England unworried by airport incident
We are finally in , after the sort of day you don’t expect on a cricket tour to New Zealand;
Airport incidents and security scares are the last things that normally happen in peaceful, picturesque Christchurch. The impact on the England team has been minimal, though.
I switched on the radio in my Christchurch hotel room at 9am to hear early reports of with a woman arrested after reportedly attacking one of the pilots and threatening to blow up the aircraft.
It soon became apparent that it was being treated as a major security incident, the airport was closing and all those inside were being evacuated.
My sympathy goes out to the pilots and passengers on board that flight from Blenheim to Christchurch, as it was clearly a frightening and disturbing incident.
A number of media were due to be on early flights out of Christchurch, including Test Match Special’s Bryan Waddle, and they had been evacuated from the terminal and were waiting around in car parks.
The England and New Zealand teams were far removed from it all, though. I went down to breakfast, where a number of England players were tucking in.
None of them had year heard about the incident, nor that the airport had closed.
However, England manager Phil Neale and security man Reg Dickason were already making phone calls, and during the next few hours, as players emerged to check out as normal at 10.30am, they simply found they had to wait around in the hotel lounge to see when they might be able to go to the airport.
No panic, no worry, just the prospect of a potentially long, tedious wait.
Cue the laptops, iPods, and in Jimmy Anderson’s case his guitar, to keep themselves amused for however long it took.
Aggers, Arlo White, producer Adam Mountford and I were also waiting there, surrounded by our suitcases, waiting to hear when the airport was reopening. We didn’t have to wait long.
By 11.45am we were on our way to catch our flight – scheduled for 12.15 - with no idea as to whether it would be going at all.
With such a backlog of flights, the queue for check in was horrendous. Several of the English media had already given up hope and hired cars to drive the four or five hours to Picton, in the hope of getting a place on the three-hour ferry trip to Wellington (the flight takes a mere 30 minutes).
Luckily for us, we stuck with the queue, and unbelievably our flight was suddenly called.
By 2.30pm we were safely in Wellington. I’m still not sure where some of our media colleagues have got to. Perhaps they’re on a long, remote road somewhere in the South island or heaving up and down on the choppy waters of the Cook Strait!
As for the England team, they boarded a plane soon after us with no waiting around in the airport, as they tend to arrive and get whisked straight through.
The only impact on the team was that they missed their scheduled practise session in Wellington. Ryan Sidebottom didn’t think it would duly unsettle them ahead of the first one-day international on Saturday.
However it does mean an opportunity missed for those players wanting to impress in practise ahead of team selection for the opening match.
Certainly there are some interesting choices to be made in the middle order with Ravi Bopara challenging Dimitri Mascarenhas and Owais Shah, who both played in .
Alastair Cook was in great form with a century in a warm-up match early in the tour, so should come back in to open the batting at the expense of Luke Wright.
As for me, I was never keen on the ferry option. I sailed from Picton to Wellington a few years ago when the swell was up to five metres. My ferry was the last allowed to leave the port, as the weather was so bad.
Unfortunately it only got worse and the swell bigger as we headed into open water. It was like being on a Pirate Ship ride at the fair. The heaving was relentless, it took an hour longer than usual, and almost every passenger was seasick.
As fast as the crew were picking up used sick bags they were having to hand out fresh ones. To make matters worse, the time it took us to cross these unforgiving seas meant that darkness fell during the journey.
Up until that point, watching the horizon had been my only hope. When darkness fell, that too, soon disappeared.
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The wife and I made the ferry trip last year. It was better than getting the ferry between Portsmouth Cherbourg and if they've got any sense they'll drop into a couple of vineyards in Marlborough on the way.
At least they'll get something good to drink that way.
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Dispiriting to read that Shah's place is even now not secure. Can England get it wrong yet again ?
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Dispiriting to read that Shah's place is even now not secure. Can England get it wrong yet again ?
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I would very much hope that Shah is not dropped. He done brilliantly in a very difficult position in the order since coming back. Has to be one of Dimi, Bopara and Wright for the number 7 space. Wright is not a good enough bowler to be 4th seamer, so it would have to be Dimi ahead of Bopara on current form. The other 10, with the possible exception of Cook, pick themselves at the moment.
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England will beat New Zealand in forms of the game....
