Pat Cummins
has revealed he was booked into the Australian Institute of Sport to
have his bowling action examined for signs that it had contributed to
his injury-ridden year before the back stress fracture that has blocked
him out of a second home summer in a row.
Cummins, 19, is expected to miss nearly all of the 2012-13 season due to
a stress fracture in his lower back. The diagnosis means Cummins will
not be part of the Test series against South Africa or Sri Lanka, and
almost certainly will not be considered for the Test tour of India in
February, while his possible involvement in the Ashes tour of England
might depend on whether he is able to play any first-class cricket
before then.
On his return to Sydney from Melbourne where examinations confirmed the
fracture, Cummins said there had been plans afoot for some time to have
his action assessed scientifically. He also admitted that the surfeit of
Twenty20 cricket he had played in the UAE, Sri Lanka and South Africa
in recent weeks had allowed bad habits to creep into his technique.
The back stress fracture means the aforementioned AIS appointment will
not be taken up while Cummins rests, but it is understood that analysis
is likely to begin with pre-existing video footage.
"We were talking about going down to the AIS, we were already booked in
to have a look at my action while we had time. We'd been planning to do
it for a while, just to see what it came up with," Cummins said. "One
thing I noticed was I might've been falling away a bit more than say a
year ago. When I'm bowling with a red ball I try to swing it and when
I'm swinging the ball everything's going well.
"But when you're bowling cross seamers with a white ball you kind of fall into bad habits maybe."
The most recent first-class match Cummins played was his Test debut last
November in Johannesburg, where he collected seven wickets and was Man
of the Match. Australia's selectors had hoped he would be available for
the third Test against South Africa at the WACA, but scans in Melbourne
this week confirmed that he would be out of the equation for an extended
period.
Cummins had back soreness during the Champions League Twenty20 but kept
playing, including in the Sydney Sixers' victory in the final. That
might have seemed a risky course of action given his injury history, but
Australia's team physio Alex Kountouris said the niggle at the
Champions League did not appear a major issue.
"He had a little bit of back pain towards the back end of the Champions
League, which wasn't a big concern," Kountouris said. "He played all the
games and was training and was functioning okay. But because of his age
and his history we decided to investigate it and unfortunately he's got
an early stage stress fracture of his spine, which is disappointing.
"The good news is we've got it nice and early, because we have had a
high index of suspicion with him. Now we're going to manage it early and
expect to get a good outcome from it. He's now going to start his
rehab. We do expect him to miss most of the season, if not all of it.
But he will come back and he'll be fine once he gets back in to playing
cricket again.
"Pat had a spine bone stress injury a few years ago but the current
injury is new and in an entirely different part of the spine. We expect
he will recover fully from this injury and will be closely monitored to
determine his return to the playing field, but expect that he will miss
most of the 2012-13 domestic cricket season."
As far as his management is concerned, Cummins said there was nothing he
would have changed about the past few months, as he recovered from a
side strain he picked up in England to play a series of T20 matches.
However the latest setback is sure to cause another round of thinking
about how Cummins should be handled.
"I've got to sit down with the people that manage me and give them my
thoughts as well," Cummins said. "It's a group effort. I probably
wouldn't have changed anything from the last few months. I thought I was
bowling enough and not bowling too much. I got through 20 games in the
last few months so it was playing every two or three days.
"The one thing with all young people is they're more susceptible with
injuries, you can't really be too wrapped up in trying to pick and
choose. If you're ready to go you've got to go out there and play, and
if you get injured that's just what happens. It's what's on the
schedule, so looking forward if it's not the end of this summer
hopefully the Champions Trophy in England and obviously the Ashes is a
major goal. Certainly not ruled that out yet, hopefully I'll be right
for them."
Cummins missed most of last summer due to a foot injury and has managed
only four first-class matches - including his Test debut - in his short
career. He also suffered a side strain during the one-day tour of
England this year and was sent home mid-series.
His latest injury means Australia will have one less bowler to rotate
through the Test attack this summer, which could mean a heavier workload
for James Pattinson and Mitchell Starc. Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus
are the mature-bodied fast bowlers in the group, while there remains a
chance of Ryan Harris recovering from injury in time for the series
against Sri Lanka.
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