Jimmy Anderson has ‘stopped trying to make sense’ of England Test axe
Jimmy Anderson is still struggling to make sense of his omission from the Test side and says he has had no communication from the England camp.
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Jimmy Anderson is still struggling to make sense of his omission from the Test side and says he has had no communication from the England camp.
Jimmy Anderson is still hurting from his England snub, and admits he still can’t understand the decision to leave him out of the Test series against the West Indies.
Jimmy Anderson could sit out Lancashire's first game of the season versus Kent at Canterbury next week as he plots to win back his Test place.
After the year England’s Test team have had, nine out of 10 captains would have resigned or been sacked. Joe Root survived, somehow, while several other heads rolled. After impressing Andrew Strauss with his appetite, he was given the chance to rebuild his own broken team. He banished Stuart Broad and Jimmy Anderson, the only top-class bowlers at his disposal. And in the first two Tests in West Indies, it looked as if it might just be working.
Jimmy Anderson insisted he has 'made peace' with his surprise omission from England's ongoing Test series in the West Indies and is fully focused on the forthcoming county campaign.
After England landed on Monday in idyllic Grenada, their seamers could have been forgiven for heading straight to the National Stadium and subtly sprinkling grass seed on the pitch in the way that Andy Dufresne shook dirt out of his trouser leg in the yard of Shawshank prison.
Barbados. West Indies closed on 288 for four in their first innings in reply to England's 507 for nine declared. On a placid pitch that has exposed the bowling limitations of both teams, England struggled to regularly beat the bat of a stoic West Indies upper order determined to survive after starting day three of the second Test in a deep hole.