Saturday 14 June 1997
Award for Atherton in time for Lord`s
Christopher Martin-Jenkins.
THE news that Michael Atherton had been awarded an OBE in the
Queen`s Birthday Honours could hardly have been better timed.
The former prime minister, John Major, made his recommendation
before England`s victory at Edgbaston but when Atherton leads
England into the second Test at Lord`s next Thursday it will be
for the 42nd time, breaking the record number of Tests as England captain held by Peter May, CBE.
He would like nothing better, obviously, than to celebrate
with what would be only the second Test victory over Australia at Lord`s this century, but Australia`s chances of getting
back into the series for the Ashes have been improved for two
reasons over the last 48 hours. Paul Reiffel has arrived,
bowled efficiently at Trent Bridge, and will strengthen the attack. Additionally, England have learnt that they will definitely be without Dominic Cork all summer because of a hernia
operation.
England can do without Cork the prima donna, as he has sometimes
been since he bowled out the West Indies at Lord`s two seasons
ago. But he is an all-round cricketer of considerable flair and
when he is fit and emotionally stable, he would strengthen the
side. He will return, no doubt, a wiser man but whether it is for
the tour to the West Indies early next year will depend on an
evaluation of his fitness and other people`s form in the middle
of August.
Chairman David Graveney and his fellow selectors, Graham Gooch
and Mike Gatting, will pick their team for Lord`s tonight
without a formal meeting. The 13 who assembled at Edgbaston -
the victorious XI plus Adam Hollioake and Phil Tufnell - will no
doubt be asked to Lord`s for practice on Tuesday and Wednesday
and it may well be that Mike Smith, of Gloucestershire, the current pick of the left-arm-over men, and Ashley Cowan, Essex`s
fast-improving 22-year-old fastmedium bowler, will be asked to
join the nets, too.
Lord`s, of course, is where every cricketer wants to play, and
the younger the better. Ben Hollioake showed last month how the
place can inspire a cricketer and it is 51 years since the
13-year-old Colin Cowdrey made his first indelible mark on the
game by scoring 75 and 44, not to mention taking eight for 117
with his leg-breaks, for Tonbridge against Clifton. This
morning, it was announced that Sir Colin, already one of the
most decorated and celebrated of all cricketers, who made 22
hundreds for England, led Kent to a championship and England
to victory in the West Indies, and has been president of MCC,
the ICC and the Lord`s Taverners, is to become a Lord.
He will join Lord MacLaurin, chairman of the ECB, not to mention two recent MCC presidents, the Lords Bramall and Griffiths, to give a considerable cricketing voice in the upper
chamber, although Lord Cowdrey`s special brief is intended to
be as a spokesman for school sport.
Cricketing honours also go to Test umpire David Shepherd and
to a tireless worker for youth cricket in Northamptonshire,
John Malfait.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)