Craven capitulations
Win or lose at The Oval, English cricket must continue its forward march.It must take this chance to become a truly national and multi-cultural game, says Peter Roebuck
Peter Roebuck
09-Sep-2005
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Jonathan Agnew says that an England triumph at The Oval will be as joyous
an event as the winning of the soccer World Cup in 1966. I can remember
that victory, could name the England side, half the Germans and even that
nice moustachioed Russian who persuaded himself that Geoff Hurst's shot
had crossed the line.
Hurst scored a hat-trick, Martin Peters added a fourth. Nobby Stiles
snapped at numerous ankles, Bobby Chalton was majestic, his brother Jack
presided over the penalty area, Bobby Moore was serenity itself, Gordon
Banks was flawless between the posts, Alan Ball was everywhere. The crowd
developed its own clap. It was a dreadful, dirty World Cup but England won.
Who cared about the rest?
And The Oval is bigger than that? Agnew's comment begs a question. What
the hell went wrong in between? English soccer held its own till the
1970s and cricket flourished till 1981 but then began a long slide
evident to a greater and lesser degree in every nook and cranny of the
nation.
English cricket's troubles started in the 1980s. England's national
deterioration started in the same decade. The idea that sport exists apart
from other forces is preposterous. Certainly C.L.R James and John Arlott
gave it short shrift. Its location as the last item on news broadcasts and
on the back pages of newspapers is merely a convenience. Sport is not
played in another country. Nor is it isolated or trivial, merely
unimportant. Neither the patronage of the intellectuals nor the adoration
of the devotee has merit.
Inevitably the way a country plays cricket reflects broader forces in
society. A child would not argue otherwise. West Indian cricket displays a
lack of managerial experience whilst a generation of players is following
the same path as black popular music, from sorrow to cheerfulness and on
to self-indulgent anger (and, hopefully, beyond). Likewise the current
Indian team captures the new confidence of a country no longer torn
between Western affluence and ancient customs, but prepared to look both
in the eye and to take the best they have to offer. Most of the leading
cricket writers nowadays come from India, Not the coaches, though. None of
the ten Test teams is coached by a black or brown man.
Of course the inexorable collapse of English sport in the 1980's was
caused by factors beyond the incompetence of those directly involved. A
nation had lost its identity, no longer knew itself. England became an
inward-looking land. Thatcherism had run its course and the country was
left drifting midway between her discipline and Blairite renewal. Into the
vacuum marched the greed, selfishness and egoism that spread across the
land. Celebrityism, yobbos, puritanism and prurience combined to bring the
country to its knees. Comedy and creativity suffered. Reality television
and endless confessional shows took their place. It was death in another
form.
Thatcher went on too long, had nothing more to offer. She knighted David
English and empowered Piers Morgan and Kelvin Mackenzie. Those seeking to
attach blame for this country's decline might consider this ghastly
collection of charming creeps.
Unfortunately rival parties had meanwhile taken leave of their senses.
Hurrying towards irrelevance, Labour disdained Denis Healey and Roy
Hattersley. Joining the madness, the Conservatives subsequently disowned
Ken Clarke. Unsurprisingly a strong third party emerged from this
crassness. England has not had a serious electoral choice for a quarter of
a century.
In the years that came between Thatcher's neo-liberalism and Blair's
modernism, England suffered from a lack of conviction. Forced to choose
between a return to Anglo-Saxon straightforwardness and the higher
sophistication of Northern Europe, it floundered. Both are coherent
positions. The halfway house does not work. Education collapsed and
newspapers went from bad to worse as Rupert Murdoch exacted vengeance for
past snubs. He is laughing at England.
English cricket could hardly hope to remain immune from these
debilitations. Sporting success depends on a supreme gathering of the
will. Without belief, nothing can be accomplished. Those who arranged the
singing of Jerusalem before each day's play in this Ashes series have
grasped the point. So has that destroyer of cynicism, the Barmy Army.
For fifteen years English sport was sustained by strong individuals like
Coe, Ovett and Faldo. Meanwhile soccer fell foul of the yob culture.
Cricket also lost its head, with rebel tours, contrived matches, lob
bowling, and worse at the highest levels. Botham and Gasgoine were the
champions of the age. Unsurprisingly neither cricket nor soccer could find
an English manager or coach capable of confronting the prevailing culture.
Even the Rugby codes, those impressive representations of capital and
labour, fell foul of the prevailing mood.
As a nation, England had to choose between its stoical past and the
intelligence of Europe. Clearly the Conservative Party is still trying to
resolve this dilemma. Eventually soccer, or rather the chairmen of
ambitious clubs, took the European route. John Toshack points out that
hardly any of Britain's top soccer teams are run by Englishmen and argues
that the ejection from European competition that followed the tragedy at
Heysel Stadium caused a loss of confidence and experience. But that
disaster was itself caused by the same craven capitulations.
Of course socio-political considerations were not the only causes of the
decline of English sport. England had snobbishly omitted to take sport
seriously enough. Australia made the same mistake and found by the
mid-1980's that it could no longer compete. Entire Olympic Games went by
without any Australian making an impression. This did not go down well.
Steps were taken to improve matters, with the creation of an Institute of
Sport and a cricket academy. England were slower off the mark. Spain and
Sweden - the West's two great sporting nations - were streets ahead.
Desperate to break the cycle, the more advanced English soccer officials
turned towards Europe. Frenchmen, Swiss, Swedes and Germans were invited
to take charge of leading teams. Scotsmen and Irishmen were also summoned.
