The maddening overseas merry-go-round
Kevin Mitchell on the influx of overseas players in county cricket
Kevin Mitchell
21-Apr-2007
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"I have given up the right to play for my country in the
future and this was one of the hardest decisions I have
ever had to make. I will miss playing for South Africa,
but I honestly feel that my future lies in England."
Jacques Rudolph to the Yorkshire Post.
Jacques Rudolph to the Yorkshire Post.
"He actually approached us with the whole
arrangement. The real reason he is going is so he can
become a better player for South Africa in the future."
Gerald Majola, the head of Cricket South Africa.
Gerald Majola, the head of Cricket South Africa.
An awful cynicism has obviously taken grip on
English cricket, much worse than any of the look-the-other-
way pragmatism of the past, and, it seems, it
is out of control. It can never have been more starkly
exposed than in these statements, as
Rudolph pretends to be as committed
to Yorkshire as Geoffrey Boycott while
back home they wait for the return of
their temporary exile.
Yorkshire believe what suits them,
of course. The ECB, meanwhile,
gnashes a few teeth and say there
is nothing it can do, because of the
nasty old lawmakers in the EU. But, as
Richard Bevan, chief executive of the
Professional Cricketers' Association,
points out, signing Rudolph has cost
Yorkshire at least £23,000 because of
the performance fee payment scheme
that penalises the loss of a place to a
home-grown player.
Yorkshire are hardly alone. All the
counties are at it. What started as
minor exploitation of an obscure EU
ruling over a handball player nobody
had ever heard of, Kolpak is now cricket's
enduring migraine. Historians will point out cricket
has always accommodated carpet-baggers, hired hands
and the geographically confused. In 1878, WG Grace,
the richest amateur of his day and a grade-A hypocrite,
famously kidnapped Australia's Billy Midwinter (who
also played for England) on the eve of a tour match
against Middlesex at Lord's and persuaded the poor man
he'd be better off playing for Gloucestershire against
Surrey at The Oval. Billy, who later went mad, might
have felt very much at home this 2007 season.
Or even in 1975, when Tony Greig, born and educated
in South Africa, found himself captain of England. Or
1982 when Allan Lamb, proud son of Langebaanweg,
Cape Province, came aboard, followed over the years by
the Smiths, Chris and Robin, and Graeme Hick, all the
way up to KP. In Australia, they had to put up with the
transitory loyalty of Kepler Wessels.
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On the excellently nostalgic and informative ESPN
Classic TV channel recently, Wessels, having returned
to South Africa, is interviewed after playing a major
role in beating Australia at the start of the 1992 World
Cup. Gently quizzed by Greig he says: "I just
want to also thank Allan [Border] and the other guys
in the Australian team for the spirit in which the
game was played. Certainly their attitude towards me
was very, very good. I really appreciate that because
... their friendship means a lot to me." Surely it does.
But what was then an oddity of capriciousness is now
commonplace.
Look at the mad merry-go-round set in motion
at Headingley by the signing of Rudolph and, more
pertinently, the Boycott-inspired signing of Younis
Khan, the county's second overseas player alongside
Jason Gillespie: Matthew Elliott is suddenly squeezed
from the squad, so where does the Australian batsman
go? To Glamorgan - for a month. After which, he will be
replaced by ... his compatriot Jimmy Maher.
This is madness. There is no
coherence, no logic, not even the
slimmest sense of propriety. The
counties have not only greased the
revolving door, they have put batteries
on it. Some of these wandering
mercenaries must wake up wondering
which end of the M1 they're on.
The Rand Refugees will always
be better off than in their own land,
where bleating about quotas has
proved the most convenient way to
soothe consciences as they abandon a
country even now still wrestling with
the transition to normality. That's the
bigger moral dilemma. Richard Bevan
says the players' union doesn't have
an issue with overseas players in the
County Championship. "The issue is
balance," he says. You could say that.
The county game over the past 25
years has been so in awe of overseas
players there is no balance. Now the rules governing
their status are so loose they are accepted as fully fledged
'locals'. At some point this season, England
could field a team that includes Andy Flower, Craig
Spearman and other previously non-qualified players.
That is not to say those players want to, or that the
selectors would be daft enough to pick them.
But the Kolpak and EU-qualified players queuing up
to earn the best living the first-class game has to offer
below international level must send a message of despair
to young, British-born cricketers. "It's disappointing
that clubs stretch the regulations and look short-term,"
Bevan says, "and we want to see the performance fee
payment doubled to control these clubs."
That is on the way, apparently. Good. It might have
some effect, although I doubt how much. It's not just
about money. It's about a festering culture of cynical
short-termism by clubs and players who will call
England home as long as it suits them. If the Rudolph
case is anything to go by, we are a long, long way from
finding a solution.
Kevin Mitchell is chief sports writer for The Observer