S Hughes: Captains face job insecurity (22 Oct 1997)
COUNTY captains are falling like autumn leaves
22-Oct-1997
Wednesday 22 October
Captains face job insecurity
Simon Hughes
COUNTY captains are falling like autumn leaves. Since the end of
the cricket season Phillip DeFreitas (Derbyshire), Peter Moores
(Sussex), Rob Bailey (Northants), John Stephenson (Hampshire)
and Mike Watkinson (Lancashire) have been deposed or jumped
before they were pushed, leaving only one captain - Essex's Paul
Prichard - with more than two years' experience.
These days captains have about as much job security as breakfast
radio DJs. This signifies quite a change from the early part of
this decade when over half the county captains had had at least
five years at the helm.
It is a poignant statistic, because it was around 1992 that
four-day matches became a significant part of the firmament, and
with the departure of three-day cricket went redeeming escape
routes for ropey teams. Third (last) day collusion masked a
multitude of sins, not least mouldy leadership, and several
captains managed to remain on the top shelf way past their
sell-by date.
Not any more. Four-day cricket brings skill, motivation and
man-management into sharp focus, and in this precarious,
pound-eyed society captains who fail to deliver good results are
quickly fingered. It is no coincidence that the teams of the
five guillotined men above finished the championship 16th, 18th,
15th, 14th and 11th respectively.
But in a task that requires a rhinoceros hide allied to a feline
touch, poor performance is not the only precursor to
unceremonial disrobing. The emergence of expensive,
high-profile coaches has jeopardised the authority of
inexperienced captains. This is not necessarily deliberate, but
the views of a strong, self-confident person like John Emburey -
an excellent reader of the game - will tend to triumph over a
meeker one like Bailey, captain under coach Emburey at
Northants.
A similar situation developed at Hampshire, where disagreements
between Stephenson and Malcolm Marshall were common, and
Stephenson soon lost the respect of the players. The fact that
he had been recruited from elsewhere, ahead of locally-reared
aspirants like Shaun Udal and Adrian Aymes, did not help. Nor
did the fact that the team often looked incapable of holding
their own in the Basingstoke and District League never mind the
County Championship. Stephenson's intense personality may not
have been ideal, but whatever his own failings, he felt totally
undermined, and is unlikely to play for the county again.
Mark Ramprakash, suddenly landed with the Middlesex captaincy in
early summer when the new England selector Mike Gatting decided
for once that he had too much on his plate, had none of these
difficulties. A newly erected honours board in the Lord's
dressing-room listing all the Middlesex captains gave him the
secure knowledge that the county do not habitually wield the axe
(Mike Brearley and Gatting's leadership spans 26 years) and the
first thing he was told on taking over was "the captain runs the
cricket. You're in charge."
"Having that sort of responsibility made me feel worthwhile, and
gave me the confidence to build something for the future,"
Ramprakash says.
He found the job all-consuming, often having restless nights
pondering team selection or bowlers' ends. He confessed to
occasionally losing concentration in the field while
contemplating the next strategy, and dealt personally with
individual gripes. "Concentrating mainly on other players'
needs, it is sometimes hard to get your own game together," he
reflects, "and ideally you need an energetic coach to organise
all the preparation so that you can get on with worrying about
the match."
Cricket's complexity - a team sport based around individual
conflict - makes finding the right authoritative balance tricky.
In this competitive, impatient age, the safest solution is to
follow Warwickshire's lead. With no outstanding candidate, pin
your faith not on one captain, but four.
County Captains
Derbyshire Dominic Cork (to start 1998) Durham David Boon (since
1997) Essex Paul Prichard (1995) Glamorgan Matthew Maynard
(1996) Gloucestershire Mark Alleyne (1997) Hampshire Vacant
(John Stephenson resigned) Kent Steve Marsh (1996) Lancashire
Vacant (Mike Watkinson resigned) Leicestershire James Whitaker
(1996) Middlesex Mark Ramprakash (1997) Northamptonshire Vacant
(Rob Bailey resigned) Nottinghamshire Paul Johnson (1996)
Somerset Peter Bowler (1997) Surrey Adam Hollioake (1997) Sussex
Vacant (Peter Moores standing down) Warwickshire Tim Munton
(1997) Worcestershire Tom Moody (1995) Yorkshire David Byas
(1996)
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)