Atherton remains confident about keeping Test place (13 May 1998)
NOBODY could be more upbeat about the new season than Michael Atherton, whose campaign to guarantee himself a place in England's Test team against South Africa begins in earnest with Lancashire's championship match at Canterbury today
13-May-1998
13 May 1998
Atherton remains confident about keeping Test place
By Charles Randall
NOBODY could be more upbeat about the new season than Michael
Atherton, whose campaign to guarantee himself a place in
England's Test team against South Africa begins in earnest with
Lancashire's championship match at Canterbury today.
His place has been inked in anyway, if hints by David Graveney,
chairman of selectors, David Lloyd, coach, and Alec Stewart,
Atherton's successor as captain, can be so interpreted, but a
bucket of runs would make the situation much tidier.
Atherton said he had been looking forward to the season more than
any since he left Cambridge University nine years ago. "It comes
from a feeling that I have to prove something again, to create
the next part of my career. It's a good motivating force and I've
even got butterflies in my stomach," he said.
Atherton has had little chance, with Lancashire, to prove himself
after his atrocious form for England in the West Indies. The
rain-sodden start to the English season has seen to that.
He insisted yesterday after practice at Old Trafford that he felt
"absolutely fine" and dismissed a suggestion that he might not
make the England side. "I'm not worried in the slightest," he
said. "I've not lost my place yet, in any case."
The first month, dominated by rain and one-day games, has been
mediocre for him rather than worryingly poor. Last year his
record was worse at the equivalent stage and he went on to score
a hundred against Australia in the second one-day international
at the Oval.
Atherton's contribution in the Texaco Trophy series tended to be
overshadowed in the public mind by the Hollioake brothers.
This time a return to England's one-day side has apparently been
ruled out, and Atherton has two championship games - against Kent
and Essex - to settle misgivings about his batting at Test level.
His average of 18.09 in 11 innings against the West Indies was
paltry.
In Atherton's favour is that the weather has muted the Test
claims of rival opening batsmen, with two berths to fill if
Stewart takes the wicketkeeping gloves and drops down the order.
Darren Maddy, of Leicestershire, would be high on the probables
list, but Nick Knight's form has been wobbling and Steve James
has had no further opportunity to make an unanswerable case after
two golden years of run-making.
Kent, with Dean Headley leading a good seam attack, should
provide a stern shake-up for Atherton and his colleagues, not
least because Lancashire have not won a championship match at
Canterbury since 1936.
Yorkshire, the only county to have won both their matches, should
make it three at Northampton, especially if David Byas - after
two hundreds and a fifty in three innings - and Chris Silverwood,
with the ball, continue their momentum.
Durham, who play Essex, suffered a blow when David Boon, their
captain, broke a toe batting in the nets. He is hoping to recover
for the Benson and Hedges Cup quarter-final in Yorkshire on May
27.
Shaun Humphries, 25, makes his championship debut for Sussex at
Nottingham to start what he hopes will be a wicketkeeping career,
replacing Peter Moores, who has retired at 35 to concentrate on
coaching. If Moores's example were followed more widely among
certain other counties, professional cricket would be healthier
for it.
Hampshire have awarded a benefit next season to all-rounder Kevan
James, 37, who joined the club 14 years ago from Middlesex.
The first Test between England and South Africa, from June 4-8,
will be held at Edgbaston and not as stated in yesterday's tour
itinerary.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)