Richards reveals a rotten system (2 August 1999)
A very, very good batsman is in town and staying at my place
02-Aug-1999
2 August 1999
Richards reveals a rotten system
Mark Nicholas
A very, very good batsman is in town and staying at my place.
Yesterday morning, Barry Richards, the South African who lives in
Australia, read the sport sections of three Sunday newspapers and
concluded, not for the first time, that something was rotten in the
state of cricket.
Double-page spreads were devoted to the England issue: the captaincy,
the team, the post-mortems from Lords - reaction, blame and
accountability. The best part of a full page was devoted to county
cricket: David Sales's 300, Aftab Habib's second failure in
Leicestershire's match against New Zealand, the apparently irrelevant
previews of the Super Cup final and, wait for it, hidden away, another
interesting and close match between the England and Australia under-19
teams.
"Why," asked Richards, "are England as good as Australia at junior
level and so far behind after that?" Whereupon he proceeded to answer
the question himself.
"The Australian boys are hand-picked by Rod Marsh and Wayne Phillips,
who run the Australian Cricket Academy, and Geoff Marsh, the
Australian coach. Initial recommendations come from state coaches, who
concentrate on the basics of technique and mental organisation from
the 15-year-old age group onwards. They are not over-coached and any
boy with flair is encouraged to express it; to attack if in doubt and
to have a bit of fun with the game. Rod Marsh insists that the lads
have a beer and talk cricket. But if they step out of line, if they
let themselves or their mates down, they're out. Discipline is
essential for success at the highest level."
Richards knows because his son Mark played in the Western Australian
under-17 side last season. Both Marshes watched the 10-day interstate
tournament over the new year. "They keep an eye on temperament as much
as talent," says Richards, "so the boys touring England at the moment
may not be exclusively the best young players in Australia but they
will be the ones considered most likely to go on and do well in
first-class cricket."
It is during the journey from age-group cricket to first-class cricket
that gifted English players lose their way.
"What happened to a guy called Trescothick, who was captain of Young
England and played a season of club cricket in Perth? He did look a
good player," said Richards. "Vice-captain of Somerset, made 190 just
the other day, actually, but has been in and out of the Somerset side
for a couple of years now," said I.
"Did he ever lose any weight; he was a bit slow on his feet, they
thought in Perth. Aussie boys of that age have got six-packs for a
stomach." Yes, well, er, lost a pound or two, I guess, but there is
still plenty of it. "I wonder if he gave himself the best chance,"
observed Richards.
"The key," he adds, becoming increasingly animated, "is that after
under-19 cricket, these guys must sink or swim in grade cricket. In
the real world, if they don't perform, they don't get picked - simple.
"In England, they have counties bickering for their name on a
contract, kit manufacturers offering goodies, maybe sponsored clothes
and cars, too. At the very moment they should be pushing for higher
achievement, they are gifted with the trappings of success. At that
point, they can cruise in the second XI against ordinary, equally
spoilt and protected opponents. None of this encourages
self-discipline or the pursuit of excellence."
Richards came to England to play for Hampshire in 1968. "There was a
pecking order - junior players, capped players, senior pros.
Everybody was compartmentalised. You had to serve time.
Dressing-rooms were often bitter places which discouraged excellence.
It is much less oppressive now, of course, but the remnants will
always be there in a fully professional system.
"The benefits system applauds mediocrity and stands in the way of
excellence. Players hang on for a golden handshake."
He pointed out that county cricket lurched from good to bad almost
daily. "One day, you can bat out of your brains against a good attack
on a bad pitch for 80-odd, and the next, you read about some mediocre
player getting 200 against Oxford University - and they both count for
the same, which is ridiculous. The fixing of pitches is another
hopeless thing for the game because there is no consistent environment
in which the players can be judged."
He said he had never had the feeling that English cricket was pulling
together. "Most of what I read in the papers blames the players, which
is OK up to a point. But they're a product of the system. If there is
no discipline in the batting or if technique and application is not as
it is supposed to be, then look to where the problems start, not where
they end. Never mind paying someone six figures to coach the national
team. Pay that to coach 15 to 18-year-olds and you'll get a real
return for your money."
And all that was over a bowl of cornflakes. You should have heard him
by lunchtime. "A strong England is good for world cricket but it won't
come back overnight. The cricket community is too big; too many people
are feeding off the carcass. If the system was streamlined - and
that's not just the players - and the quality condensed, people would
earn more, for one thing, and excellence would be allowed to emerge
without inhibitions."
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)