In the skin of a lion
Boyd Rankin forsook a potential rugby career for his first love, cricket
Dileep Premachandran
12-Apr-2007
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In March, when the star-studded rugby team came agonisingly close
to Ireland's first Six Nations Championship since 1985, it was a strapping
cricketer that won the BBC Radio Foyle/Bank of Ireland Sports Personality
of the Month award. Barely known a few days earlier, Boyd Rankin's heroics
pushed the cricket team on to the back pages and the rugby heroes inside,
yet he would be the first to tell you that it could all have been so very
different.
Right through his secondary education at Strabane Grammar School, Rankin
played No.8 for the rugby team. A pivotal position occupied by legends
like Mervyn Davies (Wales) and Morne du Plessis (South Africa), it's
evolved in recent times to such an extent that the man in possession of
the jersey needs the ball-skills of a back and the brute strength of a
forward. At 6'8", Rankin certainly wasn't lacking in strength, but there
was something else holding him back.
That was a love of cricket. In Michael Ondaatje's Running in the
Family, it was eccentricity that was the common thread. For the
Rankins, it's cricket. "Dad still plays, though each season he says it'll
be the last," says Boyd with a goofy grin. "He's 57 now. My brothers both
played for the Under-19s as well. Robert (21) played with me in Bangladesh
in 2004, and David (19) played in Sri Lanka last year. My sister's only
16, but she's represented the region as well.
"Yes, it's in the back of your mind that it's not a big sport [in Ireland]
in the way that football or rugby is. But it's not about being famous;
it's about what you're good at."
His first foray on to the world stage was a big letdown. Little went right
for him in Bangladesh and in his three outings, he had 2 for 104 at a
whopping economy rate of 7.25. That wasn't going to discourage him though,
or extinguish a dream that had started burning bright when he was in
primary school. "We obviously didn't have much cricket in Ireland, but I
watched a lot on TV. I modelled myself on Curtly Ambrose and Glenn
McGrath, bowlers who hit the deck from just back of a length outside off
stump."
By 15, he was playing for the first team at Bready, the local club, and he
went on to represent Ireland at every age group from U-13 onwards. In
fact, his Irish debut came even before the trip to Bangladesh. "It was
against a team called the Free Foresters," he tells you. "We didn't play
too many international teams back then."
That game at Eton College also saw the advent of one of Irish cricket's
biggest hopes. A precocious 16-year-old named Eoin Morgan made his debut
that day, but for all the talk of him being an England prospect one day,
it's been Rankin that's caught the imagination at the World Cup.
Though he wasn't called up for the national side in 2004 or 2005, there
were enough outings with the U-19s and the A team to attract the attention
of county scouts. There were several offers of trials, but when it came to
the crunch, Rankin chose Middlesex. The reason was a simple one. "It was
because of the Irish connection, with Ed Joyce and Morgan there," he says.
"I wanted to be some place where I knew a few faces."
He had a summer contract with Middlesex in 2004 and '05, but though he did
fairly well for the second XIs, the call-up to the county side never came.
When the winter of 2005 came along, it was clear that Rankin needed to
make some tough choices.
That was when he came across an individual he had first met two years
earlier in Spain, at the European Cricket Academy arranged to help young
talent from countries like Ireland, Scotland, the Netherlands and Denmark.
Mike Hendrick had played 30 Tests and 22 one-day internationals for
England, and was employed as Derbyshire's bowling coach when he invited
Rankin over for a couple of training sessions.
The time was right for a change. "In my time at Middlesex, I didn't really
prove anything," says Rankin. "They were also trying to change my action.
Two or three different coaches were giving me tips, and it messed me up a
bit. I came across Hendo again when I was at University, studying
agriculture at Harper Adams College in Shropshire."
After that, things should have fallen into place, but they didn't. There
was a game for Derbyshire's first XI and a Pro40 match against Kent where
he took a wicket in his first over, but a side strain subsequently ended
his season. The road back included another stint with Ireland A, before a
couple of matches at the European Championships in Glasgow. When the World
Cup squad was announced in August, he was in.
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From October, he trained full time with the Northern Ireland Sports
Council, and then went to South Africa in January for more fitness
training. "I did reasonably well in games against teams like Eastern
Province," he says, "but didn't feature much in the World Cricket League
[in Kenya]. I had one match, but didn't do nothing. I was down with a
stomach bug."
He was steady rather than spectacular in the two warm-up games against
South Africa and Canada - one wicket to Dave Langford-Smith's eight - but
came into his own in the St Patrick's Day clash against Pakistan,
dismissing Younis Khan, Kamran Akmal and Azhar Mahmood. On a day when the
rugby team had to endure Six Nations heartbreak, the cricketers scripted
their bit of folklore with a stunning three-wicket triumph.
Following that, there were messages of support from Eddie O'Sullivan, the
coach, and the rest of the rugby team, and also from Roy Keane, the
Manchester United legend now coaching at Sunderland. There was also good
advice from Courtney Walsh, an icon in Jamaica and once the world's
highest wicket-taker. "His advice was that it's basically a simple game,"
says Rankin. "Just do the basics well, and try not to overcomplicate
things."
That accent on the uncomplicated also came from Jeremy Snape, the former
England offspinner who worked briefly with the Irish in his role as sports
psychologist. "I used to have a lot of negative thoughts at the top of my
run-up," says Rankin. "I'd think of wides and no-balls, and of being hit.
He taught me to get over that, and also block out the crowd."
We're sitting on the steps of the Garfield Sobers Pavilion at the
Kensington Oval, and Rankin stares quietly at the sun-baked strip in the
middle as the practice session winds up. "It's always been my dream to
play against Australia," he says quietly. "To do it in a World Cup is just
unbelievable. Talking to McGrath after the game would make it even
better."
Dileep Premachandran is associate editor of Cricinfo