurant in Beijing, where she reached the semi-finals of the
Shin Oebori coaches the Fukagawa Hawks youth baseball team in Tokyo, and he is very aware how Los Angeles Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani touches his players. “With Ohtani, the kids think everything is possible,” Oebori said, wrapping up practice yesterday on an all-dirt field set alongside a local Buddhist temple, below an elevated highway, and in the shadow of tall apartment blocks in central Tokyo. “Nothing is impossible with him. A dream is not a dream,” Oebori said, stepping out of the fenced practice field that keeps balls from landing on the temple grounds. None of the players hitting sponge-soft baseball has reached
CRICKET Azhar’s 59 leads Stallions Aashir Azhar’s blazing half-century guided the Taipei Stallions to victory over Taipei Super 11 in the Taiwan Premier League’s Group A at the Yingfeng Cricket Ground in Taipei yesterday. The Stallions were 102-3 and into the 12th over of 20 when Azhar came to the crease. He hit seven sixes and two fours in the 25 deliveries he faced to push his side to 171-5. Gokul Kumar was the star with the ball for Super 11, taking 3-17. In the reply, Deepak Vishnu outscored Azhar with 77 from 50 balls, but nobody else got past 20 as
‘GLOBAL PRESSURE’: LA’s Dave Roberts said that it was difficult to appreciate the ‘pressure on a global scale’ his starter was under ‘pitching for his country’ The Los Angeles Dodgers shelled out US$1 billion for Japanese talent in the off-season and it is paying off in the MLB playoffs. Yoshinobu Yamamoto on Friday outdueled Yu Darvish in a historic post-season matchup of Japanese-born starters, while the Dodgers got home runs from Kike Hernandez and Teoscar Hernandez to beat the San Diego Padres 2-0 and advance to the National League Championship Series. “It’s pretty sweet,” a smiling Freddie Freeman said. Yamamoto allowed two hits over five innings for the win, getting pulled after 63 pitches in a decisive Game 5 between heated NL West rivals who were meeting in a