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Simon Jones joins the throng of muted spectators on the fourth morning
© Getty Images
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For two extraordinary hours on the fourth morning at Trent Bridge, it was
just like watching Test cricket, and a packed house - packed with
expectancy and ever-mounting uncertainty - did not like it one little bit.
A subdued attack, shorn of Simon Jones and his ability to produce jaffas
on demand, were being thwarted for over after over, and though the runs
had been reduced to less than a dribble, a dreadful fear of yet another
missed opportunity was beginning to envelop the ground.
It's a two-way relationship between fans and players. To lift a team out
of its torpor, the crowd needs something to cheer. And yet, if there's
nothing cheering about the degree of comfort with which two batsmen are
grinding through the overs, then that elusive spark will remain under a
bushel. The Trent Bridge masses came to see a procession - indeed, one
Sunday tabloid was declaring "Let the party begin!" - but for 90 galling
minutes, there was nothing to witness but desperate party-pooping
defiance.
Simon Katich and Michael Clarke have both been embarrassed this summer by
shouldering arms and watching their off stumps being extracted, but their
judgment of line and length was impeccable this morning, as they embarked
on the long winding road to safety. While the pair were still together,
notions of an England victory and ultimate Ashes glory looked as much of
an empty promise as the free "Greatest ever English cricket" DVD being
advertised by another of the Sunday papers. (Free at a well-known high
street retailer, while stocks last, read the small print.)
The fourth morning of a Test is invariably a special occasion, however,
and the mounting anticipation of this series could not be ignored - even
at 9 o'clock in the morning, when none but the most cash-strapped of touts
had made it to the Trent Bridge traffic island. As I walked down the river
bank from my hotel, an old lady with an unruly Scotty dog engaged me in a
scattergun conversation.
"You going to the cricket? Ooh, lucky you! It's been extraordinary, hasn't
it? Now, tell me, how's that lad Jones? There are two of them aren't
there? He's the bowler isn't he? Ooh, we must beat them this time,
surely!" Then the dog strained at the leash upon sighting a lamp-post, and
I found myself three steps ahead and back on my own.
It's been like that all week. Cricket has become the talk of the town -
this town, that town and every town. Nottingham has not known fanaticism
like this since the days of Clive Rice and Richard Hadlee. Banners have
appeared on the side of the most improbable low-brow chain pubs, declaring
that "So-and-so Inc. loves cricket! Watch the Ashes here!", while the
delicatessen on the Bridgford Road is adamant that "You'll be bowled over
by our baps!"
Factor in the open-top bus that has been bombing up and down the Ratcliffe
Road all match, bedecked in a sponsor's logo and blaring out that anthemic
cricket tune, "Soul Limbo"; the taxi drivers who declare proudly how they
"had that Brett Lee in the back of their cab last night", and the buzz
around the city centre as random passers-by discuss the nuances of
reverse-swing, and it is clear that Nottingham has been turned into the
cricket capital of the world - albeit for one week only.
Cricket may not be the new football, as some publicity merchants have been
announcing this week, but for the moment at least, it is the new
something, and it is rightly revelling in a joyful sense of rediscovery.
But Nottingham is an apt city for maintaining a sense of perspective. From
the higher points of the ground, it is possible to peer directly into the
rusting hulk of an empire that was once the pride of the city.
The red and white might of Nottingham Forest's Brian Clough stand is a
stark reminder of how sporting dynasties rise and fall. From the pinnacles
of Europe to the depths of the football league, Forest are currently lost
in the woods. And so too, as Michael Clarke swished at Matthew Hoggard and
Australia slipped to 2 for 5, were Australia. One breakthrough at the end
of an attritional morning was all it took for the stands to begin to
believe once again.
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo