The best and worst times of Ravi Bopara

LONDON, (Reuters) – Three consecutive ducks in his  first three tests were the worst of times for Ravi Bopara.  Centuries in his last three test innings are the best.

Through both early failure and recent success, England’s new  number three has tried to keep sport and life in perspective.

“I work very hard on the player I want to be (but) I didn’t  think too much about what happened in Sri Lanka. I didn’t change  a lot,” he told reporters recently.

“I just try to enjoy it. You can put pressure on yourself  and make too much fuss about it. I think it’s important you go  out and enjoy yourself. When you’re a kid you don’t worry about  anything.”

Bopara, who was dropped after scoring 42 runs in his first  five test innings against Sri Lanka, seized the moment in the  Caribbean this year when Andrew Flintoff flew home injured.

Selected at number six for the Barbados test, Bopara  responded with 104. He was dropped for the next test when the  selectors opted to play an extra bowler and keep faith with  Owais Shah.

True to his philosophy, Bopara remained upbeat and was  rewarded by winning selection ahead of Shah, Ian Bell and  Michael Vaughan in the problematic number three spot for the  opening test against West Indies at Lord’s in the return series.

ULTIMATE CHALLENGE
Bopara came to the crease with Fidel Edwards at his fiery  best. He survived a venomous first ball and went on to bat with  increasing authority to score 143.

He followed up with 108 in the second test in Durham to  become only the fifth Englishman to score three test centuries  in a row.

In the Twenty20 tournament that followed, Bopara and Kevin  Pietersen were the only England batsmen to live up to their  reputations and now he faces the ultimate challenge in a key  batting spot against Australia.

Shane Warne, still the master of psychological warfare in  retirement, has suggested that Bopara may not be up to the  challenge.

The former Australia leg-spinner said Bopara was “not an  international cricketer” and was “someone who’s too worried  about how he looks”.

Warne’s comments imply that Bopara, an open admirer of the  great Indian batsman Sachin Tendulkar, is more concerned with  style than runs.

It is a criticism that Bopara emphatically rejects, although  he knows the most effective riposte will be to bring his form  against West Indies into the Ashes series, which starts next  Wednesday.

“Over the last couple of months I’ve earned my place on the  team,” he said. “I’ve always wanted to bat in the top order for  my country. To do it against the best in the world will be a  great challenge for me.”