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Essays

When Sussex wept for Alan Wells

Wisden writing competition 2019

Jonathan Foulkes
01-Feb-2021
Alan Wells falls to Curtly Ambrose for a first-ball duck on Test debut  •  Getty Images

Alan Wells falls to Curtly Ambrose for a first-ball duck on Test debut  •  Getty Images

There is a place in Sussex where the road falls away so suddenly and unexpectedly that, just for a moment, unsuspecting drivers must feel they have driven over the edge of a cliff. Locals slow almost to a stop, while cars coming the other way, straining up the hill as they shunt through the gears, approach the summit at a similar speed. Much like commuters on the underground, travelling up and down the escalators, motorists get to enjoy a good old gander at their opposite number as they pass slowly by.
It was on just such an occasion that I listened to the entirety of Alan Wells's debut Test innings. I was the barman of an old pub at the foot of Windover Hill, across the fields from Alfriston. There were views to the west, and we were assured by a regular that, on Midsummer's Eve, the sun would set over the spire of Berwick Church. It didn't - but, as he pointed out, it rather depended where you stood.
I was thrilled to discover Alan was a near neighbour, and occasional visitor. He was the swashbuckling captain of Sussex, a run machine with an unwanted sobriquet: "Best Batsman Never to Have Played for England." We were delighted when, in 1995, he was at last selected. But we hadn't reckoned on Curtly Ambrose.
Only once did I see Ambrose in the flesh, four years earlier at The Oval, the day before Ian Botham couldn't get his leg over. It was Botham I'd gone to see - but it was the easy rolling action of Ambrose that caught my eye. I was side on to the wicket, and able to watch that sinuous run-up, seemingly effortless, with no suggestion of haste or hurry, the ball released again and again from an apex well in excess of eight feet. I was smitten.
Ambrose was beginning that run-up as I started the climb. By the time I had reached the top, Alan was walking back to the pavilion. Somewhere in between, he had faced his first ball, and gloved it to Sherwin Campbell at short leg. Meanwhile, in one of those lovely moments of shared experience, I and the driver coming down the hill had simultaneously thrown our heads in our hands as we listened to the disaster unfold on TMS. We exchanged looks, shook our heads, and drove on. The whole county felt his pain: that day, Sussex wept for Alan Wells.
It was among the shorter Test careers, though he did make three not out in the second innings. Later that week, he joined us for a beer. A farm worker who did odd jobs around the place called over: "That fencing, Alan - is it to keep the ducks out?" As jokes go, it was lame, but it broke the ice. Alan laughed. I poured his pint, and he told us all about it: the day he played for England.
Jonathan Foulkes is a university administrator living in Ely. Under the pen name Eric Wark, he is the author of "Behind the Sky", a little-read blog of Suffolk walks, Russia, and found photographs, at www.ericwark.com.