Simon Hughes: Gatting goes after a long run at helm (28 May 1997)
IT HAS been a traumatic month for Middlesex
28-May-1997
Wednesday 28 May 1997
Gatting goes after a long run at helm
By Simon Hughes
IT HAS been a traumatic month for Middlesex. First, Denis
Compton, their most famous player and president dies, then they
become the first county to be beaten by Ireland, and now their
captain is standing down.
Mike Gatting announced yesterday that, after leading the
county for 15 of the most successful years in their history, he
is handing over the reins to Mark Ramprakash with
immediate effect.
In fact, it is a thoroughly sensible move, born of
Ramprakash`s readiness, and Gatting`s closer involvement
with England. After last weekend`s Texaco taster, no wonder he is
anxious to play a major role at the development level.
He will continue to play for Middlesex, perhaps to the end of
1998, coaxing Ramprakash through the early days of
leadership and in the meantime seeking a further nine centuries
to make him the 24th man to score a hundred hundreds. He is
likely to have more success with the first task than the second.
County captaincy is an intricate business, and moving the
field and changing the bowling are only the half of it. Gatting
always eschewed the services of a manager, so knows all the
intricacies of the job: anything from persuading the Lord`s
ground staff to erect the nets more quickly to picking the match
ball. The one duty he did manage to palm off was `transport
organiser`, which involved arranging a squabbling squad into
threes for car travel to the next away game.
Generally Gatting never shirked responsibility. Once after a
run of poor results, he asked for more commitment from the
senior players, walked in at 10 for two and made 158. He never
tolerated laxity or lethargy. He orchestrated a cacophony
of sound on the field, urging on the bowlers, clapping his chunky
hands vigorously. Occasionally his vehemence backfired. "Right,
remember a good, solid start is vital," he implored before a
NatWest semi-final at Southampton, "and watch out if you`re
trying to take a quick single to Paul Terry at cover, he`s very
quick." A short time later Gatting was run out taking on Terry
at cover.
In elements of determination, punctuality and dress he set an
immaculate example (though some players secretly believed
he banned the wearing of jeans purely because he couldn`t find
any to fit). He instilled a discipline at first a shade
rigid, which relaxed to accommodate the perverse characters
like the two Phils, Edmonds and Tufnell.
His one area of weakness was informing players of tricky
decisions. The first time I was dropped I found out from Val
the office typist, who said nonchalantly: "Bad luck about not
playing - you`re not in the team I`ve just given to the
scoreboard operators." Gatting hadn`t had the heart to tell me
himself and admitted later: "I always want everyone to play, so
I find it hard to tell them they`re not."
Well he doesn`t have to worry. That invidious task passes to
Ramprakash, while Gatting, for the first time since 1982 and
the brandishing of eight trophies, is a mere player. The time
is right. He has found it hard keeping up with county cricket`s
fitness-orientated expectations, and the decline of old-fashioned
socialising after games. Ramprakash is smart, modern and
ambitious, and more sympathetic towards individuals than his
past reputation or his nickname `Bloodaxe` suggest.
Leadership could stimulate his own game in the same way it did
his predecessor.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)