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England have edge over Australia in The Ashes 2015 as they play at home: Shahid Afridi
England look to regain The Ashes after they lost 5-0 against Australia in the previous year.
Written by Indo-Asian News Service
Published: Jun 16, 2015, 03:35 PM (IST)
Edited: Jun 16, 2015, 03:35 PM (IST)


Pakistan’s veteran all-rounder Shahid Afridi has said England’s home ground advantage gives them an edge over Australia in the upcoming Ashes series, which starts in less than a month in Cardiff, England. England have not lost to Australia on home soil in Ashes for 14 years and Afridi, who recently concluded a brief stint with English Twenty20 side Northamptonshire, said England’s bowlers will lift themselves in their own backyard. READ: Ryan Harris confirms ‘good base’ to launch his attack in The Ashes
“England will have advantage of playing in home conditions. Their bowlers know a thing or two about bowling in England. If you notice they have always bowled better in England as compared to other countries,” Afridi was quoted as saying by Cricket Australia (CA) on Monday.
“They may have struggled in the One-Day Internationals (ODI) lately [against New Zealand] but in Tests we can expect a good contest from them. I can’t pick one team as favourite to win the Ashes but I think England will have a slight advantage due to home conditions,” he said. VIDEO: The Ashes 2015 promo: We didn’t start the fire!
Australia completed a 2-0 series clean sweep against the West Indies last week, the same opponents England drew with 1-1 all in April and May. England drew their most recent Test series 1-1 against New Zealand with questions surrounding England’s middle-order batting and bowling unit still largely unanswered.
Afridi also revealed the two Australians that have caused him the most grief over his 19-year international career are Glenn McGrath and Michael Clarke.
Afridi was dismissed five times in 25 One-Day Internationals (ODIs) and once in Tests against McGrath. “The bowler I always admired and found really tough was Glenn McGrath. “He is the sort of bowler you can’t hit blindly. He just does not give you a chance to hit. I don’t think I have seen a better new-ball bowler than him in my career,” Afridi said. READ: England’s only Ashes hope lies in ‘doctored’ pitches
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Afridi said as a bowler he finds current Test skipper Clarke the most difficult to dislodge. “I think Michael Clarke was the best Australian batsman I bowled to. It is because his footwork against spin is extremely good,” 35-year-old Afridi said.