Harris N: Lord Ted takes far-sighted view of Illy's England (22 Jan 95)
The message from down under was that a World Series final between Australia and Australia "A" deserved nothing less than our contempt, but no one told Ted Dexter
22-Jan-1995
LORD TED TAKES FAR-SIGHTED VIEW OF ILLY'S ENGLAND - Norman Harris
Norman Harris finds that Ted Dexter is still star-gazing two
years after he fell to earth
The message from down under was that a World Series final between
Australia and Australia "A" deserved nothing less than our
contempt, but no one told Ted Dexter. With pleasure, he describes
what he saw when he switched on the other morning at 3.30.
"Damien Martyn had been smashing it around the park. Then came
the drinks break, and an extraordinary little bit of cricket.
Before Warne bowls the next ball he faces down the wicket and
makes a face. Hunches his shoulders and pulls a face. Whether to
the wicket-keeper or the batsman I don't know. But first ball
Martyn is plumb lbw. Then, before the next two balls, two more
faces and two more hunches, but no more wickets."
Those who have heard nothing of Dexter since the summer of 1993 -
and these are his first utterances in print since then - might
wonder at the spirits of one who might presumably still be hiding
his face. He was then portrayed, as he now recalls, as "a wacky
bloke out on a limb". He avoided reading much of the press at
that time. ("I told the TCCB press officer not to show it to me,
because I couldn't do my job if I had this sort of soup swilling
around inside me.") But he certainly knew the impact of one
memorable throwaway line.
England had just been beaten - humiliated - for a second
successive Test, and a voracious press scented blood. Did
Dexter feel responsible? How responsible? Finally, when the
questions and answers were going nowhere, the chairman
shrugged and said that perhaps Venus was in the wrong
juxtaposition. It was a headline writer's dream.
"By that time the lampooning process was well in swing, and it
didn't matter particularly what I said or didn't say. The fact
was that England were being beaten out of sight, and I was the
chap in the chair who was going to be kicked around the place.
But that wasn't anything like the start of it. The accusation in
India that we had blamed the smog was far wilder." If ever he got
upset, which seems rare, it was in India. "I was quite angry, to
the extent that it was such a bloody nuisance, because it became
political." The new post that had been created for Dexter was
that of chairman of the England Committee, with responsibility
for all international sides. With the forced exit of the "Wacky
One", England turned back to a conventional chairman of selectors
- but their team has hardly surged to the top of the
international tree. Surely, Dexter must have got just a touch of
satisfaction from that?
"A wry smile, perhaps, but no satisfaction. Obviously, I only
want England to do well, and I only want England to have top
players. Gough has appeared, which is wonderful - he really is
wonderful - but the systems still militate absolutely against
players reaching any standard of excellence. Unless they're
playing the right kind of competitive cricket at the right age,
and coming up the steps to the summit at the right speed, they're
just not going to be good enough."
Dexter got annual "A" tours going, and the first coaching
programmes for under -19, 17 and 15 squads, but for more profound
advances he needed to win over committees heavily influenced by
the counties. "I felt I'd made an impact one day when a chairman
thumped the table and said: "It seems to me that all we talk
about these days is England!" As it happens, he was the same guy
who kicked me in the wotsits later on."
Ironically, for one who helped develop the rules of one-day
cricket (with the International Cavaliers in the Sixties) Dexter
now regards the limited-over game, along with the old three-day
championship, as a virus that has damaged batsmen and killed off
all the bowlers. "In four-and-a-half years I must have had my
shoulder tapped 500 times by important county people, wanting me
to look at a player who was thought to be Test material. Every
one of those players were batsmen. Bowling became a non-event. At
all levels of cricket people say: "So-and-so's our best bowler,
he's terrific, he always bowls his 10 overs for less than 20."
"Nobody spins the ball. You know, I couldn't find a single
spinner with a sore spinning finger. Everyone said, "Funny, I'm
very lucky, I don't get that problem." So, nobody spins it and
nobody swings it. Chris Lewis started off as an outswing bowler,
one of the best bowlers at under-19 level. Phil DeFreitas started
with outswing. By the time they got into international cricket
they just came over the top of the ball and tucked it into the
body to restrict scoring, not to get anyone out."
Of course, Dexter is not the first to blame the one-day game, but
he has a distinctive solution - and he is very keen to reveal it.
"Young players should be kept out of one-day cricket until
they've established themselves in championship cricket. This
would only mirror what happens overseas. Someone like Michael
Slater may have played only two or three major one-day matches
before he played for Australia. Our blokes have probably played
about 200. They've gone before they start!"
If he had his way, the Sunday league would be scrapped.
Generally, he would like to see a more professional approach. The
need is to coach out faults among leading players, and for
players to be more ambitious, more committed. He sees few
players who make time to work at their game like a Faldo in golf,
though Gooch and Boycott have been exceptions.
The ex-chairman has evidently judged the dust to have settled.
Is he ready for another contribution? "Well, I'm very interested
in trying to improve England's cricket standards." He points out
that he is still on the MCC Cricket Committee. He is in
close touch with Sir Colin Cowdrey, and Micky Stewart wants him
to have some input with youth cricket.
When we are finished, the interviewee picks up some papers to
read his own scribbled notes, checking that he has not missed
anything. "Yes," he says with some satisfaction. "Imagine if your
slow left-arm bowler has to have 30 championship wickets before
he can play a one-day game. By then, with a bit of luck, he'd at
least have some of his basic skills intact ... "
The odds against selling this idea to anyone, the odds against a
Dexter Plan enabling England to become a cricket superpower
again, would seem rather long. But this is a man, remember, whose
explosive strokeplay once humbled the feared Hall and Griffiths
in front of an entranced Lord's; who once flew his family out to
Australia in his own light plane; and who stood as a
parliamentary candidate against James Callaghan in Cardiff.
The record suggests anything is possible. And right now, golf is
offering another irresistible challenge. Twice winner and five
times runner-up of the President's Putter at Rye (and in the last
eight this month), Dexter is now 59 and his handicap is 2.7. "I'm
determined to be a scratch 60-year-old," he says. "And I'm moving
in that direction."
(Thanks : The Observer, 22 Jan 95)