Charles Randall: Cowan is caught out by surprise selection (10 Sep 1997)
ASHLEY COWAN was sitting on the Essex team bus on the way to a game at Old Trafford when he heard the news of his se- lection for the West Indies tour yesterday morning
10-Sep-1997
Wednesday 10 September 1997
Cowan is caught out by surprise selection
By Charles Randall
ASHLEY COWAN was sitting on the Essex team bus on the way to a
game at Old Trafford when he heard the news of his se- lection
for the West Indies tour yesterday morning.
Cowan, 22, could not believe it. "I was dumbfounded," he said.
"I didn`t know what to say, but my team-mates were over the moon.
A team bundle was nearly called for - a celebration.
"I thought there might be a chance of an A tour, but that was
it. That was as far as I was looking ahead. If I`d got an A
tour, I would have been the happiest person alive."
Cowan had taken no notice of frequent media comment about his
England chances. "That never really matters until the decision
is actually made. I had a good start to the season, but then I
came to a slump and I thought, if I was to be critical with myself, that would cost me a tour."
Having been rejected as a youth player by Leicestershire and
Worcestershire because of a chronic back problem, this son of a
Hertfordshire village cricketer was recommended to Essex by
Ray East while a minor county player with Suffolk and when still
a Framlingham schoolboy.
Cowan might have been gangly in those days but now he could be
described as big and athletic, almost 6ft 4in and over 14 stone.
And after two successive NatWest Trophy finals, his face has become familiar to millions.
His action is so fluid, to the point of being languid, that it
is sometimes hard to believe he is bowling seriously, and he is
all too aware of this impression.
"There`s no doubt when I bowl that I give 100 per cent," he
said, "but people still think that I`ve got a couple of yards
left in me because of the way I am so comfortable with my run up
and action. I do bowl the odd ball faster when everything
clicks and the ball comes out right."
The remodelling of his front-on action at Chelmsford seems to
have been a significant success after his back operation
three years ago. His out-swingers from a distinctive upright action grooved nicely last year, and he made his name with a championship hat-trick against Gloucestershire at Colchester.
He knows that he might have no more than a minor role in the
Caribbean. "If I get a chance - or when I get a chance - I`m going to take it with both hands and prove to everybody I`m not
just a youngster and that I can play," he said before donning
his coloured clothing for yesterday`s rescheduled 40-over
Sunday League game at Old Trafford.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)