Ollie Pope: Zak Crawley is capable of a run-a-ball Ashes hundred
And last week at Lord’s, faced with an 11-run chase in the fourth innings against Ireland, Stuart Broad related how the talk in the innings break had been about the possibility of Crawley winning the game with consecutive sixes. “The conversation in that 10 minutes was ‘can you do it two balls?'” he said. “Don’t take four overs, don’t worry about getting out …” In the end, Crawley sealed the chase with three fours in four balls.
Such sentiments are echoed by Pope. Though the vice-captain cedes Crawley himself has not been happy with his returns so far, Pope feels the Ashes, and the bowlers England will face, provides the perfect opportunity for the Kent batter to show just how high his ceiling really is.
“The player that Zak is, he could have a tough first game, have a tough first innings of a second game and then go and blast a hundred off a hundred, because he’s got the ability to do that against Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Scott Boland, Nathan Lyon – these guys,” said Pope. “That’s the exciting thing about Zak as a player – you know he can take the game and, in the space of a session, set the tone or break the back of a run-chase.
“We chat about it openly and he wouldn’t mind me saying – there have been times when he hasn’t scored the weight of runs that he has wanted. But there have also been times where he has played some knocks that have gone under the radar. He’s scored his three hundreds (in his career) but he’s also had a lot of big knocks at the top of the order.”
Pope sympathised with his team-mate’s situation and feels greater focus on the five matches against Australia should not make the next six weeks the be-all and end-all. Not just for Crawley, but for the rest of an England side angling to claim the urn for the first time since 2015.
“Firstly, Zak is a top bloke and a very well-liked bloke in the changing room,” Pope said. “There’s a lot of media around it, because of the numbers. There’s been a lot of chat. Coming in after someone like Alastair Cook and the way he played – what a legend of the game he is, averaged 40-odd – there’s probably a bit of a stereotype maybe as to that England opening spot, you need to be averaging 40 and batting this way.
“Just because it is an Ashes series, there’s more on it because there are more public eyes watching. But it doesn’t have to be a make-or-break series. There’s pressure on us all going into this series. We’re playing one of the best teams in the world in our home conditions, so we’re desperate for everyone to do well. But at the same time, if it doesn’t go to plan, what we’ve done as a team in the last year and a bit … for nobody is it a make-or-break series.”
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