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 Gus tells Cockley to pitch it up 

Gus tells Cockley to pitch it up

07 Nov, 2009 03:00 AM
WARATAH-Mayfield legend Gary Gilmour believes rising star Burt Cockley must pitch the ball up to be successful at international level.

Cockley will follow in the footsteps of Gilmour, Grahame Corling and Johnny Watkins if he is selected to play for Australia in tomorrow's one-day international against India at Guwahati.

All three started their senior cricket careers at Newcastle district club Waratah-Mayfield. Cockley is set to become the club's fourth Australian representative.

"If he doesn't try to bowl too short, he'll be right," Gilmour said. "In that one-day game last Sunday he pitched the ball up and he got wickets.

"Then in the Shield game through the week he tried to bounce everyone and he got whacked everywhere."

Cockley and Victorian all-rounder Andrew McDonald flew to India on Thursday night as replacements for injured Victorian quick Peter Siddle and NSW all-rounder Moises Henriques.

The 23-year-old Novocastrian was confident he would get a game in the sixth match of the series tomorrow and the seventh and last game in Mumbai on Wednesday.

Cockley has played only eight first-class matches and four domestic one-day games, and Gilmour believes nerves will play a part in Cockley's game.

"Burt's a nervous bloke anyway so there's no doubt he'll be a bit nervous before the game," Gilmour said.

"But it's up to the other blokes to look after him and make sure he's OK. [Australian captain Ricky] Ponting's got enough experience to do that so he should be right."

Gilmour knows the pressure that goes with international cricket at a young age.

He played three seasons of first-grade with Waratah before moving to Sydney aged 18 and by 22 he had represented NSW and Australia.

In all he played 15 Tests and 75 first-class games and also played in the rebel World Series Cricket competition of the late 1970s.

Corling was also 22 when he made his debut for Australia on the 1964 Ashes Tour of England and he played five Tests and 65 Sheffield Shield matches for NSW.

Watkins is mostly linked with the Hamilton-Wickham club in Newcastle but he started his senior cricket career at Waratah before playing for Merewether and then Hamwicks.

AAP reports: A ragtag Australian team of regulars and replacements answered their captain's plea and won one of the great limited overs matches by three runs against India at Hyderabad on Thursday.

Fielding an unlikely XI thrown together by injuries and scheduling six players had fewer than 20 matches to their credit, four less than 10 Ricky Ponting asked his men for a little more in game five of the series and received exactly that.

That they were able to defend 4-350 and so claim a 3-2 lead with two matches to play, despite the unadulterated greatness of Sachin Tendulkar (175), said much for the team's fighting ability.

"That's what I'm most proud of, everything that's happened over the last couple of weeks, for us to keep finding ways to win games says a lot about the team, a lot about the players and the way we go about it," Ponting said.

"I actually asked the guys for a little bit extra in this game, asked them to be really brave and to play the best form of cricket they possibly could and just back themselves every opportunity.

"I thought in the first half of the game with our batting we did that to a tee, and I think even in the last half of the game with the bowling we did that really well, so it was a great day for us.

"I can tell you now that the guys, even though we probably fought our way out of jail a little in the last half of the game, we were as excited out there and back in the rooms as we have been for any win that we've had."

No one personified the composure and resourcefulness of the performance better than Victorian debutant Clint McKay.

Relying on his height and ability to hit an awkward length, McKay also varied his pace to good effect, claiming three top-order wickets, including the critical one of Tendulkar.

Shane Watson, too, deserved plaudits for a staunch all-round performance (93 and 3-47) that would have won him the match award on almost any other night.

"[McKay] was very good, he was calm under pressure," Ponting said. "We had to experiment late in the innings, with lots of different slower balls and things to try and take some wickets.

"If you just kept bowling down the seam and trying to bowl a good length, the wicket was just so good that you'd get hit back over your head, so we had some good discussion about how we thought we could get some wickets.

"Full credit to Clint, he executed things really well, a really good debut on that sort of wicket."

The Australians had rested Mitchell Johnson for the fixture, and Ponting admitted the decision had been taken to avoid a repeat of Peter Siddle's loss to side stiffness only three weeks out from the first Test of the home summer.

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 CALL-UP: Burt Cockley   YOU BEAUTY: The Australians celebrate their narrow win at Hyderabad on Thursday night.- Picture by Getty Images
CALL-UP: Burt Cockley YOU BEAUTY: The Australians celebrate their narrow win at Hyderabad on Thursday night.- Picture by Getty Images

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