Wednesday 21 May 1997
Verdict is split in defence of batting form
Matthew Fleming Talking Cricket
I WOULD like to take this opportunity to thank that
charitable soul who at Canterbury last Friday provided a muchneeded boost to morale by reminding me that "form is temporary
but class is permanent" as I trudged back to the pavilion.
It had not been a long innings. It wasn`t a first- baller,
yet it wasn`t one of those marathon knocks that guarantees the
next man in has had time to get his pads on. In fact, it
would have been a considerably shorter stay at the crease if I
hadn`t torn my trousers from kneecap to kneecap while executing
an elegant forward defensive (for elegant read uncontrolled and
for forward defensive read lunge) against Robert Croft.
Play was held up for some time while Matthew Maynard, crouching
at silly point, highlighted the scale of my problem. It was not
a `chest out, shoulders back` walk-off, more of a `where`s
that hole in the ground when you really need it?` trudge. So the
cry from the aforementioned Samaritan represented welcome crumbs
of comfort.
Imagine my humiliation when some wag stage-whispered in a Brian
Blessed type of bellow to his neighbour and the
surrounding grandstands: "Pity you haven`t got either." It is
not easy maintaining one`s dignity when your trousers are doing
a passable impression of a spinnaker, free of tobacco
advertising, and yet some absolute brute has just taken the wind
out of your sails.
It`s true my scores may not have made particularly
impressive reading of late; it`s also true that having ripped the
heart out of the Glamorgan second innings, Hugh Morris mispulling a long-hop to midwicket and Croft getting a leading edge
to mid-on, my tally of wickets for the season stood at four,
double my aggregate of championship runs.
Statistics alone do not tell the whole story. Granted, at the
beginning of the season, I was not in great form. I only had
to look at my methods of dismissal to realise how badly I was
batting: caught behind off a defensive prod, chipping the ball
to short midwicket and playing-on off a half-hearted nudge,
but things had changed.
In recent innings, I have been caught at third man, caught
and bowled off a full-blooded drive and caught at deep extra
cover. Therefore, the wag`s implication about a lack of class
may indeed have been accurate, but a lack of form - that was
unfair.
At least six counties were waiting on the announcement of the
Australian touring team before being able to confirm their
overseas cricketers for the 1997 season. This is not a problem
that is going to go away.
It is being discussed in all the county dressing-rooms as it is
one of the areas of concern being covered in the
Professional Cricketers` Association`s questionnaire. Are we
merely teaching the world`s leading players to perform in
English conditions, or are we ourselves learning from them?
In Derbyshire, Worcestershire and Durham, it is highly unlikely
that we are doing any great service to Australia, yet Dean
Jones, Tom Moody and David Boon are helping the likes of Andy
Harris, Vikram Solanki and Melvyn Betts and their
colleagues to become better players and preparing them for
the international stage.
At a time when our Premiership is signing the world`s greatest
footballers, rugby league is attracting players of the highest
international stature and sports previously considered to be on
the fringe, such as American football, ice hockey and basketball,
are all becoming homes to the world`s best, it seems odd that we
are threatening to jettison some of our most marketable assets.
At a time when the cake that is sports sponsorship is becoming
smaller and more and more people are scrapping for a slice of
it, perhaps we should ensure that we compete on a level playing
field.
The professional cricketers all understand what an important
time this is for English cricket. You can be sure that issues
such as overseas cricketers, a two-divisional
championship, relegation and promotion, regional cricket,
one-day cricket and the future of second XI cricket will all
be fully discussed.
We may not come up with all the right answers but they will be
thoroughly considered and honestly given. We are aware that we
have a duty to leave the game in a better state than it was when
we started.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)