Sue Mott: First place is everything for warrior king Gatting (02 June 1997)
Sue Mott
02-Jun-1997
Monday 2 June 1997
First place is everything for warrior king Gatting
Sue Mott.
FASHIONS change. Now the England captain has swabs of sunblock
across his nose. Back then, the soon-to-be England captain had
his own nose across his face. Both aggressive gestures in their
own way, but Mike Gatting`s bone-splintering approach to West
Indian bowling, circa 1986, would seem to mark him out as the
more committed.
"You`ve got to be prepared to - if you like - die for your
country. That`s what we`ve got to find," said the juststepped-down Middlesex captain and novice England selector, reclining in a bucket seat in the front row at Lord`s to catch
the last rays of a lowering sun. "We don`t want these pretty
players - it`s great, it`s lovely - but when it comes down
to battle they aren`t prepared to stand up and be counted. When I
was out there, it was either them or you. He had the ball. I
had the bat. I didn`t want to come second. That`s what it`s
about."
There is something Napoleonic about Gatting. This is partly because he is, as he puts it, "short and wide"; a description he
would dearly love to apply to Shane Warne`s bowling this summer.
It is also because he is a classic warrior, unflinching, stouthearted, generous to his team-mates, belligerent to the enemy.
A man for both the trenches and the bar.
But he possesses none of the French emperor`s self-regard.
Less likely to be stuffed with hubris than Yorkshire pudding, his
informed and forthright command of the selectorial process,
alongside Gooch and Graveney, has already brought us the double
Hollioakes and triple one-day victory against the Australians.
Last Saturday, the triumvirate came meaningfully together
again. "We met in a little hotel in Peterborough, because
Athers was somewhere up there playing. We had a little trundle up there so we could look each other in the eye and see who
meant what."
Gatting hadn`t expected deliberations to last long nor that
they would intrude on a "nice bottle of red somewhere along the
line".
It sounds like a garden party, but then so does English county
cricket sometimes. That rattle you hear is less likely to be
sabres than the ice on the drinks tray. Gatting would like to
sweep gentility away, create two divisions and introduce threeup, three-down relegation. But first he would like to pick
the team who win the Ashes.
"We as selectors can only pick the guys we think can do the
job. We, unfortunately, can`t perform for them. We can`t go out
there and show our pride and passion playing for our country.
They`ve got to go out and do it themselves and it was great for
me to see 11 guys out there showing the discipline, pride and
passion in the one-dayers.
"We thought Ben Hollioake was worth being there. So what he`s
19? The way forward is with young cricketers who are keen, enthusiastic and want to represent their country." Or rather,
one of their countries. Gatting staunchly refuses to be moved by
the irony that the Hollioakes, Adam and Ben, were Australianborn. "Um, it`s just unfortunate," he said, showing proper
sympathy for those reared 9,000 miles from the Norfolk Hotel,
Enfield, where he will celebrate his 40th birthday shortly.
"They were born over there but they were actually brought up on
the English system. But it does show that we`ve got to get into
our youngsters the same combativeness, competitiveness, belief.
I think we`ve got to make people appreciate there are disciplines to be learnt and identify the guys who wanna battle.
"I do get a bit concerned about the younger guys. Whether they
get a lot of things far too easily. Instead of pushing players,
I think we tend to leave them in their age groups far too
long. I wouldn`t like to spoil their childhoods but get them to
grow up a little quicker. In the cricketing sense as opposed
to the. . .disco sense."
It is not known whether Gatting`s maturity was acquired in the
nets or on the dance floor of the Tottenham Empire. But a good
deal of his youth was spent at Lord`s, that much is certain. At
13, he attended his first Middlesex match. Four years later he
was playing, out for 16 against the bowling of the West Indian
Test player, Vanburn Holder. "No helmets," remembered Gatting,
wistfully.
