Bowlers pose problem for England selectors
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins
THE only thing missing from the recent Acfield report into the
selection and management of the England team was any advice on
how to make silk purses out of sows` ears. When it comes to
choosing their bowlers this, unfortunately, is what England
selection committees, whoever they comprise, are obliged at
present to do. There will, therefore, be some disagreement
when Ray Illingworth sits down for the last time as chairman at
Lord`s today.
Only the choice of the six front-line batsmen will be
straightforward when he joins Mike Atherton, David Lloyd, David
Graveney and Graham Gooch to debate the England teams to tour
Zimbabwe and New Zealand from late November to early March and
the A tour to Australia from October to December.
The annual meeting of the selectors just before or, as in this
case, just after the NatWest final is in many ways the toughest
they face. They know how much joy and misery they have it in
their power to dispense, how many are the winter plans which
hang on marginal decisions between one fast bowler and another.
They often get it wrong. Two winters ago Chris Lewis and Angus
Fraser finished second and third in the Test bowling averages
in Australia without having been chosen for the tour. Of
last year`s bowlers in South Africa - Fraser, Dominic Cork,
Peter Martin, Mark Ilott, Devon Malcolm, Darren Gough, Mike
Watkinson and Richard Illingworth - only two are certain to be
announced tomorrow and in the case of Cork this will only be
the result of a late change to the plan to leave him at home for
the first leg of the tour.
The first idea was for him to miss the flat pitches at
Bulawayo and Harare in order to recharge his batteries and to
build up the strength in his legs needed to carry suspect knees
and heavy work. Preparation for the Ashes series at home would
then begin with the tour of New Zealand which begins early in the
new year. The thinking now is that he should work under the
supervision of the physiotherapist, Wayne Morton, during the
early stages of the tour, doing sufficient work to justify his
leading the attack in the two Test matches, before and after
Christmas.
Cork is now in 17th place in the Coopers and Lybrand Test
ratings, and it is significant, perhaps, that the only other
England bowler in the top 20 (although Heath Streak, of
Zimbabwe, is third, two places ahead of Wasim Akram and
Mushtaq Ahmed) is Angus Fraser. No one in a season when England
have employed 26 players has made even the initial impact
of a Cork or a Gough, neither of whom has sustained his bright
start, and the selectors should surely be considering Fraser
(46 championship wickets) more seriously than they are.
Given his preceived lack of penetration, the most accurate
English fast-medium bowler is Martin, so he would get a place in
my party, especially as the ball swings in Zimbabwe`s
warmth and humidity, along with Cork, Gough, Alan Mullally and
Mark Ealham.
Only 15 players are to be taken, which means, unfortunately, no
place for Andrew Caddick or Dean Headley. Last year`s attempt
to promote a young bowler failed when Richard Johnson, of
Middlesex, discovered he had a stress fracture of the back and it
may be a suspicion that Caddick is not truly fit that will
prevent him returning to his native New Zealand.
Ealham or Martin is also likely to be unlucky in practice
because the selectors seem determined to pick one young fast
bowler: either Andrew Harris, of Derbyshire, or, more likely,
Chris Silverwood of Yorkshire. Either would be a speculative
choice and there would be more sense and justice, I think, in
giving Glen Chapple a chance.
Lewis burned his boats at the Oval, but Headley, who made such a
success of his A tour to South Africa, would be unlucky if he
missed the chance at a higher level after two inconsequential
one-day internationals. It would be a gross injustice for his
Kent colleague Ealham not to be chosen, given his 43 championshp
wickets at 18 each. He always swings the ball and is the
only contending allrounder - Ronnie Irani and Adam Hollioake
are the others - who could play in a Test match as the third
seamer, to allow for two spinners.
Ealham`s batting seems to have been condemned largely on the
basis of one inelegant prod at Lord`s when Mushtaq Ahmed bowled
him around his legs. Only John Crawley played Mushtaq
convincingly, however, and both Zimbabwe and New Zealand may
have a leg-spinner in their Test team. If this tour is to
advance England`s chances of defeating Australia it is
essential that progress is made in the art of batting against
wrist-spin and also that, if possible, the all-rounder quandry
should be settled.
It is partly because Irani`s qualities and limitations are the
most obvious of the three that I would send him to Australia
with the A team and choose Ealham and Hollioake, whose batting
has a look of genuine class. The selectors will probably ask
Hollioake to captain the A team in Australia, but Jason
Gallian`s leadership credentials are equally sound and Hollioake
is ready for Test cricket.
Assuming Atherton, Stewart, Hussain, Thorpe, Crawley and
Knight to be the batting certainties, Russell the specialist
wicketkeeper and Croft the off-spinner, this leaves room for
debate only on the other spinner.
Sometimes issues resolve themselves and that of Phil Tufnell`s
right to return as the best of the English spinners is one such.
His behaviour is deemed now to be mature - not just because of
his own contention that he has become a man who "does the
shopping and goes to bed early". It is widely accepted he is the
best of the leftarm spinners and Croft`s emergence gives the
hope that in future Tufnell may be allowed a more attacking
role than he was during his last spell in the national side.
One could pick not just an A team but a B team too with equal
potential, but the 15 below fulfil the purpose of sending a
youthful side with genuine pretensions to be playing for England
in the next two or three years:
Christopher Martin-Jenkins`s senior team: Atherton (capt),
Stewart, Hussain (vice-capt), Thorpe, Crawley, Knight,
Hollioake, Ealham, Russell, Croft, Tufnell, Cork, Gough, Martin,
Mullally.
A team: Gallian (capt), M Butcher, Walker, Lathwell, Adams,
Irani, Warren, R Rollins, Giles, Solanki, Headley, Lewry,
Silverwood, Harris, Chapple.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph