Thursday 21 August 1997
Sixth Test: England need Oval win for captain and country
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
THERE is a sub-plot to the final Test of the summer, starting
at the Oval this morning, but it needs to be emphasised that the
game is an event in itself. The series may be Australia`s by
right but all tickets for the first four days were sold when
frost was still in the ground.
There were not many reasons then for thinking that England
might have a chance of regaining the Ashes, which proves
that there is more to the demand for Test cricket than patriotism or, as an Australian might describe it, blind optimism.
Equally, there is much more at stake in this game than whether
Australia win the series 3-1, 4-1 or 3-2. English cricket -
the professional game, the business and the national pas- time
- cannot afford the further sickening blow to its selfesteem
which would be implicit in a fourth successive win for Australia.
Nor, as everyone knows, can the captain.
Oddly enough, Mike Atherton is not the only leader considering
resignation. Before the start of the series Mark Taylor said that
whichever captain finished on the losing side would probably
lose his job. In the event Atherton will resign his commission only if he so chooses, whereas the winner, Taylor, is seriously contemplating quitting while he is ahead.
Taylor was the man under the laser beam of media specu- lation
when he made his prophecy. A curious twist is possible now: that
Taylor will retire while deservedly wreathed in laurels, and
that Atherton might yet accept the pleadings of the chairman of
selectors that he should continue as captain in the West Indies. For that to happen, however, the probability is that not
only will England have to win in the sort of rousing manner that
they did in Atherton`s second Test in charge at the Oval
four years ago, but that the captain himself will have to overturn his recent run of low scores for both his county and his
country.
It is already certain that he will not be in charge for the oneday tournament in Sharjah in December, which in turn probably
rules out any distant dreams of leading England to success in
the World Cup in 1999. He seemed to be speaking in the past
when he said that captaining England had been "enjoyable and an
immense challenge".
Repeating that it would not be until after this match had been
won, lost or drawn that he assessed the situation, Atherton
added: "You have to ask yourself whether you`re still the best
man for the job. Do you still have the drive, the ener- gy and
the enthusiasm?"
Atherton is not yet 30, so it is some indication of the weight
that has been on his back that such questions should almost
seem to have been inviting negative answers. An England win to
finish the series as they started it, and an overdue 12th Test
hundred, would alone persuade him, perhaps, to battle on. He
would be greatly helped by having equally overdue luck with the
toss. If Taylor calls right today it would be six out of six.
Strong character, dignified man and original and decisive
thinker though Taylor has proved himself to be, he has had the
priceless advantage of matchwinning bowlers. Shane Warne has
been the prime asset all along, except when he was away for his
operation: without him Australia had a short tour of India last
year and failed to win a match.
Taylor may yet wish to rise to the challenge of a fuller
tour of India next year, having already had his own hearty vote
of thanks and confidence from the Australian chairman of selectors, Trevor Hohns. Since his 15th Test hundred in the first Test
defeat at Edgbaston Taylor has rallied his side in the manner
of a genuinely great captain, but it was only in the last match
at Trent Bridge that he began to bat with the same almost impenetrable defence of old and his personal form, too, may have
a bearing on his decision. He said yesterday that he would spend
two or three weeks at home before he decided whether to continue after his 33rd Test in charge.
By their recovery from a bad start to the tour, for which no
praise can be too high, Australia have ended all dreams of the
longed-for English revival. They have had a recent habit of
losing matches after the series is decided, but winning their
fifth series against England in succession, an unprece- dented
achievement, will not necessarily make them throttle back, especially as they have two new faces in the side to bring additional keenness.
Mark Waugh, who missed the nets yesterday with flu, is, according
to The Management, certain to play but Aus- tralia have lost
Paul Reiffel and Jason Gillespie. England know how dangerous
Michael Kasprowicz will be with the new ball and they can only
have a healthy respect for the all-round ability of Shaun
Young, who was awarded his first Test cap yesterday at the age
of 27, but it is Warne and Glenn McGrath they fear most.
McGrath`s 29 wickets so far put him in possible touching distance of Terry Alderman`s 42 wickets in 1981 but the usual truelooking Oval pitch, a fast outfield and the fact that England
are planning to play seven batsmen, with Adam Hollioake at seven, will make it hard for him. Hollioake`s brother, Ben, will
be in the dressing-room only as a spectator this time and Peter
Martin is expected to take the place of Dean Headley, whose
bruised heel has not improved. Phil Tufnell already knows that
he is the chosen spinner but Atherton`s main bowling hope rests
with the Oval expert, Devon Malcolm.
For the first time three batsmen whose careers have run closely
together from boyhood, Nasser Hussain, Graham Thorpe and the
recalled Middlesex captain, Mark Ramprakash, are play- ing together in an England Test side. With Mark Butcher and Alec Stewart batting at two and three on their home ground (as are Hollioake and Thorpe), England really should be capable of making
the sort of huge score which alone will give their bowlers a
chance.
England (from): *M A Atherton, M A Butcher, -A J Stewart, N
Hussain, G P Thorpe, M R Ramprakash, A J Hollioake, A R Caddick,
P J Martin, P C R Tufnell, D E Malcolm, D W Headley, B C Hollioake.
Australia: *M A Taylor, M T G Elliott, G S Blewett, M E Waugh, S
R Waugh, R T Ponting, -I A Healy, S Young, S K Warne, M S
Kasprowicz, G D McGrath.
Umpires: P Willey, L Barker (West Indies). Third umpire: K E
Palmer. Match referee: C W Smith (West Indies).
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)