He made his debut for England at 20 in 1977 in Pakistan where he
was out "lbw to Shakoor Rana". Since the named gentleman was
an umpire as opposed to a bowler there is obviously a history
here, and one of the many colourful events of Gatting`s long career involved his finger-wagging, asterisk-necessitating explosion on the field in Pakistan in 1988. Not best pleased, the England nabobs sacked him.
But nothing can detract from the glow of the highlight: captaining the England team who won the Ashes in Australia in 1986.
A tour that began inauspiciously - "we couldn`t bat, couldn`t
bowl, couldn`t field" - was transformed by a rare outbreak of
luck, togetherness and tigerish self-belief. "People had written us off. It was a horrendously long trip. And about 14 minutes
before the third Test at Melbourne Graham Dilley came to me
and said, `Look, I`m not fit`. So I was rushing around, thinking, `Christ, who are we going to play, Gladstone or Fozzie?`
[Gladstone Small or Neil Foster].
"In the end, we went for Gladstone. Fozzie was very upset. And
then when Gladstone came in and bowled the first over, it went
all over the place. One down the leg side. One down the
off side. I thought: `Oh no. Wrong one, you idiot`. Anyway,
four hours later we`d bowled them out and he`d got five. In
fact, he actually took the catch at deep square leg to end the
Ashes series."
One of Gatting`s greatest qualities as a captain was in creating sums greater than the parts at his disposal. The A-team
tour to Australia that he coached when Graham Gooch was forced to
withdraw was remarkable for its almost unremitting success. "The
Australian papers relegated us to the inside back page. Somewhere under the swimming results. That`s always a great sign over
there."
His methods were relatively simple. They did quality work in
the nets, played as though possessed and went out. Gatting is, at
heart, a compassionate slave-driver. "They weren`t tucked up in
bed at 9.30, put it that way.
"I`m a great believer that you`ve got to go out and relax. You
can`t be out on the field for six hours, concentrating, and not
be allowed to relax. If you didn`t you`d go crazy. The main thing
is, you try and get everyone to go out together. The one thing
you don`t want is little cliques going off in different directions. I said, if I caught anybody doing that there`d be some
bums kicked but fortunately it didn`t happen."
He is surprisingly hot (especially for a man I seem to remember in a wide-brimmed white hat at which even Mrs Shilling might
have baulked) on the new dress code. "You`ve got kids here
watching the game. And if somebody`s out there looking smart and
performing well, it gives a better impression that someone
half-shaven, with a dirty floppy on, looking like death warmed
up, misfielding.
"It`s like you ladies, if you look nice and smart, you feel
better don`t you?" I, who foreswore ironing in 1974, became a
touch self-conscious suddenly. "Well, don`t you?" said Gatting
pugnaciously. "If we were going to get very, very personal here, you wouldn`t want to go out without shaving your legs
or anything, would you?"
I don`t think this means that Mike Atherton will be issued
with tubes of Immac hair remover in the dressing-room but it is
indicative of Gatting`s philosophy. "I`m straightforward, yes.
I`m patriotic, yes. I don`t like to see selfishness, laziness
or lack of spirit. Even mavericks can conform."
If you can trust the rumours in the byzantine world of the
cricket committees, David Lloyd might be uninvited to be the
England coach if the team are adjudged to fail this summer. Concomitantly, Gatting might be invited to apply. "Ha, ha, that`s
news to me," he said, wise in the ways of rumours, whispers
and barmaids. "As far as I`m concerned, David`s got a contract
until whenever. I have no devices to do anything else. All I
would say is I enjoyed doing the A team thing last year but
I`ve no devices to do anything else at all. I`d like to get involved with Middlesex on the coaching front and if there is a job
for me to do at England level, or England A, then I`d be very
happy to take something on."
What he would really like to take on is the Australians again.
But age, girth and realism have thwarted him. At least he can
reflect that in 22 years at Middlesex, 14 as captain, and 79
Tests he met his challenges (not to mention Malcolm Marshall`s bouncer) head on.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)