Prepare for the cricketing carnival (3 May 1999)
The best-kept secret in sport will at last be disclosed later this week, as this country prepares to stage the seventh and biggest cricket World Cup
03-May-1999
3 May 1999
Prepare for the cricketing carnival
Michael Henderson
The best-kept secret in sport will at last be disclosed later this
week, as this country prepares to stage the seventh and biggest
cricket World Cup. It promises to be a wonderful tournament because
never before have so many teams well-suited to the one-day game been
brought together.
At least it should be wonderful, so long as the public wakes up to
the fact that it is taking place. Recognition of the event so far is
woefully sketchy.
That ignorance may have something to do with the time of year. In
May, summer is still a month away, and the football season is winding
down - or up.
Football is now such a swaggering, bullying adjunct of showbiz,
waited on hand and foot by an army of lickspittles and hangers-on,
that it has come to speak for all sports. The best definition of a
snob these days is probably somebody who does not think that football
is the greatest thing in the world.
But the low profile of the World Cup may also have something to do
with cricket's inability to reach out beyond its natural
constituency. England are not a successful side over five days or
one, and the players, with the notable exception of Darren Gough,
give little impression of enjoying what they do.
The recent brouhaha with the England and Wales Cricket Board
concerning World Cup fees did not earn them much sympathy. If they
won a few more games, people reckon, they might be worth some of the
money they are asking for.
As far as England are concerned, therefore, this is a competition of
immense significance. One-day cricket may only be a genetically
modified form of the game, with many more poor matches than good
ones, but the World Cup - the first to be staged in this country for
16 years - provides a showcase for these players to remind people,
particularly young ones, why cricket is a game worth playing and
watching.
Certainly, if the tournament matches up to the bizarre sequence of
events that have preceded it, it will be impossible to ignore. In the
past fortnight alone Carl Hooper, the West Indies batsman, has
retired from international cricket at just the time he is most
needed; Javed Miandad has resigned as the Pakistan coach in
circumstances that have yet to be explained; Makhaya Ntini, South
Africa's solitary black player, has been found guilty of rape; and
Australia's cricketers have been pelted with bottles in the
Caribbean. What does it all portend?
The domestic background to the competition is also perplexing. The
ECB is four sponsors light, so the projected profit of £15 million
will now work out closer to £11 million. The loss of revenue means
that the counties have had to re-jig their budgets to accommodate a
10 per cent reduction in their annual subsidy, so there are some
angry people in the shires.
Tim Lamb, the board's chief executive, is wise to what people are
thinking, if not saying, though he feels the picture is not as black
as it has been painted. Ticket sales have gone well (a healthy 85 per
cent) and, granted half-decent weather and exciting cricket at 21
venues, including Edinburgh, Dublin and Amsterdam, the tournament
should gather momentum.
''We want to appeal to everybody,'' says Lamb, stressing that the cup
has been promoted deliberately as a 'carnival' of cricket. ''Unless
we appeal to a wider constituency then we are always going to suffer
from the image that we are a game existing for middle-aged men. There
is an opportunity here to leave a legacy, and that is what we intend
to do. We want a bit of the fun of the fair at these matches.''
Whether the sense of adventure infects England's performance is
another matter. Runners-up three times in previous competitions, they
will have to play above expectations to reach the last four of this
one.
To qualify for the second stage they must edge out one of Sri Lanka,
South Africa and India, which makes the opening game, against the Sri
Lankans, the cup-holders, one they must win.
For England to fulfil their ambitions three players are crucial.
Graeme Hick must bat like an emperor, not a courtier; Darren Gough
must perform like the great fast bowler he wants to be; and Andrew
Flintoff must declare himself, boldly, without hesitation.
If these three conjoin, if Graham Thorpe retains his fitness, and if
Neil Fairbrother continues to milk useful runs, then a sliver of
optimism is permissible. Only a sliver, though. There are too many
good teams to mark England down as winners.
For one thing, too much has been made of their familiarity with
conditions that are commonly supposed to favour them. It is certainly
true that an attack of Gough, Alan Mullally and either Angus Fraser
or Ian Austin should do well on English pitches.
It is equally true that Allan Donald and Shaun Pollock, of South
Africa, will exploit any dampness or tinge of green. It would be
surprising if the Australian pair of Glenn McGrath and Damien Fleming
did not excel, or Javagal Srinath and Venkatesh Prasad, the
impressive Indians. Then there are Wasim Akram, Courtney Walsh and
Curtly Ambrose, who each have a decade of experience in these
conditions. Local knowledge counts for only so much.
For another, they simply do not have the depth of specialist talent
available to other teams. Nasser Hussain's presence as the spare
batsman in the party is an admission of that, brilliant fielder
though he is. Why, Australia cannot find room in their party for
someone as brilliant as Michael Slater!
It goes without saying that Alec Stewart could do with a few runs.
Suddenly he is looking every one of his 36 years, and no wonder. The
burdens of the past year were never designed to do him any favours.
It is time to come off the fence. Sachin Tendulkar will be the
batsman of the tournament, and Pollock will be its best bowler. Ricky
Ponting, the electric Tasmanian, will be the star fielder (yes, ahead
even of Jonty Rhodes). Australia will be the winners, the dark horses
are India, and New Zealand will be the most likely slayers of giants.
Why Australia, and not South Africa, who have approached this
tournament with the diligence of marathon runners? In Donald and
Pollock they have match-winners. They have outstanding batsmen in
Kallis, Cullinan and Cronje, they field superbly close to the bat and
in the deep, and the roving eye of Bob Woolmer, their outgoing coach,
will spot anything the players might miss.
Everything they have done since the last World Cup has been directed
towards winning this one, and they arrive here in rude health.
Australia, though, can match their talent in every discipline and do
not bend the knee to any foe. They were clearly distracted towards
the end in the West Indies, but they will be ready by the time they
step out at Worcester on May 16.
There is a rod of steel and class running straight through the side:
Mark Waugh, Steve Waugh, Shane Warne, McGrath. There are runs aplenty
in Adam Gilchrist, Ponting, Darren Lehmann and Michael Bevan.
Finally, there is the knowledge that, last time, having played
magnificent cricket to reach the final, they were trumped by Sri
Lanka. Dog-tired they may be, after an autumn, winter and spring of
relentless cricket, but they remain the team to beat.
Set against the riches that Australia, South Africa and Pakistan will
bring to the table, England are in danger of being guests at their
own feast. But this is no time for taking a narrow view. If England
make progress, good. If they are found out, there will still be
plenty to enjoy. It is, after all, a World Cup. Wakey, wakey,
everybody!
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)