Oram wary of World T20
Jacob Oram's catalogue of serious injuries is wearing him down but the lure of the World Twenty20 has motivated another comeback. A torn patella tendon in the first ODI against Australia last month ruled him out of the IPL, where his price tag was US$675,000, and continued a desperate battle with his body.
Oram, speaking at New Zealand's training camp in Australia, said he is "good to go" for the Twenty20 tournament, which is a relief to himself and the side. In form Oram is one of the game's most brutal hitters and a useful medium pacer, but he has been hampered by injuries - back, calf and Achilles problems occurred before the latest setback - throughout his career
"The knee is alright, at the moment there are no problems," Oram told Cricinfo. "It's nearly six weeks now since I was hurt, but it could have been a lot worse. It could have been four to six months instead of four to six weeks. It's still been hellishly frustrating, especially missing the Australian series, which is the big one."
There was also the financial pain of losing his huge IPL fee, but throughout his rehabilitation he remained focussed on the event in the Caribbean. New Zealand open the tournament when they face Sri Lanka in Guyana on April 30 and back up against Zimbabwe on May 4.
"The carrot for me was the World Twenty20, which is still a massive event, so I pinned my hopes to that," he said. "I've had to start looking at the big picture. Three or four years ago I used to rush back and it doubled or tripled the time out. This time it hasn't been like a winter break and I'm looking forward to more."
During the lay-off he was at home with his wife and six-month old son and the 31-year-old knows his life is changing. He has already retired from Tests after 33 games to prolong his limited-overs career, which includes 139 ODIs and 23 Twenty20s.
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