England captaincy: Hussain leads case for his own defence (29 Mar 1998)
ALEC STEWART, it seems, is as big a certainty to replace Michael Atherton at the helm as Curtly Ambrose to win a popularity contest in Antigua
29-Mar-1998
29 March 1998
Hussain leads case for his own defence
By Paul Newman
ALEC STEWART, it seems, is as big a certainty to replace Michael
Atherton at the helm as Curtly Ambrose to win a popularity
contest in Antigua. But, if so, where has the England
vice-captain gone wrong?
Nasser Hussain, who turned 30 yesterday, is at the peak of his
batting powers and has been Atherton's deputy during a two-year
spell in which he has scored six Test centuries. Yet he seems to
be a distant second in the captaincy opinion polls to a man five
years his senior. Why?
Mutterings about Hussain's temperament persist but the evidence
is flimsy. Simply, it seems, he has yet to convince the
powers-that-be he is the man to lead England into a new era,
prompting them to consider a stop-gap appointment. It is a
situation met with a simple statement of ambition.
"Athers made me his vice-captain and while he was in charge he
had my total support but now is the time to say I believe I can
do the job," said Hussain. "The most important thing to me is to
be in the England team scoring runs but I can think of nothing
better than being in charge."
So why is Atherton's deputy not the natural successor? "I don't
know if it's a case of me not giving out the right vibes," said
Hussain. "I'm certainly a private person. I wouldn't, for
instance, go up to the Sky commentators for a chat before a
day's play. It's not that I don't get on with people, more that
I'm not one for small talk. I don't actually like too many
people getting close to me.
"I have my small group of family and friends and I'm happy with
that. If you put me in a room with Atherton, Thorpe and Tufnell
I'd be as loud as anyone but if you put me in a room with
Willis, Botham and Lord MacLaurin I would just sit and listen to
their opinions because they're all greats in their own fields.
Similarly, I don't know many of the press guys too well so maybe
they get the wrong impression of me. But ask the England players
about me and I think you'll get positive answers."
The fire in Hussain still burns fiercely. He would not rest
until he made it back into the England team during his
three-year absence from 1993 and is now determined to prove his
one-day worth to a selection panel who have deemed him surplus
to limited-overs requirements.
Now, his importance to the Test side emphasised by his century
at St John's on Tuesday and the devastating collapse which
followed his run-out, Hussain is forced to ponder the fact that
his innate passion and intensity, so often lacking among English
cricketers, could count against him in the captaincy reckoning.
He sat on Wednesday morning having breakfast with Graham Thorpe,
his closest friend in the England team, before heading for home
and talked of what he felt that strength of character could
bring to the job. "I know most of the England players inside
out," said Hussain.
"During the last couple of years I've been something of a middle
man between the players and Athers and I've spoken with them all
so much I know what makes them tick. I'm confident, for
instance, that I could bring the best out of someone like
Dominic Cork and I like the challenge of working with different
characters.
"Mike Atherton has been the key figure in making us a decent
side but what will disappoint him is that we're still not
winning big series. Whoever takes over has to keep working
towards finding that missing link."
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)