World Cup blow revives dream of cricket academy
BY JONATHAN PETRE, EDUCATION CORRESPONDENT
This report appeared in the last edition of The Sunday
Telegraph
SENIOR cricket administrators have won their long battle to
build a national cricket academy along the lines of the
successful Australian centre which has produced world stars
including the spin bowler Shane Warne.
The academy has until now been blocked by the counties, which
have argued that a national centre of excellence was
unnecessary because they provided adequate training.
But they have now been persuaded that a national academy is
needed urgently in the wake of England`s dismal performance in
the World Cup, according to sources in the Test and County
Cricket Board, the game`s governing body. John Major, the Prime
Minister, has exerted considerable pressure behind the scenes.
"It has become self-evident that we are at desperation
stations," said one insider. "We can`t go on selling what is an
increasingly shoddy product."
Senior officials at the TCCB, which will fund the academy,
have met Ministers to discuss the injection of additional money
from the lottery. The academy would employ the talents of
former players like Dennis Lillee, the Australian fast bowler, to
coach talented cricketers at all levels, from schoolboys to Test
players.
The plan was welcomed yesterday by John Carlisle, MP for Luton
West and vice-chairman of the Tory backbench sports committee.
"It could revolutionise the prospects of young cricketers," he
said. "The academy could be like a cathedral choir school,
offering an academic education as well as a cricketing one."
Jack Potter, the founding coach of the Australian cricket
academy in Adelaide, who is now coaching at Sedbergh, an
independent boys` boarding school in Cumbria, said: "There
was a lot of animosity when we set up our academy in 1988.
"The states said their coaching was good enough. But what we
found was that when the best kids came together, they really
competed in every aspect of training, and that produced
better, sharper players."
Plans to set up a national academy - with Mike Gatting, the
former England captain, as chief coach - were shelved by the TCCB
in January, even though sponors had been found, apparently
because the counties could not agree on how it would operate.
But England`s latest debacle has revived it once again.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)