Sleeping on the job
England have been snoozing their way through the Test series with South Africa so far, and soon they will be made to pay, says Andrew Miller
The Wisden Verdict by Andrew Miller
04-Jan-2006
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We've all done it. The alarm goes off on Monday morning, and you know you
mustn't ignore it, but it's just too tempting to tap that snooze button.
The next thing you know, you are stashing your coffee mug behind a bin on
the station as you straighten your tie in the ticket-office window, and you
arrive at work breathless, late, and dishevelled.
It is not a great way to start the week, and as England discovered after
dozing through the first day at Durban, it leaves an horrendous backlog to
catch up on for the rest of the week. Miraculously, on that occasion they
covered their tracks to such spectacular effect that they almost earned
themselves a bonus (almost, but not quite - the fates weren't quite that
generous). But you might have thought they had learned their lesson by now.
Not England, however. They just can't help themselves at present. Their
alarm bells have been jangling ever since that first "wake-up call" at
Potchefstroom in the tour opener, and they have been steadfastly ignored at
every turn. They sleepwalked to victory at Port Elizabeth and put in some
serious overtime at Durban, but at the third time of asking, they have been
caught fast asleep on the job.
Today's collapse of six for 68 in 24 overs really was as dozy as it gets. On
a blameless pitch, England succumbed to a succession of brainless
dismissals, not least Andrew Flintoff, who began the day as England's
pivotal batsman, but instead sowed the seeds of their downfall with his
loose carve to Herschelle Gibbs at point.
Though his bowling today carried him into the 1000 run/100 wicket club,
Flintoff has regressed as a batsman on this trip - he has now made 107 runs
in four innings, and even his vital 60 at Durban was a streaky affair that
might have been cut short twice if Hashim Amla at midwicket had been a foot
taller. And once Geraint Jones had gone as well, the situation was beyond
salvation for even Graham Thorpe, whose flimsy clip to square leg was a shot
of resignation, after being becalmed for the best part of two hours.
The worst thing about the performance, however, was the weary familiarity of
it all. Remember Charl Langeveldt? He was the workaday swing bowler whose
seven wickets for South Africa A condemned England to defeat at
Potchefstroom. Then, as now, he earned his success by living up to South
Africa's favourite press-call cliché, and landing the ball in "good areas"
with a hint of movement. It was all too much for England's swaggering
batsmen, who have become too used to forcing the pace against enthusiastic
scatterguns, such as Tino Best, Fidel Edwards, and latterly, Dale Steyn.
Today they possibly took Langeveldt even more for granted than usual. Not
only was he on his Test debut, but he also entered the attack with the minor
inconvenience of a broken hand, courtesy of a Flintoff short ball yesterday
afternoon. It may yet keep him out of the rest of the series, but that
merely made him all the more determined to make his one big break count. In
sporting terms, his effort was the equivalent of the office junior driving
two hours through a blizzard with pneumonia to impress on his first day of
work. He may not be seen again after this match, but he will be remembered
for future engagements.
The net result of England getting their comeuppance was that it allowed
South Africa's early birds to take an extended lie-in. As the sun settled
over Table Mountain and Jacques Kallis and Boeta Dippenaar snored their way
to an impregnable advantage, the only entertainment on offer was the sight
of the Barmy Army - heroically drunk and in their best voice of the tour -
making and breaking a succession of plastic-beer-mug-snakes, while informing
Kallis just how tedious he was becoming. And they were absolutely right.
Clocking in on the dot of nine every day can become a bit of grind.
Andrew Miller is assistant editor of Cricinfo. He will be following England on their tour of South Africa