Anderson-Jadeja row spices up second Test

England's primary concern heading into the second Test at Lord's remains the form of captain Alastair Cook, who hasn't scored a century in 25 innings.

While an already tense series could reach boiling point following the altercation between James Anderson and India's Ravindra Jadeja, England's primary concern heading into Thursday's second Test remains the form of captain Alastair Cook.

The International Cricket Council charged fast bowler Anderson with allegedly "abusing and pushing" Jadeja, the incident alleged to have happened after the players left the field for lunch on the second day of last week's drawn first Test in Nottingham.

Both are free to play at Lord's with a disciplinary hearing unlikely to be underway by the time the Test starts on Thursday, meaning Cook remains the biggest worry.

It is now 25 innings since the left-handed opener scored the last of his England record 25 Test hundreds, during which time he has averaged a lowly 24.

England haven't won in nine Tests, their worst run for more than 20 years, with a Test record last-wicket partnership of 198 at Trent Bridge bailing out the home side after the latest in a long line of top-order collapses.

"I've got to believe the wheel will turn at some stage," said Cook.

"I need to start scoring runs at the top of the order for England."

England have added Simon Kerrigan to their squad, after part-time off-break bowler Moeen Ali proved expensive in Nottingham.

Left-arm spinner Kerrigan hasn't played Test cricket since conceding 53 runs in eight wicketless overs on his debut against Australia at The Oval last year.

"I fear for Simon Kerrigan," said former England captain Michael Vaughan.

"Throwing him out to bowl at Lord's potentially, against an Indian batting line-up that plays spin with its eyes shut, is unfair."

India, by contrast, have a proven Test off-spinner in Ravichandran Ashwin waiting in the wings, even if his away bowling average of nearly 75 against Australia and South Africa is hugely worse than his under 29 on Indian pitches.

At Trent Bridge, it seemed the most likely way Anderson would be sidelined was if he was required to bowl long spells on similarly docile pitches throughout the rest of a series crammed into just 42 days.

"If we end up bowling 60 overs (each) every week then we are not going to get through the five Tests," said Anderson.

Cook added: "We just need a pitch with a bit of life in it."

After Trent Bridge groundsman Steve Birks apologised for his pitch, attention turned to Mick Hunt, his Lord's counterpart.

"They (captains and coaches) tell me what they want the pitch to do all the time but I don't listen to a word they say," Hunt once explained in an interview.

"I just say, 'okay' and carry on doing exactly what I planned."


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