Allott's success tribute to hard work (12 June 1999)
Geoff Allott has enjoyed socking it to the opposition at the cricket World Cup
01-Jan-1970
12 June 1999
Allott's success tribute to hard work
Geoff Longley
Geoff Allott has enjoyed socking it to the opposition at the cricket
World Cup.
Not only does Allott now hold the World Cup tournament wicket-taking
record, but he also amuses, and perhaps confuses, opponents and the
crowd alike with part of a sock protruding from his right boot.
Allott has cut the toe out of his boot to ease the pressure on his
front foot as he delivers the ball. Wearing two pairs of socks, the
looser outside one acts as a shock absorber.
"It's designed to help stop things like in-grown toe-nails," said
former New Zealand pace bowler Dayle Hadlee.
"Quite a few guys are doing it nowadays. I just used to wear boots
half a size bigger."
New World Cup tournament record wicket-taker Geoff Allott is a
born-again cricketer.
This time last year Allott was in the formative stages of remodelling
his left-arm pace bowling action because of stress fractures to his
lower back which had already sidelined him and which would continue
to recur with his existing action.
Allott's action was a mixed one with his legs coming through front on
and his body side on. Mentor Dayle Hadlee, New Zealand Cricket's
Academy director, said Allott's hyper-extension and counter-rotation
was a recipe for disaster.
"So Geoff had to go through the long process of starting to bowl from
scratch again, literally one step at a time."
Hadlee said there were no guarantees Allott would successfully
re-align his action and get back to international cricket.
"It took a huge amount of effort from him, but it said a lot about
his character that he was prepared to work at it and have the inner
confidence that he could come back."
Hadlee said Allott did a lot of work with NZC's technical adviser,
Ashley Ross, a biomechanic, who used video analysis to break down
Allott's action.
"Ashley also helped straighten his run-up, working with cones."
By getting into the right body position front-on at the bowling
crease, Allott found he was getting the ball to swing back into
right-handed batsmen, a delivery he had previously been unable to
master.
"In the past Geoff had not been a genuine threat to top class batsman
because they knew he could not bring the ball back so they could
afford to leave it. He was only half the bowler he should have been,"
Hadlee said.
Allott also devised a different way to grip the ball from most pace
bowlers, using three fingers around the seam to get stability on the
ball.
Hadlee said Allott had benefited from the Duke ball being used at the
tournament, which was more prone to swing and he expected that to
continue when he switched to the red Duke ball being used for New
Zealand's forthcoming test series against England.
"The Duke seems to fit into the hand nicely and Geoff has also learnt
to bowl the right length on the English wickets, pitching the ball up
and allowing it to swing," Hadlee said.
Last season in New Zealand Allott made good progress and initially
overtook fellow left-arm pace bowler Shayne O'Connor for a place in
the Black Caps test team.
However, fruitless returns in two tests on flat pitches against South
Africa led to O'Connor being recalled and Allott returning to 12th
man duties.
While sidelined, Allott had another session with Ross to refine his
technique which led to his bowling impressively in the one-day series
against the South Africans and earning the accolade as New Zealand's
most successful one-day bowler of the season with 18 wickets, 14 of
them against South Africa.
Now Allott, apart from taking the most wickets at a World Cup
tournament -- bettering the previous record of 18 jointly held by
Roger Binny (India 1983), Craig McDermott (Australia, 1987), and
Wasim Akram (Pakistan, 1992), is poised to tilt at another mark.
He has 42 wickets from 20 one-day appearances and is challenging the
player who took the quickest 50 wickets, India's Agit Agarkar from 23
games.
Allott has now forced the cricket world to take notice of his bowling
skills after previously being best known at international level for
his batting exploits at No. 11.
Allott made the longest duck in test history, staying at the wicket
for 101 minutes against South Africa last season at Eden Park without
scoring a run.
Big sock to absorb the shock
Geoff Allott has enjoyed socking it to the opposition at the cricket
World Cup.
Not only does Allott now hold the World Cup tournament wicket-taking
record, but he also amuses, and perhaps confuses, opponents and the
crowd alike with part of a sock protruding from his right boot.
Allott has cut the toe out of his boot to ease the pressure on his
front foot as he delivers the ball. Wearing two pairs of socks, the
looser outside one acts as a shock absorber.
"It's designed to help stop things like in-grown toe-nails," said
former New Zealand pace bowler Dayle Hadlee.
"Quite a few guys are doing it nowadays. I just used to wear boots
half a size bigger."
Source :: The Christchurch Press