England captain Michael Vaughan insisted there would be no complacency within his side when the hosts take on struggling Zimbabwe on the opening day of the ICC Champions Trophy at Edgbaston here Friday.
In June last year Zimbabwe beat England by four wickets in a One-day International (ODI) at Trent Bridge. But since then, their cricket has plummeted with 15 senior players sacked following a selection row sparked by axed captain Heath Streak's claims that some members of the team were being picked on racial grounds rather than merit.
Heavy defeats against Sri Lanka earlier this year saw Zimbabwe suspended from Test cricket and under young skipper Tatenda Taibu they lost eight straight games.
But that was nothing compared to the embarrassment of a four-wicket defeat against Champions Trophy make-weights the United States in a warm-up match on Wednesday.
However, Vaughan said England were treating Friday's game just like any other. "We're preparing and planning in the same fashion as we would if we were playing any side in the world," said Vaughan.
"We've got footage of them playing Australia and we'll watch that and come up with plans like we do for every player in the world."
Victory over Zimbabwe would set England up for the sterner challenge of Sri Lanka at Southampton a week on Friday where a win would book an Edgbaston semi-final, possibly against world champions Australia.
And Vaughan said the compact nature of the event meant the winners did not have to be at their best for long.
"There are a lot of good teams in the tournament and it's a mini-World Cup where three good wins and you're in the final. I think most teams will all fancy their chances because it's that sort of tournament - you only have to peak for a couple of weeks and you're in a final."
Zimbabwe's plight worsened Wednesday with the news that wicket-keeper Taibu, at 21 the youngest skipper in world cricket, faced a late fitness test Friday on a hamstring injury.
But despite the on and off-field problems confronting Zimbabwe cricket, Taibu remained upbeat about the team's long-term prospects.
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