England call for Irani and Giddins (16 August 1999)
At the end of an international summer that seems strangely to have been long and miserable, and yet hardly to have started at all, England have reserved their most quixotic selection for the final Test, which starts at the Oval on Thursday
16-Aug-1999
16 August 1999
England call for Irani and Giddins
Michael Henderson
At the end of an international summer that seems strangely to have
been long and miserable, and yet hardly to have started at all,
England have reserved their most quixotic selection for the final
Test, which starts at the Oval on Thursday. Into a 13-man party come
Darren Maddy, Ronnie Irani, Graeme Swann and Ed Giddins. Out go Mark
Butcher, Graeme Hick, Chris Read and Peter Such.
Irani, the Lancastrian who found regular first-team cricket at Essex,
played twice against India three years ago, when he made a good
impression with his clean striking. At 27, he is playing better now,
having added a layer of responsibility to the exuberance that flows
naturally from his appealing personality. This is a man who enjoys
what he does and, my word, England need a few chaps like that.
It seems more likely Irani will bat at No 7 than Graeme Swann will
make his Test debut. The 20-year-old all-rounder from
Northamptonshire owes his promotion to the fact that his batting
substantially supports his still-green off-spinners. Even if he does
not play at the Oval he would be a sensible choice for this winter's
tour of South Africa as the sort of player who would learn something.
Maddy, 25, and Giddins, three years older, have been rewarded for
consistent performances for their counties. Maddy, the Leicestershire
opener, played two one-day internationals last year, and every
cricketer will hope for his sake that he makes a better fist of
things than Aftab Habib, his county team-mate, who struggled so badly
in the first two Tests and was not given a third chance to justify
his inclusion.
Giddins, the Warwickshire pace bowler, will be pleased to get one
chance. On many occasions in the past 18 months, since he returned to
first-class cricket, he must have doubted that an opportunity to play
Test cricket would ever materialise. Now he contends with Alan
Mullally and Chris Silverwood for a place.
He is frequently described as a "colourful" character (which he is)
and that colour did not commend him to the men who, until last week,
helped to pick the side. In fact there was a black ball in the bag,
which has mysteriously disappeared. It may have had something to do
with the one-year ban he served in 1997 for using cocaine when he was
a Sussex player. It may have had something to do with doubts that
have been raised about his action. Whatever they were, he is now on
the cusp of a Test debut.
"I want to make up for lost time," Giddins said yesterday. He
admitted that he did not begin the season well but, after taking five
wickets in a National League game at Leicester, "it suddenly clicked.
I'm like Angus Fraser. I bowl better the more I bowl." He has bowled
a lot in the last two years, and has yet to miss a championship match
for his new county.
The most unlucky casualty is Such, who bowled far better than Phil
Tufnell at Old Trafford and is rewarded by demotion. Why oh why would
anybody in his right mind want to be an off-spinner when he could be
better off digging roads? To be fair to Tufnell, which is not always
possible, he has known success at the Oval, where his left-arm spin
has contributed to England victories against Australia and West
Indies this decade.
Butcher could also be thought unfortunate. Appointed captain for the
match in Manchester, after Nasser Hussain felt he could not trust his
broken finger, he is now cast aside to accommodate Maddy. It must be
odd for Butcher to contemplate that, one match after he was entrusted
with the greatest gift a player can receive, he is not considered
worthy of a place in the team.
According to David Graveney, the chairman of selectors, Maddy is "a
model pro who deserves his chance", which is fair enough. Butcher has
been short of runs since he made a hundred against Australia in
Brisbane at the start of the last Ashes series, though no shorter
than Graham Thorpe, who has retained his place. Maddy won the nod
ahead of Michael Vaughan, the Yorkshire batsman, on the grounds of
better form and, though this was left unsaid, the fact he has spent
longer in the queue.
The other pair to be dropped have contrasting histories. Read, who
will go to South Africa, surrenders the gloves to Alec Stewart for
this game so that England can field five bona fide bowlers. He has
gained valuable experience in the three Tests he has played, and is a
wiser man for it, if not yet a significantly better player.
Hick is a different case altogether. Recalled to the team for the
eighth time at Old Trafford, where he failed, he was always going to
make way for Hussain when the captain reported fit. His selection for
the last match was the most feeble for years and led directly to the
sacking of Graham Gooch and Mike Gatting.
Hussain, who is not playing for Essex in their current match against
the tourists, will be playing for the first time in a month when he
takes his place at No 3, a risk in itself. His finger has taken
longer to heal than expected but it is essential he goes straight
back into the side to restore the leadership missing at Old Trafford,
when the players looked inert.
The captain is the first to acknowledge that England have played poor
cricket this summer. After a slow start the New Zealanders have
developed a sense of unity that emphasises the lack of spirit in the
England dressing room. Whatever happens this week, Hussain and Duncan
Fletcher, the coach, must base their future selections on that
significant premise.
England's squad for the fourth Test against New Zealand at the Oval,
starting on Thursday:
Age Tests
MA Atherton (Lancashire) 31 89
DL Maddy (Leicestershire) 25 0
N Hussain (Essex, capt) 31 41
GP Thorpe (Surrey) 30 56
AJ Stewart (Surrey, wkt) 36 89
MR Ramprakash (Middlesex) 29 37
RC Irani (Essex) 27 2
GP Swann (Northants) 20 0
AR Caddick (Somerset) 30 24
AD Mullally (Leicestershire) 30 15
CEW Silverwood (Yorkshire) 24 1
PCR Tufnell (Middlesex) 33 37
ESH Giddins (Warwickshire) 28 0
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)