Cup's last act serves as perfect stage for England aspirants (11 May 1998)
HAVE they sent the wrong tournament to the gallows
11-May-1998
11 May 1998
Cup's last act serves as perfect stage for England aspirants
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
HAVE they sent the wrong tournament to the gallows? The irony of
the fact that this year sees the last of the Benson and Hedges
Cups after 27 seasons is that administrators have finally got the
formula right.
At least from the narrow perspective of the England team,
competitive 50-over cricket is the ideal preparation for the
opening international encounters and this year's games have given
the selectors plenty of up-to-date evidence on which to choose a
team for the Texaco Trophy this weekend. If Mike Atherton had
scored Darren Maddy's runs, for example, Atherton, not Maddy,
would be chosen; but it will be vice versa.
To have the zonal games packed, but not overpacked, into a
fortnight, with championship matches either side, has given a
more sensible balance to the difficult first month of the season,
when majority public attention is fixed on the climax of the
various football codes. With the exception of games involving
Scotland, Ireland and the Minor Counties, it has been tough
stuff, everyone knowing that defeat in more than one game almost
certainly meant no place in the quarter-finals.
That sort of cricket should breed England cricketers who excel
rather than wilt when the pressure mounts. Given the amount of
one-day international cricket, a 50-over tournament has to be a
relevant part of the wider scheme and the plan is that the new
50-over National League - the English Cricket Board hope to name
a sponsor soon - will fill the void with the right sort of
cricket.
The need is for balance. Over a full summer, one a week of these
muscle and mind stretching games is quite sufficient. Reputation
is not a shield against punishment and there is no hiding place
when a bowler has an indifferent day, witness Angus Fraser's none
for 60 in 10 overs on Saturday. The urge for quick runs can
loosen inhibitions: look at Robert Croft's opening contributions
for Glamorgan. But in encouraging liberated batting, these games
also quickly foster risky shots which can undo a player when
field placings are different.
WHEREVER one travels, buildings seem to be going up on
first-class cricket grounds. The game has much for which to thank
the National Lottery, and John Major, the cricket-loving Prime
Minister who pushed it through. The huge new construction on the
Radcliffe Road at Trent Bridge, rapidly nearing completion, is
the most obvious example. Dwarfing the other stands, it will be,
when Sir Gary Sobers opens it on July 22, much more than a stand
holding 4,500 spectators. Two cricket halls, a medical centre,
accommodation for 48 cricketers, a video room, a gym, a squash
club, a lecture theatre and extensive provision for the media are
among the facilities.
Down the road at Northampton, development is altogether more
modest but no less brave. Their lottery grant was merely £1
million compared with Nottinghamshire's £4.65 million. Their
project is a splendid six-lane cricket centre where the football
ground once stood. Here, as in Nottingham, the youth of the area,
and cricket with it, will benefit immensely, but the scale of the
respective projects underlines the different perspectives of
counties with Test grounds and the rest. Balance is required also
in the current review of how the ECB's profits are distributed
between them.
Voluntary intiatives sometimes succeed where public money is not
available. At Matthew Fleming's former prep school, St Aubyns at
Rottingdean, for example. They are offering a scholarship to any
potentially outstanding young cricketer aged between eight and
10, inviting applications to Sussex for a trial at Hove in
mid-June. The successful child is also guaranteed substantial
assistance with fees at Brighton College for the later phase of
his (or her) education.
All these schemes are part of the national revival required. The
loss of sports fields has been a terrible waste but for any
youngster with an eye who gets the chance to play the greatest of
team games the facilities are far better than they used to be.
At Trent Bridge they have recently also bought rights to the old
Boots ground nearby and to make this a genuine regional centre of
excellence it will soon have 24 net pitches and three cricket
squares. But the extent of the need has been uncovered by the
researcher Peter Wynne-Thomas, who has found only 170 cricket
grounds in Nottinghamshire in current use. Just after the war
there were almost 400.
This is mainly a reflection of social changes: cars in most
families; wives no longer prepared to let husbands play every
week; weekend shopping; television sport etc. But is a graphic
demonstration of what has happened in one and probably in every
county.
IT IS an apt time for professional cricketers to be discussing
their future, as some 250 of them will at their association's
special meeting at Edgbaston today. A testing of players' opinion
on whether the County Championship should go to two divisions
will form the centrepiece of the day.
No doubt a substantial majority will fail to appreciate how
temporary the commercial advantages would be, or how likely it
would be that two divisions would marginalise many talented young
players, eventually put some clubs out of business, and
exacerbate the tensions between clubs and country which deter
national success in football and rugby. By contrast, the
advantages of two divisions for successful clubs are obvious.
Players will be addressed today by Gordon Taylor, chief executive
of the Professional Footballers' Association, and they will hear
why their representatives are pressing the ECB for a change in
registration rules to allow freedom of contract after the age of
26; better health insurance; and a greater share of television
rights. Tim Lamb and Cliff Barker will be representing the board.
TIME has run out for the outstanding county batsman of the last
decade. Graeme Hick needed to score four more hundreds by May 16
to become the youngest batsman to score 100 first-class hundreds.
Worcestershire play Oxford University today but even a century in
each innings would leave him on 98 with no further match to reach
the landmark ahead of Wally Hammond's 31 years, 359 days.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)