CMJ: Smith leads county set in pursuit of recognition (17 May 1997)
THE Test series for the Ashes is what matters this season
17-May-1997
Saturday 17 May 1997
Smith leads county set in pursuit of recognition
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
THE Test series for the Ashes is what matters this season.
England`s selection committee, David Graveney, Graham Gooch and
Mike Gatting, who meet tonight, would be well advised to keep
some of their likely Test players up their sleeves and to hit
the Australians with one or two good county cricketers in peak
form in next week`s Texaco Trophy matches.
Mike Smith of Gloucestershire, for example, would have been on
no one`s shortlist when this season began but he should certainly
be on the official one now. Now 29, he was good enough to be
chosen ahead of a number of left-arm-over bowlers for the A tour
to Pakistan two winters ago, only to take little part because
of a rib injury. He has started this season outstandingly
well.
Alan Mullally has had an extended chance; Mark Ilott more
fitful opportunities; Simon Brown an all too brief one so far;
and there are others, but none, I think, so guaranteed as Smith
to move the ball in all conditions and particularly to make it
dip in late to the right-handers. He does so at no great
pace, but for a one-day international at least that is
virtually irrelevant.
Graham Rose, of Somerset, and Mark Alleyne, of
Gloucestershire, are two other experienced county cricketers and
either one of them might reasonably be picked as an all-rounder
on the crest of a wave. Either would be only a temporary
expedient, but the objective is to win the Texaco Trophy rather
than to plan for the Ashes series or even for the 1999 World
Cup. Rose has hit two championship hundreds in a row and
Alleyne, who took six wickets against Surrey yesterday, has been
at the heart of his county`s success so far.
The selectors are more likely to take a chance on the burgeoning
talent of Ben Hollioake or to go for two of the three allrounders who served them in one-day internationals last
year, Chris Lewis, Mark Ealham and Ronnie Irani. Ealham has
not been at his best and Irani has faded after a great start
with the bat but Lewis has probably ruled himself out because of
a neck injury.
Fourteen players will be chosen, to allow for different
conditions in the three matches at Headingley, the Oval and
Lord`s next Thursday, Saturday and Sunday. Two will be spinners
who can bat, Robert Croft and Ashley Giles, but the fast
bowling options are much wider. Darren Gough, Peter Martin
and Phillip DeFreitas would be in my party along with
Smith.
Andrew Caddick is likely to be kept for the Test matches
and the three contending fast bowlers of real pace for the Ashes
series, Devon Malcolm, Martin McCague and Alex Tudor, are all
unlikely to be risked in 50-over games. There will be a
temptation to include Dean Headley, the man most likely to play
either in Dominic Cork`s place in the first Test, or as a fourth
fast bowler; but there is little point in showing him to
the Australians now.
There is a wide choice for the batting places. Mike Atherton
has already been named captain, though his place in the batting
order is not certain. Alec Stewart will bat at two or three,
and both Graham Thorpe and Graham Lloyd, the fastest one-day
scorer of them all, are certainties. So, for his all- round
ability and shrewdness, is Adam Hollioake.
That leaves room for only one more and the choice may be
between Nick Knight, still short of match practice after his
complex finger break in New Zealand, Chris Adams of
Derbyshire, Trevor Ward of Kent and two whose qualities
and shortcomings are well known: Mark Ramprakash and Graeme Hick.
Possible England Squad.- * M A Atherton (Lancs), - A J Stewart
(Surrey), C J Adams (Derbys), G P Thorpe (Surrey), G D Lloyd
(Lancs), A J Hollioake (Surrey), M A Ealham (Kent), R C Irani
(Essex), R D B Croft (Glamorgan), A F Giles (Warwicks), D Gough
(Yorks), P A J DeFreitas (Derbys), P J Martin (Lancs), A M Smith
(Gloucs).
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)