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This is an archive article published on August 5, 1999

Injured Hussain out, Butcher is captain

Manchester, August 4: Mike Atherton returns to Test cricket on his home ground of Old Trafford and Mark Butcher takes over from the injur...

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Manchester, August 4: Mike Atherton returns to Test cricket on his home ground of Old Trafford and Mark Butcher takes over from the injured Nasser Hussain as captain as England hope for another new beginning against New Zealand tomorrow.

New Zealand’s first-ever victory at Lord’s two weeks ago brought them level at one-one in the four-match series.

Hussain has been ruled out with a finger injury sustained while fielding in that Lord’s Test. His two predecessors, Alec Stewart and Atherton, will both play in a batting line-up also featuring the return of Graeme Hick, who has been recalled for the eighth time in his unconvincing Test career.

Hussain said today that he was 99 percent certain of being fit for the final Test at the Oval in a fortnight’s time. “We’ve just lost the last Test match and it’s how you react to these things that is important,” he said.

“I would have liked the challenge to come back at the New Zealanders personally. But it’s two weeks until the Oval now and I’m sure 99 percentthat I’ll be fit for that.”

He said that England would field six batsmen at Old Trafford, with Chris Read maintaining his position as wicket-keeper and the two spinners, Phil Tufnell and Peter Such, in the side.

With Andy Caddick also named as a certain starter, there will be room for only one of the three other specialist pace bowlers in the squad, Dean Headley, Chris Silverwood and Alan Mullally.

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“It’s a two-spinner wicket,” said Butcher, who will open the batting with Atherton, ahead of his Surrey team mate Stewart. On captaincy, he said: “It’s come as a bit of a shock. I try not to have too many theories, but just to be on top of things.”

He has also pledged to cut down on the sledging, or verbal abuse, that was a feature of the Lord’s Test. David Graveney, England’s chairman of selectors, said the match referee Peter Van der Merwe had spoken to the New Zealand players after that match. “I’ve made the point that there’s no place in cricket for giving a player a volley of abuse as he’sleaving the pitch,” Graveney said.

New Zealand, buoyant after beating England for the first time since 1986, now hope to add a first victory at Old Trafford, where they have lost two Tests and drawn three.

They must again do without the pace bowler Simon Doull, who has flown home after suffering a recurrence of the knee injury that caused him to miss the second Test.

Teams

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ENGLAND (from): Mark Butcher (Captain), Mike Atherton, Alec Stewart, Graham Thorpe, Mark Ramprakash, Graeme Hick, Chris Read, Andy Caddick, Alan Mullally, Peter Such, Chris Silverwood, Dean Headley, Phil Tufnell

NEW ZEALAND (probable): Stephen Fleming (Captain), Matthew Horne, Matthew Bell, Craig McMillan, Nathan Astle, Roger Twose, Adam Parore, Chris Cairns, Dion Nash, Daniel Vettori, Geoff Allott.

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