CMJ: Atherton set to call it a day (29 August 1997)
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
29-Aug-1997
Friday 29 August 1997
Atherton set to call it a day
Christopher Martin-Jenkins.
MIKE ATHERTON is widely expected to announce this morning that,
in the interests of his future as a Test batsman and therefore
of the team, he has asked to be relieved of the England captaincy. A decision has been requested of him by today, like
it or not, and the short-term beneficiary may well turn out to
be Atherton`s sometime rival and more recently loyal lieutenant, Alec Stewart.
The latest statements by the chairman of selectors, David
Graveney, represent a distinct change of tone and posi- tion.
Having applied a warm sponge to the forehead of his captain
in the wake of England`s defeat in the Ashes series and the
consoling victory at the Oval, he issued what was more like the
crack of a whip yesterday.
Atherton missed the Roses match after the sixth Test to allow
himself a few days of deliberation. Even if his conclusion is
one which no one expects - namely that he has decided, after
all, to carry on - straws in the wind suggest that it would no
longer be a foregone conclusion that he would get the job. Yet
Graveney had made it abundantly clear even before England beat
Australia by 19 runs, not least because of astute captaincy on
the final afternoon, that Atherton was his man for the West Indies, provided he wanted the job.
Discussions with his fellow selectors, Graham Gooch and Mike Gatting, and, no doubt, opinions sought or offered from other members of the England management board, seem to have changed the
picture, to the extent that Atherton is no longer assured of the
captaincy. It has, in any case, been evident for some time that
the burden has become intolerable. Only an Ashes victory would
have lightened the load.
A decision on his replacement will be made on Sunday. It looks
likely that Stewart will be preferred, if only to buy time for
Adam Hollioake or Nasser Hussain to make a case for be- coming
captain on a longer-term basis.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)