S Hughes: Bowlers developing a sweet truth (29 Aug 1998)
TALCUM powder, lip salve, sun block, bottle tops, Brylcreem
29-Aug-1998
29 August 1998
Bowlers developing a sweet truth
By Simon Hughes
TALCUM powder, lip salve, sun block, bottle tops, Brylcreem. All
these substances have at various times been applied to a cricket
ball to aid swing. Bowlers are great cod theorists. Such measures
have since been outlawed by the heirarchy under Law 42.5: "any
member of the fielding side may polish the ball providing that no
artificial substance is used." But you can't keep good men down,
and trundlers up and down the country are now utilising an
everyday item found in your average county ground tuck shop.
Sweets.
Opal Fruits, toffees and extra-strong mints are consumed by teams
just before they take to the field, and between overs, not just
to clear the taste buds of last night's chicken jalfrezi. Bowlers
have found that the saliva enhanced by sucking candy creates a
highly-polishable sheen on the ball when applied to it. "Like
bowling with a toffee apple," said one county seamer drily.
Without the stick, presumably.
The South Africans might have started this fad. Remember all the
stories about them demolishing vast quantities of Jelly Tots when
England toured there in 1995-96? It was argued that this was a
great way of maintaining energy levels during a long, enervating
day. That may have been the case, but clearly someone had worked
out the opportunities they created to make the ball swing. Or
were the South Africans sponsored by the Association of Dentists?
Before you throw your arms up in horror and cry foul, however,
consider this. Cricket is a game of bat and ball. Administrators
(usually batsmen) and bowlers indulge in the same game of cat and
mouse as security companies and burglars. Batsmen guard the
jewels, bowlers try to steal them. The authorities perpetually
attempt to inhibit bowlers' strategies - restricting bouncers,
reducing seam thicknesses, encouraging umpires to inspect the
ball regularly for sharp practice, penalising counties for
sub-standard pitches. The game's alleged "miscreants" know they
must always try to stay one step ahead.
You have to admire their ingenuity. As balls and surfaces have
become more batsman-friendly, so they have tried manipulating the
quarter seam, drying and wetting opposite sides of the ball,
scuffing it or smothering it in Ambre Solaire.
The latest trend has probably come about because ball
manufacturers use a thinner covering of leather on their
products, making a rich polish harder to obtain. Licking the ball
is becoming more popular than rubbing it on the trousers,
especially as the latter could result in a pocketful of squashed
toffees. Officialdom will be helpless to stop this caramelising
unless they issue umpires with tasting powers. And if you hear
that a bowler is missing from a side because of toothache, you'll
know why.
AUGUST is for absence. Ben Hollioake was late for nets on
Wednesday at the Oval, repeating Chris Lewis's misdemeanour two
years earlier at the same venue during the Pakistan Test. Lewis
also failed to show on time at Worksop this week, and was
promptly suspended from duty. Unpunctuality is rife at this time
of year, for the simple reason that players have had enough of
being stuck at cricket grounds 10 hours a day, six days a week.
Either that or they're so disorientated from four months of
shire-hopping and late-night nosebags, they don't respond to the
alarm clock.
Sure, time-keeping is important, but players' daily schedules
have become a bit ridiculous. In by 9.15 is the norm (wearing
blazer and tie), looseners by 9.30, nets at 9.45, followed by
fielding practice at 10.15. Tea and biscuits are taken half an
hour before the start, which seems to largely defeat the object
of what has gone immediately before.
Logically, it would seem more sensible to arrive at 10am in a
tracksuit rather than smart attire (no one except the cleaner
sees you at that time anyway), go straight out on to the field
for the warm-ups, then just nip back into the dressing-room at
10.50 for the captain's powwow and a quick change.
Colin Cowdrey, for one, would approve of this routine. "All this
getting in at 9.15, and doing warm-ups for an hour before playing
six hours of cricket would have been too much for me," he said
last week. "I'd have had to retire years earlier."
But excuses will have to do in this day and age, the punctures,
delays behind combine harvesters and I-ran-over-a-dog alibis
being dredged out at regular intervals. Fining players is one
option, but in this well-heeled society it is no guarantee that
they won't transgress again.
Essex found a better solution. After a night out with Ian Botham,
a severely hungover Derek Pringle overslept and was late for play
at Colchester. "Make him bowl all day," said Keith Fletcher to
the captain Graham Gooch, who followed this advice to the letter.
Pringle was never late again.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)