Titter ye not, for our boy Oscar has got the lot (13 May 1999)
A World Cup is but a day away, and English grounds will soon be vibrating to the throb of brilliant young men
13-May-1999
13 May 1999
Titter ye not, for our boy Oscar has got the lot
Michael Henderson
A World Cup is but a day away, and English grounds will soon be
vibrating to the throb of brilliant young men. Some of the greatest
players ever to lace a boot are here: Tendulkar, Wasim, Donald,
Warne, Lara, McGrath, a pair of Waughs and (not to be forgotten,
though he tends to be) Azharuddin. Then there is Ian Austin.
No, missus, don't titter. 'Oscar' Austin, 'Bully', the metronomic
medium-pacer from Haslingden, will be in the England side to play Sri
Lanka tomorrow and even the grandest batsmen must pay attention. The
competition is being played in the wet and wind of a northern land,
where summer comes briefly, if at all. It is one reason, the most
compelling, some might say the only, why the host country cannot be
discounted.
What will those expansive strokeplayers, Jayasuriya and Jayawardene,
be thinking as the 32-year-old Austin lumbers up to the crease in the
manner of a blacksmith on his day off? "This chap's got to go," they
may say to themselves. "He can't bowl to me. I shall make a hundred,
or eat my hat."
Others have said as much and lived to eat their words. In his
deceptively understated way, Austin has made himself a regular at Old
Trafford; indeed, a match-winner. "I've played in six winning sides
at Lord's and been man of the match in both the one-day finals," he
can tell doubters. "Show me your medals."
It does the heart good to see a man like Austin going as far as he
has, for his presence binds international cricket with the roots that
nurture it, in the club sides up and down the country. Matthew Engel,
the editor of Wisden, acknowledged that when he selected Austin as
one of the five cricketers of the year for this summer's almanac.
'Club cricketer', actually, is patronising and misleading. Angus
Fraser is a club player, who turns out for Stanmore every now and
then when he hasn't got a game for Middlesex. But nobody scoffs at
'Gussie'. There are those who look at Austin, who carries a pound or
two round his waist, and wonder if he hasn't somehow wandered on to
the wrong field.
It is precisely that quality, drawn from the old-fashioned world of
England, Their England, that makes him stand out. Austin is the
Common Man as international sportsman, and people can identify with
that. Although he is a professional, and expects to be judged by the
highest standards, there is something innocent about his play,
untainted by the gimmickry of modern fads and fancies. Other
cricketers model clothes and appear on chat shows. This is a man who
used to work in an abattoir.
Austin, like Jack Simmons before him, was weaned on league cricket.
In his case it was also, like Simmons, the Lancashire League, whose
clubs are based in and around the towns of Burnley and Blackburn. It
is not a sentimental part of the world and folk there don't use two
words when one will do.
That is one way of describing Austin's bowling. There is nothing
unnecessary about it. He simply runs up, like a schoolmaster in the
nets, and pings it down on a good length, on or around off stump. On
flat pitches, this can be a gentle offering but - and this is a big
but - it is never quite as gentle as you might think. It has fooled
many a batsman who imagined he had the measure of it.
And now it's "Oscar of England!" Brought into the side at the back
end of last summer, for the triangular Emirates Trophy, he has been
retained for his expertise in English conditions. Looking briefly at
the pitch for Sri Lanka, he said, rather like Nico Ladenis admiring a
plate of truffles: "It's not rock solid. It takes a spike at the
moment and I hope it doesn't dry out too much by Friday." Translated
roughly, that means: "Can't wait."
The last year has been a boon for Austin, who thought that winning
cups for Lancashire (eight so far) was the summit of his career.
"When you go past the age of 30, and you haven't had international
recognition, then you don't expect it." Having had a winter to digest
it, even though he missed the one-day bunfight in Australia, he feels
up to the challenge.
"Some people get worked up by the big occasions, particularly young
players. But I did not play international cricket until I was in my
thirties, and I have played quite a few games at Lord's for
Lancashire. Having had that experience I am not overawed by any
occasion. I am quietly confident in what I can do."
In the heart of every battle-hardened pro, however, lurks a secret
romantic yearning, an unimaginable goal. "Everybody wants to play for
their country," said Austin, sounding as if he meant it. "It is a
schoolboy dream." Don't wake him, anybody.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)