8 October 1997
ECB to tighten preparations in busiest international year
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
ENGLAND'S cricketers will be better prepared next season for the
busiest year ever faced by the national team. Closer management
of the players by the coach and the selectors is top of a list
of ideas which will be considered this week by the England and
Wales Cricket Board, writes Christopher Martin-Jenkins.
The agenda also includes a proposal by the England coach David
Lloyd for a pool of national coaches, a specialist programme to
identify and fast-track young English wrist spinners and the
possibility of sophisticated video coaching equipment for all 18
first-class counties.
England players will move one step nearer in 1998 to what Lord
MacLaurin has called the long-term "inevitability" of central
employment by the ECB, but the drastic step of cutting off a
squad of 20 or more players from day-to-day involvement with
their county clubs will be avoided, despite Lloyd's disquiet on
more than one occasion last season when a player arrived for an
England practice unfit.
The coach would prefer direct employment by the board to ensure
England players get the right amount of rest, a balanced
programme of net and match practice, and close supervision of
diet, fitness and mental preparation.
There is no doubt that this gives Australia and South Africa, in
particular, an advantage compared to the English system where
players have to split their loyalties between the national team
and the county clubs, who have nurtured them and still pay their
salaries.
Rather than invite another confrontation with recalcitrant
county chairmen, however, the board may feel that it would be
wiser to identify certain periods of the season when the England
committee should be controlling their top players. Next year the
national side faces what Tim Lamb, chief executive of the board,
has described as a "unique" programme of almost non-stop
international cricket.
If the proposed inaugural world tournament gets off the ground
at Disneyland in Florida next September or October, he will not
be exaggerating.
The ICC will receive a progress report on that idea when they
meet in Pakistan next week. Already England are due to play five
one-day internationals in the West Indies from January to April.
They then go straight into the home season, playing three
one-day internationals and five Tests against South Africa, a
triangular one-day tournament with South Africa and Sri Lanka,
and a Test against Sri Lanka.
That will be followed by the climax of the county season in
September, and there is only the briefest of rests before those
who have lasted the course have to depart for Australia in
October for the toughest tour of the lot (possibly via Florida).
By the time the third match has been played in the first few
days of 1999 England will have played 14 Tests in 11 months and
could easily have gone most of the way towards a sixth
successive defeat in an Ashes series.
Clearly there is a duty for the board to keep a balance between
rest and play. No county chairman is likely to disagree and,
given fair compensation, there should be a broad acceptance of
the probability that regular England players will play only a
limited amount of county cricket next year or in future.
BOARD officials feel that an extension of the present voluntary
agreement - by which counties have rested players at the request
of the chairman of selectors - is preferable for many reasons to
central employment of a squad, which would need to be changed
according to the different demands of Tests and internationals
and which would have logistic problems if some players lose form
and fitness and others demand to be added. But the board accept
that substantial financial compensation will have to be offered
to counties if they are to acquiesce.
Surrey, for one, might feel that they would be giving up an
excellent chance of winning major county prizes by agreeing to
do without Alec Stewart, Graham Thorpe, Mark Butcher, the
Hollioake brothers and Alistair Brown - all picked for England
teams this winter. It is more likely that they will be asked to
release certain players at different times.
The ECB's management committee are giving urgent attention to
various other ideas passed on by Bob Bennett's England
committee, who met last week to draw conclusions from this
year's Ashes series. Lloyd's report is understood to have been
critical of counties where too little technical advice and,
worse, poor practice facilities, are available to players. At
three Test grounds - Trent Bridge, Headingley and the Oval -
there are no outdoor nets available during Tests except on the
outfield.
Lloyd also feels that 'star' players are too inclined to manage
their clubs rather than the other way round. One England fast
bowler rang his county last season to say that he would not be
coming in for treatment for his latest injury because he was
buying a new car.
Aware that England are unlikely to compete consistently on hard
pitches without a top-class leg-spinner, Lloyd has suggested a
'mini academy' for young wrist spinners, with a view to finding
a match-winner within five years.
Lloyd has been encouraged to work this winter to identify any
promising young wrist spinners in the 14 to 19 age group and
arrange specialist coaching from respected leg-spin experts like
Peter Sleep and Peter Kippax. A pool of national coaches has
also been agreed in principle to work with players in or near to
the England side at any time.
Mike Atherton is about to start a concentrated period of
technical fine-tuning with Graham Gooch, who is likely to be
joined in the near future by Mike Gatting, John Emburey (spin),
Geoff Arnold and Graham Dilley (fast bowling) and Alan Knott
(wicketkeeping).
Dean Riddle, the New Zealand-born former rugby league expert,
will continue in charge of England's diet and fitness, and a
psychologist is likely to be available.
When old players say that matches are won by wickets and runs,
Lloyd agrees, but he also points out that all these additional
provisions are already well established in Australia and South
Africa.
PART of England's preparation against Australia last season was
a Statsmaster video system, which logs every ball of a day's
play and allows the coach to pick on any particular aspect.
A wicketkeeper, for example, can see every ball which pitched in
front of first slip and ask himself if they were standing too
deep or the slips too close or too wide.
I understand that when a random comparison of 12 balls bowled by
England and 12 by Australia was called for, it demonstrated all
too graphically the difference in consistency of line and length
between McGrath, Gillespie and Reiffel on one side and Malcolm,
Caddick and Headley on the other.
The same system will give England a detailed analysis of the
individual strengths and weaknesses of West Indian players this
winter. It costs £22,000, and Lloyd is believed to have
suggested to the board that every county should have one.
That would be but a small slice of the £1 million or so due to
be passed on to the counties from this year's profits, and the
board might see the sense in negotiating a blanket deal at a
cheaper price and investing in 18 such systems towards the often
quoted ideal of "18 centres of excellence".
Lloyd's vision remains a county system which truly prepares
potential England players for international cricket and then
allows them rest and quality practice time with the best coaches
on the best surfaces.
It is a long way yet from being realised but, little by little,
it may be coming closer.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)