Lancashire: Flintoff gives Selectors a nudge (22 Jun 1998)
DOES English cricket have the guts to give Andy Flintoff his Test debut at Old Trafford in a fortnight
22-Jun-1998
22 June 1998
Flintoff gives Selectors a nudge
The Lancashire Evening Telegraph
DOES English cricket have the guts to give Andy Flintoff his Test
debut at Old Trafford in a fortnight?
That was the question being asked by anyone lucky enough to see the
Lancashire batting sensation's latest memorable innings yesterday.
On a day when the same old faces subsided to the same old miserable
failure at Lord's, Flintoff was confirming what many at Old Trafford
have suspected for a while: that he is the most exciting English
cricketer since Ian Botham.
He blasted 61 from 24 balls, with seven fours and four sixes,
including 34 in a single over from Alex Tudor which also included two
no-balls and cost a total of 38, thought to be a new Championship
record.
Adam Hollioake, the Surrey captain, said: "It was awesome. The game
was pretty much 50-50 when he came in, but he single-handedly turned
it on its head in the space of three overs. I've never seen anything
like it before."
Wasim Akram, the Lancashire skipper, said earlier this season that if
Flintoff was from Pakistan, he would already have played Test cricket.
And Peter Marron, the Old Trafford groundsman, put it better than
anyone. "He empties the bars quicker than anyone here since Clive
Lloyd. Why not give some of the young lads a go in the next Test?
We've got nothing to lose."a
Flintoff's innings thrust Lancashire into the thick of the
Championship race, just 20 points behind Surrey, who are still the
leaders - but have played a game more.
He came in with Lancashire 152-2 in the 34th over, still needing a
further 99 off just over 19 after an enterprising declaration from
Hollioake.
He drove his first ball from Rupesh Amin, Surrey's young left arm
spinner, for an effortless straight boundary. But the real carnage
came in the 41st over from Tudor, his former England under-19 team
mate.
Flintoff hit the first ball, a no-ball, for six. Then it went 4, 4, 4,
- to complete a 20-ball half century - and four, off another no-ball.
The next two deliveries were lofted over long on for six. And all
this, remember, off the most highly rated young fast bowler in
England, who had taken five wickets in the Lancashire first innings -
including Flintoff caught behind for a duck.
"Freddie," as he is known by his team mates, failed to connect with
the eighth and last delivery, so had to settle for 34 off the over,
equalling the Lancashire record set by Frank Hayes off the bowling of
Malcolm Nash at Swansea in 1977.
He finally holed out to deep mid-wicket, leaving Nathan Wood, who also
made a crucial contribution with an unbeaten 80, to complete the win.
"I think I was a bit over-shadowed," Wood laughed. "That was the best
innings I have ever seen. Freddie was just incredible."
Hear, hear to that - and over to you, England.
Source :: Lancashire Evening Telegraph (https://www.reednews.co.uk/let/)