Casa Arabe is committed to being a meeting point between Spain and the Arab world
No Sweat
Cook has now batted in all but 11.2 overs of the two Ashes tests so far, a gruelling schedule even if the temperatures at the Adelaide had not hit 37 degrees Celsius as he batted through the day on Saturday. “At tea, I was really tired,” he said. “It was up there with the hottest conditions I’ve batted in. It was physically quite hard after last week as well. “I’m quite lucky in that I don’t sweat that much, though. I just used one pair of gloves all day while Kevin (Pietersen) was changing his every three overs. I’m built so I don’t really get that hot or sweat that much.” Cook has now batted for more than 20 hours over the two tests but maintaining concentration is all part of the opener’s art. “When you get into this rhythm in batting it’s all about not trying to break it. Just focusing on the next ball, and getting through that next 20 minutes,” he said. “If you ever need a reminder of how cricket changes, you only need to look at me last summer. The art of batting is concentrating for long periods of time and not making mistakes.” England have first innings lead of 72 with eight wickets in hand going into the third day at the Adelaide Oval but Cook has not intention of stopping his accumulation of runs yet. “It’s important that we keep batting tomorrow, get through that first half hour and get a really big score,” he said.Casa Arabe is committed to being a meeting point between Spain and the Arab world
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