Hollioake focuses on a rewarding future following eye test (28 July 1999)
Casual observers of cricket two years ago could have been forgiven for thinking that the Hollioake brothers had been earmarked to take England gloriously into the new millennium
28-Jul-1999
28 July 1999
Hollioake focuses on a rewarding future following eye test
Charles Randall
Casual observers of cricket two years ago could have been forgiven
for thinking that the Hollioake brothers had been earmarked to take
England gloriously into the new millennium. Anyone might wonder what
has happened since then.
The question of where exactly England think they are going and what
has happened to Adam and Ben Hollioake, the men who pulverised the
1997 Australians on their joint debut in the one-day series, is worth
asking.
The NatWest Trophy quarter-final at Northampton today should answer
the question of the Hollioakes, and there are several England
reputations at stake in this 'pressure' match.
Surrey have the championship and trophy double in their sights. Adam
Hollioake regards the NatWest Trophy as crucial to the summer because
two more titles would give Surrey a full hand of four in three
seasons, all effectively under Hollioake's captaincy. Their big lead
in the championship, 34 points, is unlikely to be pulled back as it
was last summer.
Hollioake, a man of clear-eyed confidence, invited derision last year
when he lost the England one-day captaincy and then had the
championship crown dashed from his hands by Leicestershire in the
final match of the season.
"That hurt more than anything," he said yesterday. "I always thought
of myself as a winner. So last year was a huge blow to my confidence.
I'd be lying if I said it hadn't affected me. It was a strange year,
and the fact I'd received so much attention in 1997 highlighted it
all the more."
Hollioake's batting returns last year were on paper respectable -
"I'm an optimistic person, and you don't want people constantly
reminding you they thought you'd had a nightmare" - but he has
discovered that deteriorating eyesight could have caused the dips in
form.
He has an appointment with an optician in Wimbledon next Monday to
buy a contact lens for his dominant right eye. "I've just found out
I've got very poor eyesight," he said. "I knew I wasn't sighting the
ball as quickly as I have done. The optician, who is a sports person,
said the deterioration might not bother someone walking down the
street but, to a guy facing a projectile coming down at 90mph, it
does."
Hollioake and his brother Ben want their England places back, and
three current Surrey upper-order batsmen - Mark Butcher, Alec Stewart
and Graham Thorpe - are under scrutiny for their recent performances
against New Zealand.
Adam on Ben: "People forget he's still only 21. Being the young guy
he is harder to deal with. His confidence is a bit down. If you ask
people within Surrey they'll say he's starting to come on nicely.
"He's a sensible kid, and he's starting to understand what he needs
to become successful. He has got to do the hard work. Before, he went
out, played and was successful. He had no fear."
Northamptonshire have seven consecutive one-day wins under their
belt, including a five-run success over Surrey in the CGU National
League at Wantage Road. They beat also Surrey by four wickets at the
Oval in April.
Jacques Kallis, the South Africa all-rounder, announced his presence
in the Glamorgan side with his National League 155 not out against
Surrey at Pontypridd on Saturday, and he said this week he was hoping
to start bowling again after his stomach muscle injury.
With Gloucestershire possibly distracted by their forthcoming Super
Cup final appearance at Lord's next Sunday, Kallis's presence should
inspire Glamorgan to a much-needed win at Cardiff.
A crowd of well over 10,000 is expected at Old Trafford, where
Lancashire take on Yorkshire in the match to be televised on Channel
4.
Andrew Caddick, one of the few England players with an enhanced
reputation, returns to strengthen Somerset against Kent at Taunton.
Warwickshire are bracing themselves to lose Allan Donald, their South
Africa fast bowler, for the rest of the season while he rests an
ankle injury.
Adam Dale, the Queensland seam bowler, has been drafted into
Australia's one-day squad for next month's tour of Sri Lanka and
Zimbabwe to replace Paul Reiffel, who has announced his retirement.
Michael Carberry, of Surrey, has replaced the injured David Harrison
in the England Under-19 squad for the forthcoming one-day series with
Australia.
Derbyshire have signed Kasir Shah, 21, a left-arm seamer from
Warwickshire, and James Pyemont, the Cambridge University batsman.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)