Hussain declares his hand with gut feeling (11 August 1999)
The penny has finally dropped
11-Aug-1999
11 August 1999
Hussain declares his hand with gut feeling
Michael Henderson
The penny has finally dropped. Yesterday, after Graham Gooch and Mike
Gatting were sacked as England's Test selectors, Nasser Hussain
declared his hand. The captain of England's bumbling team, who
survived going 2-1 down against New Zealand at Old Trafford by a
narrow margin, have acknowledged publicly that younger men and
fresher ideas are needed on the long journey towards fulfilment.
It is a shame, in a way, that it had to end like this for Gooch and
Gatting, who will stay on as advisors and who gave so much to England
as players. But they walked into a trap of their own making. There
was never any room for both of them and now, after the muddle-headed
selection for the last Test which raised doubts about their
competence, there is no use for either. Now Hussain and Duncan
Fletcher, the incoming coach, must embrace the future. There is no
profit in back-sliding.
"I have gut feelings about certain players," said Hussain, "and there
is now a blank piece of paper. If you start with a blank piece of
paper, it's amazing what you can end up with." We will have a better
idea when he and Fletcher select the party who go to South Africa
this winter.
Hussain thought that the next selection meeting, for the Oval Test
that starts tomorrow week, will be "the longest in recent years",
longer even than the one before Old Trafford, which was brought
forward to Saturday morning so that every argument could be heard
properly. If the meeting is as long as he anticipates, it will be
because - although captain and coach recognise the need for change -
their eagerness may be tempered by the knowledge that the series is
still there to be won.
Hussain, whose involvement so far has been restricted to five active
days after he broke the middle finger of his right hand at Lord's,
must first report fit. He hopes to play for Essex against the
tourists in a game starting on Friday and, if there is no adverse
reaction, he will return to the side at the Oval.
"I am not worried about leaving out friends of mine, or people I have
played with for a long time," he said. "But I am not going to do
things just because it is what the public want, or what the media
want. I will do the things I think are right for the side.
"I am not of the school that believes there is no talent and that we
can't make any changes." Then, significantly, he added: "There is no
point going to the Oval with the people Duncan doesn't want for the
tour of South Africa." No wonder he expects the meeting to be long
and contentious.
Despite his refusal to submit to public pressure for its own sake
(quite right), Hussain knows what people are saying. "I'm very aware.
It's something I have thought through in the last couple of weeks,
and will think through again." The problem, he said, was finding
players good enough to join the team on merit, and retaining those
who justified their selection through ability and 'example'.
That is the key word. For all the talent in the batting, it is
undeniable that the top six have not batted well together. Nor is the
atmosphere in the dressing-room welcoming for younger players. More
than one has spoken privately with surprise and disappointment of the
way they were not made to feel part of the team.
In a team game like cricket, spirit counts for as much as runs and
wickets. New Zealand, for instance, have found a unity and pleasure
in each other's company that shows up 'Team England' for the nonsense
that it is. There is little obvious spirit in the England side. That
was apparent last Saturday from the inert performance in the field as
New Zealand batted on, and left former England Test cricketers
watching in utter dismay.
That is the overwhelming problem that Hussain and Fletcher must
resolve now that they are fully in charge. It will not be easy, and
the changes will not be immediate. But it must be undertaken swiftly,
and in all seriousness. An atmosphere of selfishness and insecurity
is a dangerous compound in any dressing-room.
"I don't believe in saying 'this lot are not good enough, let's go
and get another XI'," said Hussain, "because that doesn't work. But
my gut feeling is that we are moving towards a time when we have to
start looking to the future." And the future starts, for this
purpose, with the tour of South Africa.
It is silly to think that England will win where they lost 1-0 four
years ago, despite the extraordinary efforts of Michael Atherton in
Johannesburg. But the cricket-watching public will tolerate an
attempt to introduce younger players in an effort to transform the
performance - and general impression - of an increasingly
unattractive side. Win or lose next week, the touring party must be
selected with that goal in mind.
Hard times require hard measures - as Gooch and Gatting have found
out. If Hussain is to be true to his word, he must also deselect Alec
Stewart, the man he succeeded. Stewart played well for his unbeaten
83 in Manchester but he no longer enjoys the trust of the people he
plays with. The way he handled the financial arrangements for the
World Cup has left him so exposed that Hussain is better off without
him.
The nucleus of the side is well-established: Hussain, Graham Thorpe,
Mark Ramprakash, Darren Gough and Alex Tudor (when fit), possibly
Andrew Caddick. To that list should be added Mark Butcher, who is
going through a tough period but is likely to give full value in the
end. England need players committed to the side, not themselves, and
Butcher, like Dean Headley, is one of those.
It is not a long list, and it must be filled. Between them, Hussain
and Fletcher face many evenings of doubt and a few days of misery.
But the fact that the England and Wales Cricket Board have
acknowledged that suns set and dawns rise offers a sliver of hope.
Right now, that is the most the game can expect.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)