Accordingly the culture of the game started to improve, though the news
took an unconscionable time to reach Leeds and Newcastle. Of course it was
not only a question of management. Others steps were taken to brighten the
game. Lighter balls, drier pitches and less tolerant referees helped.
Television brought money and glamour.
Soccer also had the sense to embrace the local African communities. Not
that it had much choice, for their talent and commitment could not be
missed. Most of them, too, were properly raised. Every year more and more
black Africans appear in the colours of famous English clubs. Athletics,
too, has been strengthened by their contributions. Inclined to be slower
starters, Asians will follow in their wake.
Soccer has not looked back. Other clubs responded to the challenge by
raising their own standards. Anyone doubting the extent of England's
footballing revival need only consider the performances of Bolton and
Charlton, smaller clubs guided towards the top by managers cut from the
local stone.
There was nothing wrong with England or Englishmen in the first place. It
is a great country with a proud history that has produced Shakespeare,
Dad's Army and Reggie Perrin. Bad habits had crept in, that is all. As
the great songster pointed out, a nation is "either busy bein' born or
busy dyin' ".
Because the game is thinly played in Europe, cricket was obliged to search
elsewhere for its recovery. Cricket had some particular problems. Private
schools and mining towns had been reliable sources of cricketing talent.
Professional cricket had its origins in Nottingham, the city that bred
many nineteenth century political movements, the city where craftsman
started to appreciate the value of their work. Harold Larwood and Bill
Voce emerged from a proud and independent tradition. Yorkshire cricket was
built on similarly strong foundations. Qualities of this sort are not
easily replaced. Warwickshire has become the most advanced and productive
of the counties.
Private schools were English cricket's other production line, a position
they still hold in Africa, though not elsewhere. The decline of the Empire
and the collapse of the economy after the Second World War took a toll of
the school and the families that kept them in business. Inevitably the
idea of education for its own sake proved unsustainable. Accordingly the
stoic and classical traditions were replaced by consumerism. Money had to
be put on the table. Once the schools had lost their sense of purpose
there was precious little point keeping them open. Of course players
periodically emerge, but not a Dexter, May or Cowdrey.
Accordingly, English schools can no longer be relied on to produce high
class players. Not long ago a coach at a respected cricketing school asked
for an opinion about a promising player. My observation that he had fine
prospects but was unfit and immobile and needed a programme of early
morning runs was dismissed with an airy "but we want him to enjoy his
cricket." So did I. He did not make it and remains unfulfilled. Amazingly
the coach has not resigned.
It took England a long time to realise that its supply lines have dried
up. Eventually the need to build an effective domestic structure was
grasped. When the action came it was impressive. A plan was put in place.
Four day cricket, central contracts, two divisions and acadamies followed.
Attention was also paid to the "recreational game". Minor counties started
playing three day matches. Clubs were pushed towards longer matches.
Whereas in 1995 clubs routinely played 46-over games with two usually
ageing trundlers allowed to bowl 23 apiece, now it is 55 overs a side with
limitations. Believe me, it is a young man's game.
English cricket has also had the sense to tap into stronger sporting
cultures. Unable to find men of distinction in its own ranks - Mike
Brearly was otherwise engaged and Ken Barrington had died young -
officials asked Australians to run its academy and several county teams.
An African educated in the strong ethics of Prince Edward's school in
Harare became the national coach. Beyond doubt these men have helped to
instill strong values in their charges.
Nor was England content merely to catch up. Twenty-over cricket was a
gamble. As usual the senior counties were against it, a point they seem to
have forgotten. Lord's decided to give it a go. Now the rest of the
cricketing world is copying. It is a game for the bold and the brave.
England's sporting culture has improved in leaps and bounds. Not so long
ago young English professionals floundered in Australian grade cricket.
Attitude was the main problem. Now Jon Lewis, Ben Smith, Matthew Wood and
Andrew Strauss (on his second visit) count amongst those who have served
their country and profession proud. Nor have the lesser-known been
remotely as embarrassing. Even gap students seem to be brighter as they
plunge in the waves on Bondi beach.
Meanwhile, impressive past players are emerging, not least Michael
Atherton and Angus Fraser, and not merely as critics. Neither West Indies
nor India have been as lucky in that regard. Contrastingly, Australia have
made excellent use of the expertise at their disposal. The elders of the
game have a crucial part to play, especially those who didn't leave the
field too long ago.
Andrew Flintoff has been the proverbial icing on the cake. His emergence
was no more inevitable than Shane Warne's or Glenn McGrath's. Indeed it
took five years, a delay that spoke volumes. Not until the culture of the
game was strong did his talent start to emerge. Good captaincy helped.
Michael Vaughan has been able to build on the foundations laid by Nasser
Hussain. Provided the Lancastrian keeps his head he will continue to
prosper. Luckily he has married well. Botham's sad decline started in
1981. Flintoff's fame came later and he has a much better chance of
surviving it.
Win or lose at The Oval, English cricket must continue its forward march.
Players must continue to give more than they take. Otherwise the moment
will pass. Hunger cannot be sated by the recapturing of one trophy.
Cricket's ambitions must be higher. It must take this chance to become a
truly national and multi-cultural game. It is not an easy combination, but
it is nothing less than the challenge faced by the entire world.
Peter Roebuck is covering the Ashes for the Sydney Morning Herald