He has spent his time wisely, working closely with Victoria coach Andrew McDonald and assistant coach Mick Lewis, recalibrating his batting rhythm after a lengthy spell following the best summer of his career. His specific focus has been the moving ball, playing under his eyes and not following the line.”It’s probably just trying to play the ball late with batting stuff,” Harris said. “Going over to England that’s probably the main focus. It can be hard on the indoor wickets with the way that they play. Just trying to hold my line which I’ve spoken about before.”He has vast experience playing league cricket England, spending two summers in Taunton, but none playing at first-class level.Opting not to play county cricket, unlike Marnus Labuschagne and Cameron Bancroft, has its pros and cons. He could have continued his sparkling form from the back end of the Sheffield Shield season, where he passed the magical 1000-run milestone for the season and was player of the Shield final with a fine century, but he also risked burn out.”I’m quite aware that I might not walk out in the first game in England and come out straight away and blaze them,” Harris said. “But if I give myself the opportunity to come out in the middle and occupy the crease for a little while, I think my form will hopefully carry through into England. It could have been quite easy to keep going but if I kept going then I could have been at the point now where I’d had enough and needed a break. I think having the break will work for me.”He learned some valuable lessons last summer about the demands of Test cricket.”I was knackered after the Test series and even just to have a week off before BBL and Shield cricket was really good,” he said. “To be able to have an extended break now to do some training and stay at home for a bit has been really good. I think it makes you hungry and to actually really want to go out there and play.”It’s one of those things where it wasn’t so much physical exhaustion, it was more mentally, I think it was just such a big emotional rollercoaster of my first summer. I think from having the experience I’ll be better for it. Obviously the Ashes will be another kettle of fish if I’m there but I think I’ll be better for the run.”However, he knows he is no guarantee to make the Ashes squad let alone walk out to bat alongside Warner in the first Test. Joe Burns made 180 in his last Test as Harris’ opening partner but has had the misfortune of coming home from his county stint with Lancashire to recover from post-viral fatigue.Burns has recovered and was added to the Australia A squad after initially being left out. It appears that Harris and Burns will have a three-match shoot-out to partner Warner, but Harris is unperturbed.”There’s definitely still a bit of water to go under the bridge,” Harris said. “But I felt like I finished off the summer in really strong form and did as much as I could. A couple of [Sheffield Shield] 90s I could have turned into a couple more hundreds but I feel like after my first couple of Test series I finished the summer strongly. It could have been easy to peter out and let it slip but I was really driven to finish off well. There’s definitely competition for spots but I feel like I’m doing all the right things at the moment.”

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