Washbrook memories pervade gloom (8 August 1999)
Complete silence enveloped Old Trafford
08-Aug-1999
8 August 1999
Washbrook memories pervade gloom
James Mossop
James Mossop compares the present XI with the players who found
success in the post-war game
Complete silence enveloped Old Trafford. England's players stood
motionless, heads bowed beneath a sullen sky. They looked like
mourners at their own funeral, pall-bearers at the death of the
spirit of English Test cricket.
Instead, they were remembering Cyril Washbrook, of England and
Lancashire, who died recently at the age of 84. Among the acres of
empty seats, there were knots of cheerless spectators perhaps
reflecting that his ghost could have walked to and from the middle
with more sense of purpose than the current XI.
Washbrook was of an era that knew only excellence. The batting order
in those halcyon post-war days began Hutton, Washbrook, Edrich and
Compton.
'Washy' was even recalled in 1956 at the age of 41. He had not played
in a Test match for six years and immediately hit the Australian
attack to all corners of Headingley for 98.
It was impossible to erase such memories as England scratched around
at Old Trafford yesterday. There is revolution in the counties,
promotion and relegation imminent and a force-fed diet of one-day
cricket. Yet the most enjoyable aspect of yesterday's gloomy events
involved the kids' Kwik Kricket during the lunchtime interval. Plus
New Zealand's diligence, of course.
Where is the leadership, the inspiration for modern England? And this
is not a dig at stand-in skipper Mark Butcher, who has batsmen lost
in their own world and bowlers who could not take a wicket on a pitch
that has gone from bad to benign.
The urge to consort with the spirit of Cyril Washbrook produced
memories of him as a brilliant cover-point fielder and a strong,
aggressive leader of Lancashire.
This was rammed home to the last man to play football for Manchester
United and cricket for Lancashire, medium-pacer Freddie Goodwin, who
made the short journey from one Stretford End to another at the close
of the 1957-58 football season.
Washbrook, sensing a rare athlete fresh from football training, put
Goodwin in the cover-point position as Brian Statham opened the
bowling to Surrey's Tom Clarke. An off-drive whizzed past Goodwin's
groping right hand on its way to the ropes.
Goodwin loped after it, languidly tossed the ball back towards the
middle and looked up to see Washbrook marching towards him, his face
advertising fury. "Listen son," urged the captain, prodding the young
man's chest, "in this game, that's four runs not a bloody throw-in."
What he would have thought of this England would be interesting,
though probably unprintable.
In batting and bowling, they were without confidence. Mark Ramprakash
apart, there was not a batsman prepared to play his shots in that 199
that ended on Friday, the day Peter Such received a standing ovation
for a marathon duck.
The spectators were disenchanted from the start of yesterday's dreary
play. The bowlers gave them no cheer either as Matthew Bell and
Nathan Astle dealt with everything the six bowlers tried.
Before play started yesterday, Butcher had talked up what sounded
like a carefully modulated plan to have the Kiwis back in the
pavilion for a figure around the 260 mark.
It was soon clear that there would be no co-operation from the New
Zealanders. Bell, a 22-year-old from Wellington, stroked his way
beyond his previous career best of 26 not out.
He was out trying an audacious pull shortly after the new ball had
been taken but mistimed his shot and Mike Atherton, running back from
mid-on, held the catch.
Astle, who has been around longer, demonstrated that he is more than
a one-day expert, though the two sixes he struck off Peter Such were
perfect reminders of his 101 from 132 balls when New Zealand beat
England in the 1996 World Cup.
His hundred was an essay in concentration, patience and mastery over
Caddick, Headley, Tufnell, Such, Hick and Butcher, making England
look very, very ordinary. He seemed intent on celebrating his century
when he was out hooking Andrew Caddick.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)