Whither Glamorgan in a two-tier championship?
Whither Glamorgan in a two-tier championship
E W Swanton
22-Jun-2007
The outcome of the new England and Wales Cricket Board`s efforts to stimulate our game as proposed by them in Raising the
Standard was rated in much of the press as a failure and personal setback for the chairman, Lord MacLaurin: and the blame for
the alleged rejection was laid squarely on the 11 counties and
MCC whose 12 votes overcame the remaining seven, five of whom
were those of the Test ground counties.
This verdict was to show the work of the ECB out of perspective. In fact, the main thrust of the report was heartily endorsed apart from the resistance to the championship being
cut into two - or even three. Raising the Standard will do so,
in time - and I`m sure the cricket world in general is grateful to the chairman and his staff for having identified and tackled the issues involved.
It is time, perhaps, to answer in kind some of the jeering
comment which a strong majority of the counties find so distasteful. People are tired of endless jeremiads by cricket
writers mostly of limited knowledge and little range of subject. Glamorgan have been properly applauded for their popular
victory in the championship. If a division of the 18 counties
into two had taken effect in 1997, Glamorgan could not have
celebrated as they did last Saturday because, having finished
10th in 1996, they would have been among the also-rans in the
second division. If a division had been settled on the basis of
the 1997 placings, Leicestershire, the 1996 champions, who were
so cruelly rained on in match after match that they had no
earthly chance of defending their title, would also have been below the salt in 1998, having just finished 10th. Two years ago
Kent, fourth last year, second this, finished 18th. The year before that, Warwickshire leapt from 16th to the summit.
The fact is that the weather in most summers is a crucial factor in determining a county`s fortunes: other considerations are
conflicting Test demands and the vagaries of the toss. Championship plac- ings need interpretation. Without repeating the
pros and cons of the matter, which have also been clearly put in
these pages by Christopher Martin-Jenkins, the divide was rated
too chancy and too deep.
Those 11 counties who reckoned they were protecting the interests of their members and, yes, in the long run their players, by
saying no have acted in the spirit of the report by preventing
nine of the 18 outlets to the top from being much diminished.
Several counties feared for their very survival.
The ECB will do well to focus on the personal element in
first-class cricket rather than the structure. At last week`s
meeting I was glad to see that Lord MacLaurin spoke of the
need for "better coaching". I have located and am passing on to
the ECB a video comprising highlights of Gary Sobers`s superlative 254 for the Rest of the World against Australia with a
commentary by Don Bradman: one great knight explaining and in
slow motion analysing the other. One sees the stance, alert but
motionless, everything still, bat on the ground; then, the
ball having left the bowler`s hand, the full, straight upward swing of the bat, the feet moving back or forward
(mostly back) on to the line of the ball. The basics are simple -
as we used to be reminded by watching such fine players as
May, Dexter, Graveney and Cowdrey. It is a valid criticism of
the ECB that they have not brought old Test batsmen and bowlers
more into the scheme of things.
STRONG leadership, supported by good and understanding coaches, has been well-expressed this summer in the success of the
leading sides and not least by Matthew Maynard and Steve Marsh.
Under them, Glamorgan and Kent have played attractive, positive
cricket throughout the summer. These two sides, by the way, are
below only Yorkshire in relying on home-grown talent wherever
possible. County identity counts in both cases.
If, sadly, it is outside immediate practical politics to hope
for uncovered pitches - though there is everything to be said for
their return in second XI cricket - the ECB must give urgent priority to the composition and maintenance of pitches. A resurgence of spin to restore balance to attacks will only come
from surfaces of which the slow bowler can get a fair degree of
bounce and turn.
THE ECB have, however, a problem wider and ultimately more important than any other in the attitude of cricketers on the
field. The editor of The Cricketer, Richard Hutton, remarking
that "the commodity of which England`s cricketers are in the
greatest need is control" has fired a polemic in the October
issue which should shiver the egos of Stuart Law and Ronnie
Irani in particular. The former commented on his recent thoroughly-deserved fine and reprimand that his was ev- eryday behaviour back home, which is Australia. He and his kind
should be made to realise that Australia`s standards, thank
goodness, are not ours. Nor should be those of Nasser Hussain,
who echoed the outburst I referred to a month ago in Radio 4`s
Today programme: "We have to get a bit of nastiness in our
game. Everyone can work out how to get nasty." This is the philosophy of the yob which, if it is not shackled, will turn away
decent followers more surely than defeats in Test matches.
Boys and club cricketers aped, and always have done, the stars on
TV, and our schools` correspondent, Gerald Howat, tells me of
the concern of masters in schools which should show the best
example. I understand that the subject of behaviour on the field
is to be given a serious airing next month in the sports subcommittee of the Headmasters` Conference chaired by Mr Chris
Hirst of Sedbergh. I expect note may be taken of the visits
of Australian and South African schools, some of whose behaviour
has been far from salutary.
At the start of the summer I applauded a strong letter sent to
county chairmen by the chairman of the ECB discipline committee,
Gerard Elias, QC: His committee "has once again asked me to
write to you all to express our fears that our game is in
danger of becoming less attractive because its players are less
disciplined".
More power to their elbow! I wonder what their thoughts are
now that the last over has been bowled.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)