Swing woe, sweet nothing
Andrew Miller meets Ian Chappell, quizzing Australia's former captain on where England got it wrong - chiefly no plan B - and why 10-year dominance is bad for cricket
Australia's former captain, Ian Chappell, spoke to Andrew Miller about where England got it wrong - chiefly no plan B - and why 10-year dominance is bad for cricket
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How has the Ashes gone so wrong for England?
It all goes back to the Champions Trophy. England
used it as a practice and fitness session for all their
injured players - Andrew Flintoff, Ashley Giles,
James Anderson. There didn't seem any thought of
winning the trophy. Compare that with Australia's
approach. They were there to win. Sure, they had
half an eye on the Ashes but the best preparation
for any series is to play good cricket. England went
off the rails even before they got to Australia.
Going by their selection for the first two Tests, were
England too preoccupied with the 2005 Ashes?
Sure, they were thinking back to 2005 as well but
their biggest problem was their lack of a plan B.
England were successful in 2005 because of swing
bowling but what other plans did they have in a
country where it doesn't swing all that often? In
Australia you need to be able to fiddle wickets, put
thoughts into batsmen's minds and get
imaginative with your field placings. Take the
Melbourne Test, for instance. From 5 for 84 there's
no way that Matthew Hayden and Andrew
Symonds - two struggling batsmen - should each
make 150. England have all these plans when the
ball swings and no imagination when it doesn't.
Was Flintoff's captaincy to blame or was the team's
strategy flawed?
I thought at the time that Flintoff was the right
choice, and he did a fair job up to Melbourne, but
England undoubtedly missed Michael Vaughan's
adaptability. We've heard a hell of a lot about these
wonderful plans pinned up in their dressing room
- well, they're no bloody good in the dressing
room. Sure, you'll have an outline but the best
players aren't stupid. They adjust to your plans,
then you as a captain adjust to their adjustments.
It's a battle; that's why captaincy is so interesting.
From what I've seen here from England their plan
is: "We have a plan, those are the field placings."
And they've been exactly the same in the fourth
Test as in the first. If you aren't a couple of overs
ahead in this game, you're way behind.
What have you made of Monty Panesar and would it
have made a difference if he'd played from the start?
It's not so much the difference he might have made
as a player, it's the difference in mentality he'd
have brought to the rest of the team. There must
have been some England players at Brisbane who
walked out thinking "we've picked the wrong
team". If you think you've got the best possible
team, it gives you confidence and it gives you faith.
I think Monty would have made a playing
difference as well but whether it would have been
major is purely conjecture. All the same it would
have helped if he'd been deployed correctly. He was
used in Perth as an attacking bowler and got eight
wickets; he was used at Melbourne as a negative
bowler and got none. I rest my case. He bowled to
field placings for Giles but Giles hasn't been
playing. Once again it lacks common sense. He'd
had success bowling one way, so why change?
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How would you rate England's prospects for the
2009 Ashes?
They've got the nucleus of a good side but, if they
are taking the approach that 2009 will be better
because Glenn McGrath and Shane Warne aren't
there, they've still got a problem. A big problem in
world cricket at the moment is that all the sides
look at Australia and think: "We can't beat them,
they are too good but, when Warne and McGrath
go, they'll come back to the field and then we'll
beat them." You've got to take the approach that
these guys have set the standard and we've got to
get up to that standard and maybe even go past it.
Even so is it inevitable that Australia will be more
beatable from next season?
Sure, you don't lose two players like that and
become a better team. Australia will come back to
the field a bit but the field is not that strong. They
could easily stay at No.1. It's not the same as what
happened in 1983-84, when Rod Marsh, Dennis
Lillee and Greg Chappell retired. Australia were in
the doldrums for two or three years after that; this
time they are better prepared. They've got Stuart
Clark established to do a similar job to McGrath
whereas there was nobody worthy of Lillee. The
only area in which they'll struggle is a replacement
for Warne. But back then West Indies were already
off and running on their reign of domination. This
time I don't see anyone on the horizon. I don't see
England as a dominant team. They might win the
occasional series against Australia but they aren't
going to dominate for 10 years.
This seems the end of an era. How do you sum it up?
It's been an era of unbelievable success for
Australia, spearheaded by two champion bowlers.
But to be this dominant for this long - particularly
at home - I just think it's ridiculous. It's a tribute
to the Australian team but it's also an indictment
of the rest of the world. I'd like to hope there won't
be another era as successful as this. I don't think
it's good for cricket.
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo
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