Broad broadens his horizons

Eurosport - Wed, 14 May 09:56:00 2008

Stuart Broad has set his sights on developing into an international-class all-rounder as England prepare for another Test without the services of Andrew Flintoff.

CRICKET; Stuart Broad, England, March 2008 - 0

The Nottinghamshire seamer has already shown potential with the bat in his three Test appearances so far, scoring runs in both innings of the final Test victory in Napier over New Zealand in March.

But he now wants to build on that start and develop into the type of number eight who can deliver runs on a consistent basis in a similar manner to New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori or Australia's Brett Lee.

"It's obviously very important in international cricket now to be able to hold a bat," explained 21-year-old Broad.

"It's very important for me not just to hold up an end but to have an ability to score runs.

"I have worked on it very hard and it's great having Andy Flower in the set-up as a former world number one and left-hander, so he's great to work with and chat to about my batting.

"It's coming on, I'm enjoying it and working hard on it and my aim is to become a Test number eight.

"If you look at Vettori he must be one of the better ones around and he's turned himself into a high-class batsman - it's that sort of example with people like Vettori and Brett Lee that I'd like to follow."

Renowned more for his aggressive style of bowling than his batting so far, Broad has shown enough in his appearances to suggest he does have runs in him and admits to enjoying life at the crease with a bat in his hand.

"I enjoy batting and hitting a good cover drive gives me almost as much enjoyment as bowling," he revealed.

"It's a great buzz batting, I enjoy the battle between batsman and bowler no matter what side I'm on.

"If you look at successful sides they all bat a long way down. We all know at number eight, nine, 10 and 11 that every run is vital.

"There's nothing worse when you're a bowling side when the lower-order batsmen are hanging around, scoring runs and being difficult to dismiss.

"That is the aim of this side and everyone is working harder to get better, and I think we are."

Broad is expected to take his place in an unchanged England line-up with the selectors likely to keep faith with the side which beat New Zealand in successive Tests during the winter.

That would mean Yorkshire seamer Matthew Hoggard, dropped for those last two Tests, failing to break into the starting side having earned a recall to the squad this weekend.

Reuters