England must explore contingency plans to cover for Kevin Pietersen in case his sore calf rules him out of their bid to clinch the Ashes at Old Trafford next week.
Alastair Cook's team are on the verge of winning the urn for a third successive time – something last achieved by England more than 30 years ago – after their 347-run trouncing of Australia at Lord's on Sunday.
That resounding success was completed in the absence of the injured Pietersen, off the field during the tourists' second innings after a scan revealed he had strained his left calf, and he is considered doubtful already for the third Investec Test in Manchester.
Unfortunate history is therefore threatening to repeat itself for Pietersen, who also missed the final three matches of England's last surge to home Ashes series victory with an Achilles injury in 2009.
England batting coach Graham Gooch is not prepared to publicly discuss the potential replacements for Pietersen – who had a lean time in England's middle order at Lord's, where he made only seven runs in his two innings.
"I know he's got a problem with his calf, a strain," said Gooch. "Whether he will be fit for Old Trafford . . . he'd be in doubt. I'm sure there will be some cover supplied."
The potential replacement personnel remains open to conjecture, with several plausible candidates but none presenting an obviously compelling case. Among the feasible contenders, Nick Compton is the one who most recently inhabited an England batting position – but that was as a specialist opener before he was dropped in favour of Joe Root, whose second-innings 180 helped England into their 2-0 lead. Speaking about Compton, Gooch said: "I'm not a selector, so I couldn't give you an indication to whether he would be the next cab off the rank or not."
Unlike others, the Somerset opener has not been seen around the England team on practice days. A clutch of others have, though, and Gooch implicitly acknowledges the significance. "We're looking not just at the players we've got but also the ones coming through," he said. "We introduce them to the other players, and try to prepare them a little bit if an opportunity comes."
It is a path which was followed by Root, who made his Test debut in the middle order only seven months ago after appearing to be a back-up opener behind Compton and captain Alastair Cook in India. The 22-year-old has made giant strides since, and Gooch is one of many impressed by the young Yorkshireman's technique and attitude.
"For every country in the world, sometimes players get thrown in who are not only skilful, have good disciplines and good habits but are very mature characters for young men," said the ex-England captain and record first-class run scorer.
"I think from the first time we all experienced Joe in India, a few months back, it was evident that this lad was very mature mentally, had a good work ethic and was very keen to learn. He's not waiting for advice. He's seeking information, looking for new ideas."
Gooch is wary of building up unfair expectations, but is unsurprisingly optimistic of much more to come from Root. "One innings doesn't make you a regular for a long period of time," he said. "He's shown good promise. He still needs to be tested in different conditions, if he goes down to Australia this winter. He's a young player with great promise and great skill. Anyone who sees him play would think he's going to have a fruitful career – but you can't be sure."
Root is a certainty to head next week for Manchester, a venue where Gooch had mixed fortunes as a Test batsman – including in the 1993 Ashes when he became one of the very few to be out handled ball.
That was in a match England lost, despite their captain's second-innings hundred, on the way to series defeat.
There is a very different balance of power this summer for a home team intent on making their own history.
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