England praying for rich seam (10 May 1999)
Never has a one-day international been so important to England as their opening and, possibly acrimonious, game against Sri Lanka on Friday
10-May-1999
10 May 1999
England praying for rich seam
Scyld Berry
Never has a one-day international been so important to England as
their opening and, possibly acrimonious, game against Sri Lanka on
Friday. Not even when England played in three World Cup finals, and
lost, were the games so intimately linked to the future well-being of
the game in this country.
A mass of negative forces threaten to tear England down if they lose
to Sri Lanka at Lord's, in whose impartial atmosphere tourists so
often excel: to qualify at all England would probably then have to
defeat India in their last group match at Edgbaston. But if they can
defeat Sri Lanka, the unpleasant past can be forgotten and they can
complete a decent tournament as losing semi-finalists - their best
realistic hope.
England face such a wide range of outcomes, from catastrophic to
laudable, because they are far more of an unknown quantity than any
other Test team in the tournament. Their eleven at Lord's will not
have played together before.
Only two of the squad members have played 70 internationals, whereas
even Zimbabwe have six of such standing. England's squad are
experienced only in English conditions. Their think-tank has been
waiting until the night for everything to come right.
If England had been planning for this World Cup ever since the last
one in 1996, they would not have repeated so many of the mistakes
which made their last 'campaign' the shoddiest chapter in their
one-day history. Once again we have a captain drained (Alec Stewart
has not had a mental break for 18 months) and out of touch. Once
again we have a disaffected team (for Ray Illingworth last time read
the ECB after the dispute over World Cup contracts): Graham Thorpe's
disobedience, resulting in a £1,000 fine, can only be manifestation
of a greater discontent .
Another parallel is that the England team have been belatedly
assembled, so that the players are not au fait with their own roles
and everybody else's. England lost six wickets to run-outs in four
matches in Sharjah last month, some by the pitch's length, as players
batted together for the first time.
In the last two years, starting with the Texaco series against
Australia, England's selectors have picked 33 players for 34 one-day
internationals (and that excludes the Dhaka knock-out for which their
Ashes team was unavailable). Why pick three teams instead of one? If
that isn't uncertainty, I don't know what is. Another parallel
between this time and last is that England go into the tournament
with a long losing sequence in one-day cricket behind them from which
they can draw no confidence. The win over Pakistan in a dead match
ended a run of nine defeats out of 10.
As they beat only the amateurs of Holland and the UAE in the 1996
competition, England have lost seven of their last eight proper World
Cup matches and have to go back to 1992 for their last win against a
'kosher' country. These statistics are as relevant as England's
recent successes at home in Texaco series against touring teams
picked for Tests.
If England beat Sri Lanka, however, all these negative factors will
seem like sound preparation and they will be half-way to qualifying
for the Super Sixes. Even if England lose their group match against
South Africa, as they have to budget to do, they should still have a
sufficient head of steam after that opening victory to go on to beat
Zimbabwe and Kenya, making three wins out of four, and guaranteeing
them a Super Six place, whatever happens against India. By then
England will have become a hard team to beat if the ball seams.
Two major weaknesses though will prevent England going beyond the
semi-finals unless conditions are in their favour. One is their
inability to work quality spinners around, which has often led to
middle-order panic and tail-end collapses, not least when they lost
to Sri Lanka at Lord's last year.
There is too much leading elbow in English technique, and too little
wristwork which can find the gaps in an in-field. Only Neil
Fairbrother, and to a lesser extent Graham Thorpe, has the method to
avert the trap of block, block, block, block, blast, goodnight.
Playing a million one-day games in county cricket is not worth the
experience of a dozen internationals abroad in this respect. In
Sharjah, against Pakistan's Saqlain Mushtaq and India's Anil Kumble,
England batted as if the floodlights hadn't been switched on and it
will, in truth, be a poor tournament if England can get away with
such a gap in their cloistered education and win the cup solely on
seaming pitches.
The second weakness is that England do not have the means to bowl
sides out, except if the pitches are juicy enough to move the ball
sideways for them. On something dry or bare, Angus Fraser will keep
the plug in for the first half of an innings, Alan Mullally and Mark
Ealham will be tidy, but Darren Gough is the only one who might take
five wickets.
Even when England do take early wickets, their inclination is still
to set the field back, save boundaries and concede singles, when the
best teams would go for the opening - especially Pakistan who at
their best swarm through a breach like tribesmen overwhelming a
Khyber fort. One-day international cricket has evolved from defensive
field-placings and bowling into trying to contain run rates by
dismissing opponents. But England are still programmed to
old-fashioned orthodoxy.
Brilliant fielding and the odd run-out would partly make good this
lack of penetration in dry conditions, but again the players have not
been given time to bed down in their optimum positions. In Sharjah
they touched village-green rock-bottom when Pakistan's Moin Khan took
two leg-byes to square-leg and England had two fielders in the
semi-circles on the legside.
India's unconvincing batting did not pressurise England in Sharjah,
but when Pakistan's did in the opening match, England conceded 12
runs from eight fielding errors of the kind where the culprit berates
himself.
Fielding can reveal all too plainly the character of a side: in
England's case, that half the players are past their prime and only
one, Andrew Flintoff, is on the way up. Whereas the leading sides
have a blend of youth and experience, England have somehow succeeded
in combining age and inexperience.
As the last five days of preparation ebb away, England are like
students going into an exam without doing enough revision. They will
pass if the right questions or pitches come up - well enough to reach
the semis - but will not if they don't.
Their cricket won't be the prettiest either. The bowling will be
almost all seam, with the emphasis on thrift, and will be
distinguished not by its variety but its lack of it. With English
cricket in its greatest state of flux, however, trying to shed its
tired old skin before the millennium, we cannot be choosers.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)