7 April 1998
Essex: Prichard promising to appease the trophy hunters
By Paul Newman
IT WILL take three years, Paul Prichard believes, for the 'new'
Essex to fulfil their potential. In the meantime, they need to
add to their first trophy in five seasons to convince their
success-spoiled members that they are again heading in the right
direction.
The NatWest Trophy victory, earned at the expense of
Warwickshire, has bought time for Essex. Their late-season form,
after the brief Southend festival high of leading both tables,
was lamentable, and only in 60-overs cricket did they do
themselves justice. Mitigating circumstances, however, can be
offered.
Not least was the departure of Graham Gooch who, psychologically
as well as physically, left a huge gap when he decided in July
that he could not maintain his immense standards and shuffled
off for England coaching and selectorial duty. Pre-season
Chelmsford has seemed strange without him.
Yet his successor as captain has increased in stature since
Essex secured the first trophy they have won without Gooch.
Prichard, remarkably, is now the longest-serving county captain,
despite just three full seasons' service, and, his long-standing
back injury cured at last by surgery, he flourished last year to
the tune of 1,098 championship runs at an average of 46.75.
There was also the small matter of climbing out of the shadows
of his illustrious predecessors.
"It's no secret that I've been under pressure at Essex in having
to follow Fletcher and Gooch, not least through the pressure I
put on myself," said Prichard. "I'm not surprised that counties
are changing captains so regularly these days because results
are all-important and the whole business can affect your private
life. But I've always wanted the job and wanted to win things
for Essex, and that's still my aim.
"Last season promised so much that it would have been awful if
we'd ended up with nothing, but the fact remains that we weren't
mentally or physically strong enough at times. That's got to
improve. We have a young side, we've talked about where we want
to go and we've got to maintain our consistency for six months
instead of four and a half."
Essex are determined to put faith in their young talent this
year, hence Prichard's belief that it may take time for the team
to mature fully, and the club were conspicuous by their absence
from the 'transfer market' during the winter. "Unless a very
fast bowler who was capable of scoring 1,500 runs a season
became available we weren't interested," said Prichard.
Opportunities beckon, then, for Stephen Peters, a century maker
in the under-19 World Cup final, his fellow opener Ian Flanagan
and the four other Essex members of the England under-19 tour
party, Graham Napier, an Ipswich Town goalkeeper turned
attacking all-rounder, off-spinner Jonathan Powell, whose A tour
experience was limited by injury, and the raw but genuinely fast
bowler, Jamie Grove.
Essex will start, though, with the proven and those who fall
into the category of the 'almost proven but could do better'.
Huge seasons await Darren Robinson, at last sure of his place
and who now needs to kick on; Robert Rollins, destined it once
seemed to be an England candidate but who has yet to fulfil his
wicketkeeping promise, and Danny Law, bitterly disappointing in
his first season with the county.
Essex retain faith in Law, who has been working on his bowling
action with Geoff Arnold, now the full-time specialist fast
bowling coach, and expect him to come good this year. Otherwise,
Napier awaits the call.
Quality performances from those supporting cast members would
make all the difference for Essex, who are virtually guaranteed
top notch returns from their 'stars'. Of those, Stuart Law,
1,482 championship runs in 1997 at an average of 57 and
superlative one-day contributions, can be expected to produce
another of the seasons which made him one of Wisden's five
cricketers of the year, while Ashley Cowan, fresher than
expected after a winter away with England, and Mark Ilott could
do with back-up from a fit Neil Williams and Darren Cousins.
Peter Such and the under-rated Paul Grayson, who could yet
achieve his ambition of representative cricket, provide the spin
with Powell in reserve.
The key man, however, could be Ronnie Irani, so revered at Essex
but apparently out of the England picture. Newly married and
with a winter away from cricket behind him, Irani is refreshed
and keen to prove wrong those detractors who find him a shade
aggressive.
"Ronnie has a good attitude in adversity as well as success,"
said Prichard. "He's worked hard on his fitness and is more
determined than ever."
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)