Johannesburg: England's opening batsmen certainly believe in the
safety in numbers theory and displayed a brave front on Wednesday when
suggestions of a resumption of the ``Anglo Boer War'' style
confrontation between Mike Atherton and Allan Donald was downplayed by
their new coach Duncan Fletcher.
Only 27 days into his new job, Fletcher, the former South Africa A and
Western Province mentor and mastermind now overseeing England's latest
strategy plan, felt too much was being made of the Trent Bridge
hostilities between the combatants when the Test series starts at the
end of November.
Ironically Steve Dunne, the New Zealand umpire who turned down that
particular appeal against Atherton off Donald's bowling in the Trent
Bridge dust up, is handling, with David Orchard, South Africa's first
Test of the season when they meet Zimbabwe in Bloemfontein which
starts on Friday.
Flanking Atherton at the media briefing in a posh Sandton hotel were
Alec Stewart and Mark Butcher. Although Stewart, relieved of the
England captaincy earlier this year, batted at five in the fourth Test
against New Zealand, which England lost by 83 runs, he has often been
Atherton's partner.
When he was eventually cornered, Fletcher agreed there could be some
interesting individual battles, but fast bowlers were always keen to
gain the psychological high ground early on in a series.
``There's a lot of pride among the top batsmen when they meet bowlers
such as Donald and yes . . . it could interesting,'' was about all he
was going to offer on the subject, preferring to comment on the
fitness of three players whose tour prospects were shaky until a week
or so ago.
The irrepressible Darren Gough seemed to be cheerful enough when
sprinting up the escalator before meeting the media while Darren Maddy
and Alex Tudor have been cleared but there is a suspicion the
21-year-old Surrey all-rounder is not 100 percent fit and Chris
Silverwood, from all accounts, is still on standby in Bangladesh where
England A are on tour.
If the new England coach was not prepared to comment outright on
Atherton-Donald confrontation, you could gather from his tone that
some thought had been obviously been given to a resumption of
hostilities at the Wanderers.
Which means that Donald's form against Zimbabwe in the Test starting
Friday is going to be monitored from whatever TV coverage is on offer
if not a ``spy operation'' by one of The Management team.
Atherton's own comment was, like that of Fletcher's a typical shrug,
he was looking forward to ``getting some runs again'' and hoped ``my
form will go someway to helping England win (the series)''. But the
``Boer War'' theory, first raised in Trent Bridge during the fourth
Test last year was carried over to the infamous Leeds match where a
particularly odious Pakistan umpire, Javed Akhtar, looking more like
the manager of a third division soccer side than a member of the ICC
panel, gave the South African batsmen how his interpretation of the
lbw law differed from that from the official code.
What with his shoulder injury Atherton was not considered fit enough
to play for England in this year's World Cup so there was no way
Donald was able to bowl to the highly miffed Lancashire opener and
former captain.
The pace and aggression generated by Donald when bowling to Atherton
at Trent Bridge is still considered one of the finest spells of Test
match play of the 1990s.
It was even given space on Australian TV where the hardnosed Channel
Nine team agreed it was ``like watching the West Indians letting
themselves go at Allan Border''.
England captain Nasser Hussain made all the right noises when he said
the aim was to win the series and felt the statistics had shown the
batsmen were far better than recent form (against New Zealand)
suggested and expressed confidence of quality performances throughout
the tour.
It is their batting though where England are at their most vulnerable
and this is also the view of some seasoned commentators who saw enough
during the World Cup to wonder about sliding standards.
"As we are looking to the future we have brought along a number of
young players on this tour," said Fletcher. "We try not to listen too
much to the views of others and feel we are better placed to know
where we are going."