Cricket news: TCCB to place Illingworth role under scrutiny
BY CHRISTOPHER MARTIN-JENKINS
THE Test and County Cricket Board will once again have a
winter of intense disappointment to reflect upon at their
two-day meeting which starts today at Lord`s.
That is in contrast to a home season which was financially
very satisfactory and, given the drawn series against the
West Indies, not unpromising as far as the performance of the
England side was concerned.
The performances of both England and the West Indies in the
World Cup have put that series into truer perspective. Although
either could yet win the tournament against the head, and it
should always be remembered that Test matches are the true
yardsticks of cricketing strength, both are looking tired, short
of bowling variety, inconsistent with the bat and old-fashioned
in their approach to practice and preparation.
It is England`s problems which concern the Board as they
discuss the tour of South Africa, the subsequent efforts
on the subcontinent, the selection, management and leadership
of the England team and the domestic structure in 1997 and
1998. No decision about whether to retain Ray Illingworth both
as manager and chairman of selectors will be taken until
after the World Cup, but the executive committee will be
talking about this today before carrying out a further review
after the World Cup.
Illingworth may feel now that he was hard on Fletcher and his
supposed lack of motivation
Illingworth was elected as chairman two years ago and as
manager last March, so both appointments have to be reviewed
imminently by the executive committee under their chairman,
Dennis Silk. Illingworth wants to retain both roles this
summer and thereafter to revert to being chairman of selectors
only, a job which he found less than satisfactory before
taking over the management from Keith Fletcher. His
instinct was to become involved more closely with the team and
their tactics.
Illingworth may feel now that he was hard on Fletcher and his
supposed lack of motivation. His own attempts this winter
stand condemned by the team`s results so far, doubly
disappointing in view of the promising start to the tour of
South Africa when the combination of Illingworth, John
Barclay and Mike Atherton was working well.
John Edrich and Peter Lever, from a different generation
though they are, proved genuinely helpful as technical coaches to
several players, although Devon Malcolm was the obvious
exception. He was not the only player who has found the
manager`s inclination to speak the truth as he sees it,
whether directly to the cricketers or to the press, more
disruptive than helpful.
For several reasons it seems as though Atherton and Barclay
represent the future and that Illingworth`s role would best be
confined to selecting.
The Board will have to ask themselves why it is that
successive managers have failed to turn England into a
consistently successful side. It can only be either because
good players are not playing well or because they are not good
enough. The evidence of several tours suggests the latter, in
which case the system needs changing.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)