Australian Under-19 to provide test of English mettle (30 July 1999)
The Australian Under-19 side, who start the NatWest one-day series against their English counterparts at Canterbury this morning, will bring some quality and mystique to a late summer
01-Jan-1970
30 July 1999
Australian Under-19 to provide test of English mettle
Brendan Gallagher
The Australian Under-19 side, who start the NatWest one-day series
against their English counterparts at Canterbury this morning, will
bring some quality and mystique to a late summer.
Spectators at the St Lawrence Ground, and indeed viewers on Sky
television, will undoubtedly be watching Australian Test stars of the
near future.
When the young Australians last visited in 1991, they lost just one
of their 16 games. That tour in next to no time spawned Test
cricketers in Damien Martyn, Adam Gilchrist, Mike Kasprowicz, Greg
Blewett and Simon Cook.
Their solitary reverse was a strange affair. In the second four-day
international at Chelmsford, they declared their second innings on
338 for three only to watch England score the 403 required to win by
four wickets.
England, the under-19 world champions, are intensely competitive at
this level. The talent manifestly exists. It is what happens next
that continues to undermine the English game.
Eleven of the Australian tour party are members, either full or part
time, of their much-vaunted Commonwealth Cricket Academy, which
offered them eight-month contracts back in April. After this tour
finishes, the Academy take on all six Australian state second XIs in
an organised championship before the year group disband at Christmas.
After that, the intimidating world of Sheffield Shield cricket
beckons.
"At any one time in Australia there can only be 66 first-class
cricketers," says Richard Done, who helps Rod Marsh, the country's
former wicketkeeper, coach the Academy side and Australia Under-19.
"By definition therefore you have to be playing at a very high
standard even to get a game."
In such a tough environment, international quality players are
recognised almost instantly. Those who are only "very good" or have a
slight chink in their armour return to grade cricket or are never
seen again. The likes of Geoff Barr, who scored a fine unbeaten
century for Australia in the third Test at Old Trafford eight years
ago, or Aaron Littlejohn, the quickest of their fast bowlers,
ultimately flattered to deceive.
Of the England party from 1991, three have played Test cricket - John
Crawley (Lancashire), Ronnie Irani (Essex) and Mark Lathwell
(Somerset) - and another seven make a living from the county game -
Phil Weston (Worcestershire), Mal Loye (Northamptonshire), Glen
Chapple (Lancashire), Ben Smith (Leicestershire), Rob Rollins
(Essex), Gary Welch (Warwickshire) and Adrian Shaw (Glamorgan). In
addition, Richard Pearson and Mark Broadhurst enjoyed long spells in
the professional game.
As for today, there is no real form guide as England will be making
their seasonal debut. The Australians, in typically strident form,
crushed an ECB (South) XI in two warm-up games at Eton on Tuesday and
Wednesday.
"It's a fantastic challenge, exactly the sort of opposition our young
cricketers should be confronting," Tim Boon the England coach, says.
"Their batsmen are all little Michael Slaters - well organised, quick
feet and a large array of shots - and they have a well balanced
bowling attack. But we've got class players as well."
England (from): M Gough (Durham, capt), I Bell (Warwicks), G
Bridge (Durham), M Bulbeck (Somerset), M Carberry (Surrey), R Dawson,
J Inglis (Yorks), I Flannagan, J Foster, G Napier, W Jefferson
(Essex), D Harrison, M Wallace (Glamorgan), G Haywood (Sussex), R
Logan (Northants), C Liptrot (Worcs), J Maunders (Middx), M Whilley
(Notts).
Australia: M Klinger (Victoria, capt), M Clarke, P Byrom, L
Zammit (NSW), N Hauritz, M Johnson, D Mackenzie, A Rowe (Queensland),
S Clingeleffer (Tasmania), D Harris, P Rofe, L Williams (Sth
Australia), A Voges (Western Australia), B Oliver (Victoria).
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)