James Anderson may miss Ireland test to be fit for Ashes against Australia, England star recovering from injury
James Anderson knows he might need to sit out of England’s first Test of the summer if he is to be fit for the Ashes opener against Australia at Edgbaston.
Scans have shown the problem to be mild and the England and Wales Cricket Board say Anderson will be “assessed nearer the time” of the Ireland fixture.
Cricket
Archer to miss Ashes due to injury as England recall Bairstow
YESTERDAY AT 12:35
At a sponsor event, Anderson said: “I think I will be fit for the Ireland game. Whether I play or not is probably another matter really. I definitely don’t want to risk it.
“I am desperate to be fit for the first Ashes Test. If that means missing the Ireland Test, so be it.
“It’s a 10-day recovery period, and I’m rehabbing already, running next week.”
The injury happened during Anderson’s fourth outing of the county season and he said: “I was disappointed to have to pull out of a game but, with what’s to come in the summer, it was actually a pretty good result.
“It was weird how it worked out. The last ball of my spell I felt something not quite right. I came straight off, and then we came pretty much straight off for rain after that. I pulled up the next day and it wasn’t right. I went for a scan that night and it showed a strain, so there was no point risking it.”
Anderson has faced fitness battles ahead of the Ashes before. In 2019, he fought back from a torn calf but went down injured on the first morning of the first Test and missed the rest of the summer.
Comparing then to now, Anderson said: “That situation was a different injury, a more serious injury. I ripped my calf earlier that summer, and it was a real push to try to get fit for that first Test.
“I don’t feel like this is anywhere near that severity.”
Speaking on the BBC’s Tailenders podcast, Anderson has admitted sitting out of the action in the coming weeks for his county is not ideal as it would have helped with his preparation for the hectic international schedule.
“It’s frustrating because you always want to feel good and get enough bowling in before a series and you want to be fresh, so it’s now about trying to plan the best route through this summer,” he said.
“I felt like I needed to play this game (Ireland) so it’s not ideal, but I’m not stressed about it.
“I’m just taking it day by day and seeing how it goes because obviously I don’t want to risk anything by making it worse.
“I’m more confident I can get this one right [than in 2019] and give the Ashes a right good crack.”
Anderson will also want to add to his impressive haul of 685 Test match wickets this summer. He is just 24 wickets away from moving ahead of Australian legend Shane Warne into second place in the all-time record books.
Sri Lankan spin bowler Muttiah Muralitharan is at the top of the list with 800.
Cricket
Sciver-Brunt in a ‘good place’ following mental health break
YESTERDAY AT 19:16
Cricket
Anderson fitness to be monitored by England after bowler picks up groin injury
14/05/2023 AT 21:12
Read the full article Here