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My sisters ex boyfriends mum was on the plane of this incident. I was very shocked when my sister informed me of what happend. apprently my neighber saw it comeing over his house but being at work i depressingly did not get to see.
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As an england fan heading to new zealand in a week or so and planning to take the ferry from Picton to Wellington - your blog has left me with an extreme sense of worry! I once got seasick on a rowing boat on a lake!
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In my opinion i dont think cook should play. Bell and mustard to open which means Kp gets more time to bat at 3 and then u can bring in the youth of ravi,if Owais is dropped im not goin to be happy. Dimi should move to 8 and swanny to 7.
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The day I went on this ferry, round Christmas time about five years ago, it was one of the calmest crossings imaginable - I guess it all depends!
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"My sympathy goes out to the pilots and passengers on board that flight from Blenheim to Christchurch, as it was clearly a frightening and disturbing incident" -you are clearly a great human being as well as being very knowledgeable about cricket.
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Did the crossing between Picton - Wellington Feb 2007 - Cooks Straits like a mill-pond - glorous weather - most of the passengers on up decks sun-bathing! Please do not be put off by report - it a lovely crossing - and a fantastic country!
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Last time i took that ferry, it was an evil journey. I tried to be strong and not throw up even though the vomit was lapping at the toilet doors, and made it into Wellington- where i threw up at the side of the road!Nice!Anyway- as for the cricket, we just need to play like we did in the 20/20.Simple!
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To Jonathan: In all forms NZ will be beaten? check the results here in NZ - Your boy's don't travel well and also come highly overrated.
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Im from Christchurch and have never been on a bad crossing on the Interislander or Bluebridge(the two main ferries between Welly and Picton). Not to say that they dont happen. The regular ferries are ships and have several lounges, restaurants and a movie theatre from memory. You dont feel the swaying at all unless the weather is really bad. The fast ferry (a catamaran) is smaller and gets there in about 1&1/2-2hrs, but you can probably feel the swells a little more. If you've got time this trip is really gorgeous going through the Malborough Sounds. Hope all you Poms traveling to NZ enjoy your trip and the cricket. Go the Blackcaps!
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I'm a baggage loader for Air New Zealand at Christchurch airport and I was at work during the day which was a little bit crazy. I think seeing the English cricketers in the queue to board their plane and saying hello and congratulating them on the 20/20 win was the highlight for me from quite a strange day!
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To all those concerned about the Picton to Wellington ferry crossing, you'll be relieved to hear that those journalists who took the ferry experienced calm, glassy waters, and even reported spotting a few dolphins (although I suspect the latter may have been exaggerated due to our gloating that we managed to get on a flight).
Sir Ian Botham came over on the ferry by choice. He never flies between the islands because he loves the journey so much.
Fingers crossed for fine weather!
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On December 13, 2007 an employee of Midwest Airlines in Philadelphia was fired from his job. The reason being given that a passenger ticketed for the following day, travelled a day earlier without the knowledge of the gate staff.
How very convenient to get rid of an employee. Was there a report made to TSA? Was there an inquiry as to how the passenger walked through security?
Was this information available to the press? Who was this passenger and what happened to the passenger?
Scarry but true everything brushed under the carpet to save heavy penalties and cause any embarassment to the management at Philadelphia International Airport.
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Hello:
Nice hearing about what is going on in the other side of the world, despite the sea sickness, flight scares etc. Please keep yor commentaries as so many people lie me are reading it. And I am in New York. If you get a chance, please visit :
www.thendian playboy dot com
Cheers!
Richard
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So why does Ian Bell say in his Independent column that the team went by road?
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I only read these sports blogs occasionally, because to do so frequently would drive me to distraction. Why? The unforgiveably poor standard of English grammar, vocabulary and spelling in almost every offering.
The clumsy, poorly edited, inarticulate dross served up by the ' journalists' to which you are responding is little better. I thought it was a cornerstone of its charter that the ´óÏó´«Ã½ would forever be custodian of correct English. But that cannot be when it seems the sole qualification required to be a reporter/journalist/presenter is an unstoppable desire to be one: to be famous; to get your fizzog on the box.
When did the presentation of news and weather as plain, unbiased fact become subverted to bland, shallow, hyperbolic entertainment (just like this sentence) for the hard of thinking?
Ladies, gentlemen, enjoy your cricket, read your favourite reports, but please, curb your desire to strew your syntactical indiscretions over the internet.
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