The overseas invasion
The idea of foreign players in county cricket is not intrinsically bad, but surely there have to be limits to the influx
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
07-May-2008
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Matthew Engel asked pertinently in his 2006 Wisden notes what the prime
purpose of a first-class county cricket club should be. To win trophies, to
provide entertainment for members, to enhance cricket within the county, to
provide players for the England team, to make money, or all of these? The
latter is the answer, but I am getting increasingly worried by the obsession
with the first of them. In particular the pathetic dependence of coaches on
Kolpak players.
Overseas players by another name, they have come to England and Wales in
such numbers that they are now certainly having a negative effect on what is
arguably the most important of county cricket's raison d'etres, namely
unearthing, developing and nurturing talented young home-bred players, some
of whom will one day enhance the England side.
In last year's Almanack my own son, who has had a decent all-round start to
this season in his benefit year with Sussex (ironically helped by the fact
that he has been given the new ball because one so-called "British"
Australian fast bowler decided that he was not British after all) wrote a
well-argued defence of the influx of the Kolpaks. They are so called, lest
anyone has forgotten, because a Slovak handball player of that name
established a legal precedent (or so it has been interpreted) that
professional sportsmen whose country of origin has a trade agreement with a
country in the European Union cannot be refused employment because of a
restriction on the number of foreign players imposed by the rules of a
sporting body like the ECB.
But no one has satisfactorily explained to me why Kolpak players have to be employed. If counties did not offer them contracts they could not be accused of
discrimination. In fact, they are coming here in ever increasing numbers,
mainly from a cricket circuit in South Africa that is being gradually
stripped by the voluntary migration of most of the best of its white
players. County coaches employ them because they think that thereby they
will have a better chance of winning trophies.
They are not all Kolpaks. At Warwickshire, Ashley Giles, who has mixed priorities as a new coach and new England selector, has chosen Monde Zondeki as an official overseas player. He already has Jonathan Trott, who has qualified for England despite being
viewed in Cape Town, where he grew up, as a future South Africa international.
Because there is promotion and relegation involved in the highly competitive
County Championship and because there are still three one-day tournaments,
giving the season its feeling of relentlessness, the coaches are forever
having to bolster the resources that have emerged from their own academies.
They are reluctant to give responsibility to their own young players because
the grass always seems to look greener to them beyond their own fence.
Significantly, too, the imported players are relatively cheap to employ.
Despite the IPL, there seems to be no end to the supply. When Lancashire
lost Brad Hodge to the Indian league for five weeks, they wasted no time in
replacing him with Mohammad Yousuf. Sussex have now signed Corey Collymore,
who managed 11 wickets at 43 runs each in England for West Indies
last year and was left out of the one-day team. He is hardly the sharp
spearhead they were trying to find for their attack, in response to the loss
of Ryan Harris. The younger, faster, if less experienced Harris was
registered on a British passport thanks to having a Leicester-born father,
only to renege on a sworn affidavit that he would not play in Australia
except as an overseas player.
Robin M-J said in his Wisden article that the Kolpaks had been, in effect, a
third "overseas" player. But what chance has local youth when that becomes a
fourth, fifth and sixth overseas player too? Last week Leicestershire
fielded six South Africans in their XI. One of their young, locally
educated batsmen, Matthew Boyce, who used to open the batting for Oakham
School with Stuart Broad under the coaching of Frank Hayes and David Steele,
has actually found a way into the side this season and done very well so
far, as has the young wicketkeeper Tom New in his new role as an opening
batsman. But how many other homegrown talents might prosper, given an
extended chance to do so?
The Kolpaks had been, in effect, a third "overseas" player. But what chance has local youth when that becomes a fourth, fifth and sixth overseas player too? | |||
The ECB has given evidence, along with the Rugby Union, to the European
Court in an attempt to argue that they have a right to preserve the
interests of their sport by being able to insist on a given number of
England qualified players, but a spokesman last week said that they "were
not holding their breath" that anything would come of it. The "Performance
Related Fee Payments" by which the ECB sought to encourage counties to field
home qualified cricketers, are clearly not nearly sufficient incentive to
force their hands.
County cricket is, like the IPL, a melting pot of different races, and in
some ways it is all the better for it. Young talent does still emerge, too.
On Sunday spectators at Old Trafford could see seven current and former England
internationals playing in the Friends Provident Trophy match between
Lancashire Lightning and the defending champions, Durham Dynamos - Andrew
Flintoff, James Anderson, Mal Loye, Paul Collingwood, Steve Harmison, Graham
Onions and Phil Mustard, not to mention the South African Neil McKenzie, the
West Indian Gareth Breese, and the two prolific Australians Stuart Law and
Michael Di Venuto. Happily, it was a 23-year-old Lancastrian, Steven Croft,
who hit the six that won the rain-ravaged match.
I accept the point that experienced professionals from overseas - whether
they come to England under the guise of "overseas" players (only one now
allowed), Kolpak imports, or as overseas-bred cricketers who have British or
European passports - can help young players develop. Also that the best
English professionals will still be chosen, and in some cases improved, by
the increased competition.
Leicestershire's chairman, Neil Davidson, and their coach, Tim Boon, claim that the course they have taken is the only one open to them if they are to compete against clubs with far more money than they have, such as Surrey, who only resorted to a Kolpak player for the first time this season. Pedro Collins is doing well, in company with their
other main fast bowlers, the South Africa-born Jade Dernbach, Matt
Nicholson from Australia, and Chris Jordan from Barbados. But Surrey were
themselves bowled out on Monday by a Kent attack whose wicket-takers
consisted of two Pakistan Test players and two South Africans. There must,
surely, be a critical mass.
Christopher Martin-Jenkins has been a leading cricket broadcaster, journalist and author for almost four decades, during which time he has served as a cricket correspondent for the BBC, the Daily Telegraph and the Times