Stewart clouds the horizon for Hussain (5 July 1999)
It became clear this week what Nasser Hussain has been doing for the past three years since he returned to the England team against India at Edgbaston in 1996 and made a hundred that reshaped his international career
05-Jul-1999
5 July 1999
Stewart clouds the horizon for Hussain
Michael Henderson
It became clear this week what Nasser Hussain has been doing for the
past three years since he returned to the England team against India
at Edgbaston in 1996 and made a hundred that reshaped his
international career. He has been preparing himself assiduously for
the day when he would inherit the captaincy.
You could not say that this time last week. You can now. Everything
he did and said at Edgbaston bore the imprimatur of a man who has
waited, and waited, and finally been granted the opportunity to do
the job he wanted. He gave a purposeful press conference before the
match and spoke clearly in its aftermath. He has observed at first
hand how Alec Stewart did the job and Michael Atherton before him. He
did not come into it cold.
It helps when you win, of course, and victory in the opening Test of
the summer broke the spell that has had England captains transfixed
since Bob Willis won his first match in charge 17 long years ago.
This is not the time to say that Hussain will go on to achieve
wonderful things, only to note that he is looking ahead with a clear
eye.
The horses he backed galloped impressively, though nobody should get
too carried away by Andrew Caddick's eight wickets. If he could not
have a productive bowl on that pitch, against those opponents, people
would have been entitled to wonder why. He should be commended but it
should not be forgotten that Dean Headley also took eight wickets in
England's last Test, in Sydney, and six more in the game before,
without which they would not have pulled that Christmas cracker in
Melbourne.
Phil Tufnell also deserves commendation, no less than his captain,
who told him not to be afraid of giving the ball some air. When
Hussain spoke on Saturday of Tufnell's "flight and dip and spin" it
was like hearing a farmer talk of a pet bull that has just come home
from a country fair with a rosette in its ear.
Two marks, then, for Hussain's selection. Now, the hard bit. If he is
absolutely honest, he cannot claim any marks for retaining Stewart as
opener. The former captain should not have played at Edgbaston but,
oddly enough, having failed, the selectors may feel duty-bound to
give him another chance to fail at Lord's.
Hussain was all sympathy afterwards. "It's been a difficult couple of
weeks for Alec. Opening the batting on that pitch was hard work and
he got a couple of good balls. We have all had a week like that but
Alec is strong enough to come back. I'm sure he will fight back. I
know that."
Mmm. That sounds too much like a man talking himself up, in the hope
that brave words will disguise his concern. It's a good try, by a man
who feels sympathy for the man he has succeeded, but it will not
wash. It made little sense to go into this match with Stewart,
however hard he bit his lip, publicly lamenting his demotion.
Picking him was one of those botched jobs, of which England selectors
are so fond. It was a sop, a compensatory decision for relieving him
of the captaincy, and those are the worst kind of decisions because
they absolve the selectors of the responsibility of looking beyond
the usual cast list to make the hard choices.
There is no place for sentiment at this level of cricket. As David
Gower once said, in regard to another matter: "It is not Old
Reptonians against Lymeswold, one off the mark and jolly good show."
How it escaped Graham Gooch and Mike Gatting, who between them played
197 Tests, is astonishing and a bit worrying. Perhaps it is time that
David Graveney, who may feel a bit cowed in their company because he
played no Tests at all, got tougher.
Stewart made one run at Edgbaston, off an inside edge, and missed two
chances at second slip. For all Hussain's words of support it is
undeniable that his powers have waned and that is a great shame.
Stewart has served England wonderfully well, and without complaint,
but when a batsman's skills begin to decline at 36 there is not much
anybody can do. Stewart has done very well to last that long.
There has been talk that "good players do not become poor ones
overnight". No, they do not, usually, though it is possible. In
Stewart's case there is evidence that he has regressed over the
course of the last, onerous year. The selectors chose to ignore that
evidence when they met last week but it will not go away and until
the problem is resolved England will not make progress.
It is instructive to compare Stewart's situation with that of David
Boon, who stood down from the Australia team three winters ago,
shortly before his 36th birthday. Boon had been a pillar of the side,
good enough to make 21 hundreds in 107 Tests, and hold down the No 3
position through years of solid achievement. The team batted round
him and yet, when the moment arrived, he held up his hand and left
the stage to other, younger men. It was a most dignified departure.
Although it must be admitted that Australia have a bigger pool of
talented young players, there is still no excuse for prolonging
Stewart's career unnaturally at the expense of others, who may now
have more to offer. Michael Vaughan is in the selectors' thoughts and
Darren Maddy, who should really be one place behind the Yorkshireman
in the queue, made a timely hundred, against Yorkshire, last week.
One does not always pick a Test team on county form. England players
should be judged by their performance at international level until
there is a case to review their place. There was an excellent
opportunity to review Stewart's place before the Edgbaston Test and
the selectors, feeling perhaps that two new caps were enough, decided
to stick with him.
It is a critical time for the opening position. Apart from Stewart,
who has played 87 Tests, there is also concern about Atherton, who is
unlikely to add to his 88 caps, so wretched is his back condition. At
the moment he is doing more scribbling than batting - and a good deal
more entertainingly!
Those gaps leave an awful lot of experience to replace and the
selectors do the team's prospects no good at all by faffing about.
There is an important tour to South Africa this winter, where Allan
Donald and Shaun Pollock will be waiting. Last year they bowled South
Africa to a 5-0 drubbing of the West Indies.
Hussain is believed to be considering taking on the opener's job
himself, a move that would release a position in the middle order.
This week, when he meets Duncan Fletcher, England's new coach, in
Cardiff to discuss matters of mutual interest, that may be as good a
place to start as any.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph