Mark Nicholas: Reiffel`s recall gives Australian attack straight back (3 July 1997)
DRESSED to his chin in sweaters and tracksuit while play continued at Southampton over the weekend, Paul Reiffel sat on the players` balcony and contemplated his second visit to England
03-Jul-1997
Thursday 3 July 1997
Reiffel`s recall gives Australian attack straight back
By Mark Nicholas
DRESSED to his chin in sweaters and tracksuit while play continued at Southampton over the weekend, Paul Reiffel sat on the
players` balcony and contemplated his second visit to England.
He did not much agree with the idea that he has settled easily
into an `English length` because, he remarked, he al- ways
bowls that length. He said that some bowlers, and Glenn Mc-
Grath is obviously one, bowl a shorter length on faster pitches
but that he just "bowled normal" and had always looked to "drag
batsmen forward".
He likes bowling here - he took 19 wickets in three Tests in
1993 - and especially in the present miserable weather, because
the dampness in the pitches allows the seam to grip and the moisture in the air allows the ball to swing generously. The slower pitches do not bother him, he said, because he relies on accuracy to work a batsman over rather than speed or bounce to
shock him into error. He was pleased that his outswinger
is going, something he didn`t really have in 1993, and which
he thought came from at last understanding the mechanics of his
bowling. He was aware that now is the time to cash in because
when the warmer, drier weather comes there isnothing so good for
batting as a good English pitch, and then even he will have to
alter his length a little.
He did not think he had bowled especially well in the first innings at Lord`s, where he was too wide with the new ball and
annoyingly had not committed the batsman to play, which was a
sin. Happily the misdirection had gone in Australia`s favour,
he agreed, because England could not score from Reiffel`s end
while they could not preserve their wickets against Mc- Grath. It
was important to be "a partnership bowler and to work with the
others as a unit".
He had bowled some beauties, mind you, which kept the batsman
aware of his threat and on balance he had been delight- ed to
have found the groove so quickly. After all, he was only just
off the plane.
Leaning back a little on the bench, he reflected on the frustration of his initial exclusion from the tour. The news had hit
him very hard, really got under his skin, and he was aggravated
that noone - selectors he meant - had contacted him to say
where he had gone wrong. The rumour that he was an injury risk
was infuriating because he was quite fit enough, thank you,
and if his hamstring problems does linger, experience has taught
him to manage them and they are now under control.
He said it had been hard to watch the team take off for England
and though he had not realised, his anger at being omitted
turned to depression. He learnt as much during a valuable chat
with the Victorian team`s psychologist, who called it grieving.
Reiffel, who is not one to wear his heart on his sleeve but whose
emotional sensitivity comes over loud and clear, accepted that
losing something close to you, something that takes up so
much of your life, can lead to dark thoughts.
"The experience was the worst of my career. I know it`s only
sport but it is a career too. And though I never thought
as seriously about retiring, as was suggested, I did run
through other possibilities for this stage of my life. Having
said that, many worse things happen and once I had come to
terms with the disappointment, I began to look forward to
playing for Victoria and Richmond again and perhaps in county cricket."
His course of rehabilitation began with a nine-day car rally
through Tasmania and along the east coast of Australia. His codriver, more likely the captain, was another Victorian fast
bowler; a very different kettle, one Mervyn Hughes. Nine
days in a car with Merv? That`s make or break.
REIFFEL says he learnt more tricks from Hughes than from anyone. "Merv`s a street fighter, a man who knew how to survive
through a smart bowling brain and an amazing ability to compete
in any situation. He kept cricket simple - what you saw was what
you got - which is a good example for any cricketer to follow. Time spent with Merv is never wasted."
Clearly not. A bonus from the Australian selectors` original
mistake is that Reiffel is fresh, not just physically, which
matters, but mentally, which matters most for the in- tensity
of Test cricket. His presence in the attack gives it solidity,
gives it a straight back when, prior to Lord`s, it had looked
hunched and strangely unsure of itself.
Reiffel is not a cricketer of extravagant frills, he is a mean,
straightforward bowler who nags at batsmen for his success and
who allows others around him to expand in their own play. He
is a deal quicker than he looks from afar - he bowls that thing
cricketers refer to as a `heavy` ball which jars the splice of
the bat - and he has the special knack, like Hughes, of taking
wickets when they are most needed.
His brooding when the world is against him can be seen as disaffection or worse, as disinterest. And given the signature
"laid-back" approach, you would barely think he cared. But he
does, of course, and it is because the dressing room knows as
much, because of his value as a team player, that he has settled back with his mates as if he had not been away.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)