8 January 1998
England attack hold key to Test success
E W Swanton on Thursday
CONTRASTING emotions chase one another as English cricket comes
out of its brief hibernation and once more claims our close
attention. For the next three months the chief scene of action
will be the West Indies, though the showing of the A team under
Nick Knight in Kenya and Sri Lanka is also of importance.
I believe that our cricketers of Test rank and those aspiring
thereto, with one proviso, can acquit themselves with credit in
the demanding period ahead if, despite media pressures, however
fair or exaggerated, they can maintain a spirit of enjoyment and
good fellowship. This has been the direction of Atherton's
enduring strength, and it is this quality that has prompted the
England Cricket Board chairman and selectors to persuade him to
carry on.
My one caveat concerns the opening attack. To look for a reason
why success in Tests (as distinct from one-day cricket) has
recently been so hard to come by, one has only to compare the
English new-ball bowlers of the last decade and more with the
opposition - with Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis, Donald and
Pollock, Ambrose and Walsh, McDermott and McGrath. Several have
had their moments, notably Angus Fraser, Devon Malcolm, Dominic
Cork and, of course, Darren Gough, whose last-minute withdrawal
has been such a sad blow to England's immediate prospects. There
has not, however, been a truly militant pair since Willis and
Botham faded out in the mid-1980s.
In series after series, English batting, and especially Atherton
and his opening partner, have been under the severest testing
without the captain's capacity to subject the enemy to anything
comparable. Hence I believe that the prospect in the Caribbean
may chiefly depend on the degree with which the faster bowlers,
Caddick, Headley, Fraser, Silverwood and Cowan, can command
speed with control.
At limited-overs level, as was evidenced against Australia last
May and, most welcomely, at Sharjah last month, other
disciplines apply: seven wins in a row we had, the tournament's
success against West Indies, India and Pakistan under Adam
Hollioake being a great fillip to all.
Hollioake has clear qualities as a leader, but it is as an
all-rounder with Test claims that he is at the moment a key
figure. As Ted Dexter pointed out with some force in these
columns when the team was chosen, the selectors, by omitting
Mark Ealham, the only man with proven all-round Test
credentials, can only play five bowlers by asking the admirable
Alec Stewart to keep wicket as well as going in first or
thereabouts. As I see it, a balanced side including Jack Russell
can emerge only if Hollioake's early form makes it reasonable to
try him at No 6 and as a fifth bowler.
With only two four-day matches before the first Test on Jan 29
and 16 players to choose from, Atherton and his co-selectors
have difficult choices to make. It is specially frustrating,
therefore, that, having given themselves ample time to
acclimatise to Caribbean pitches and light, the unseasonable
rain in Antigua has kept them out of the nets. West Indies also
have their difficulties, of course, of a more basic sort,
beginning with the choice of a captain.
REMEMBERING the corresponding Test at Kingston, Jamaica, four
years ago when Courtney Walsh was guilty of what Wisden properly
called "unwarranted and unpunished intimidation", I am pleased
to hear from the ICC chief executive, David Richards, that Barry
Jarman, the old Australian wicketkeeper, is to referee the
series.
The referee system, operative in all Tests, was novel in 1994,
since when it has sometimes been crucial in fortifying the
umpires and regulating the temperature. Steve Bucknor and
Venkataraghavan, experienced men both, should not need reminding
that, irrespective of the deplorable two bouncers-an-over
allowance, intimidation is intimidation, punishable under the
unfair play Law, 42.
The first Test happenings notwithstanding, the last series in
the West Indies was played in a spirit reflecting credit on the
captains, Atherton and Richie Richardson. Let us hope for a
repetition, and may all concerned remember that the young will
be watching - and listening!
A WINTER clear-out of files and accumulated paraphernalia has
revealed a document which has perhaps some topical relevance. It
is the speech delivered by Field Marshal Lord Montgomery at the
MCC anniversary dinner in 1956, of which he gave me a copy three
years later when, at his invitation, I reviewed on my return the
1958-59 tour of Australia.
He rose to speak, he said, with some diffidence, but it was not
a quality at all in evidence as he attempted to equate cricket
and warfare: "I once had the honour to lead an England team on
to the field: not the cricket field but the field of battle. We
won all our matches."
Preaching from this text, Monty maintained that success was
simply a matter of leadership, discipline and training. He
wanted changes in the first-class structure to bring in more
amateurs (this was several years before they were officially
eliminated), and he finally led a slightly bemused audience into
the realms of technique before advising the MCC committee to
"loosen up, be imaginative; do not be mentally constipated".
Unfortunately Telegraph and BBC duty had taken me to Worcester
for the Australians' opening match, so I heard the amused,
whimsical reaction only at second-hand of a committee who, as it
happened, contained no fewer than seven former England captains
under the presidency, ironically enough, of Monty's fellow field
marshal, Alexander by name.
Monty's conception of cricket was, of course simplistic. The
tactics of the game and its many-sided subtleties were a closed
book to him. Yet one can detect in his remarks a faint foretaste
of the ECB's Raising the Standard, while the importance of
leadership can scarcely be over-rated, though he succeeded in
doing so.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)