CMJ: Lancashire rest Atherton for battle ahead (29 Jul 1998)
Michael Atherton, the man who set up England's victory at Trent Bridge by blunting the threat of Allan Donald, will miss Lancashire's important championship match against Leicestershire this week at the request of the England selectors , writes
29-Jul-1998
29 July 1998
Lancashire rest Atherton for battle ahead
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
Michael Atherton, the man who set up England's victory at Trent
Bridge by blunting the threat of Allan Donald, will miss Lancashire's
important championship match against Leicestershire this week at the
request of the England selectors, writes Christopher
Martin-Jenkins.
David Graveney, the chairman, secured the agreement of Lancashire's
chairman, Jack Simmons, before the completion of the 98 not out which
took Atherton's aggregate in the series to 476 runs from four Tests at
an average of 68.
Lancashire's cricket secretary, Dave Edmundson, said during the
NatWest Trophy quarter-final at Old Trafford yesterday that the county
club recognised "the rigours" involved in opening the batting against
Donald and Shaun Pollock and the concentration required to bat for
long periods in the intense atmosphere of Test cricket.
The club's willing compliance will strengthen opinion in the shires
that the gentlemen's agreement under which all county chairmen have
guaranteed to give sympathetic consideration to the resting of England
players at key moments in a season is preferable to any binding order,
or even to the central employment of England players.
A committee under Sussex's joint-chairman, Don Trangmer, is viewing
the possibility of central employment from all angles and have already
concluded that the matter cannot be considered in isolation. They are
aware that an increased number of international matches - perhaps as
many as seven Tests and 10 one-day internationals each season - are
likely to be part of the regular diet of home seasons from 2000.
Not all the internationals would necessarily include England, if, for
example, this season's experiment with a triangular tournament is
successful, but the probability is that England players, in common
with their counterparts overseas, will gradually play less and less
domestic cricket.
Atherton is in the most commanding batting form of his life but he has
still contributed only 324 first-class runs for Lancashire this season
and his mental stamina seems to fail him when the challenge is less
demanding.
It is one reason why Atherton has recently joined an increasing number
of influential people who believe that a tier of regional cricket,
between the County Championship and Test cricket, would be a better
way forward than two divisions.
The championship is quite difficult and competitive enough for young
players still learning the trade, like Andrew Flintoff, Darren Maddy,
Ben Hollioake and Alex Tudor. As figures prove, is it no breeze either
for Test players like Atherton and Brian Lara. In order to harden
themselves for the international game, however, Atherton believes that
the time has come for emerging players, and the best of the
established ones, to be stretched further.
The imponderable is how many regional games a season would be feasible
if home international players were to take part. If they are to be
kept fresh there would be a limit. If they were not regularly involved
the standard would drop, a point equally true of a twodivisional
format.
After England's eight-wicket win at Trent Bridge the hope is that the
autumn review of the programme from 2000 onwards, which Lord MacLaurin
will chair on Oct 13 and 14, might be undertaken from a position of
greater strength. There would certainly be more chance of a balanced
debate if England could defeat South Africa at Headingley and wrap up
a five-match series at last.
At the most intense period of the contest between Donald, Pollock,
Atherton and Nasser Hussain on Sunday evening the BBC recorded an
exceptional peak viewing figure of 4.7 million. Through the afternoon
on BBC2 the average figure was 2.8 million, according to audience
research. The epic finish of the Old Trafford Test, also on a Monday,
attracted a peak figure of 3.7 million.
These figures and the extraordinary last day crowd of 12,024 at
Nottingham, a city which for all its long cricketing history has not
been noted previously for fervent support on the big occasion,
eloquently speak of the link between the success of the national side
and the well-being of the English game generally.
Alan Mullally's five for 18 for Leicestershire yesterday has
strengthened the probability of an unchanged England party for the
fifth Test, leaving possible experiments with players such as Alex
Tudor and Ed Giddins for the Sri Lanka match at the end of August. Not
that liberties can be taken with Sri Lanka.
England's coach, David Lloyd, said yesterday: "I'm not averse to
changes but wrist spin always seems to play a part in any series
England play and I hope Ian Salisbury will at least be in the squad
for Leeds."
Headingley has actually encouraged spin bowling in the last two
seasons, at least when the weather has been dry, and if three
specialist fast bowlers proved sufficient on a flat pitch at Trent
Bridge they might be enough for Headingley, too. Andrew Caddick (48
wickets at 26) and Martin Bicknell (46 at 17) should also be in the
running if an extra fast bowler is needed.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)