'You have to get into a winning mentality'
Andrew Miller speaks to Martin Corry about the winning habit
Cricket in England is currently enjoying the sort of media coverage that is usually reserved for football and football alone. Only one other sporting side knows that feeling - the England rugby team who won the World Cup in 2003. Martin Corry, the England captain and Leicester Tigers stalwart, was a member of that squad, and he spoke to Cricinfo about the similarities between the games, and his own passion for cricket.
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In the autumn of 2003, everyone in England was a rugby fan, now all of
a sudden, cricket is the sport of the moment. Are you experiencing a
strange sort of déjà vu?
To be honest, because we were on the other side of the world [in
Australia], we weren't really aware of the phenomenal interest back home.
It was only when we arrived back at Heathrow that we understood just how
gripped the nation must have been. This Ashes series has been fantastic
and it just goes to prove what we found in 2003. The country just wants
its national sides to be successful, because it's a chance to share the
pride and get behind the team.
Is it a help or hindrance for the cricketers to know just how many
people are willing them to succeed?
It can only help them. Just listen to the crowd and you'll know what's
going on. I don't think England have ever been supported as well as they
have been in this series, and so far, the lads have risen to the
challenge. It must be a huge help for them.
I hear you were down at Edgbaston for the second Test
Yep, I managed to find a window in my training schedule and went down
there on the first day, and it was a brilliant experience. That day really
epitomised everything that has been going on, because England really took
the game to the Aussies and you could see the confidence coming out of
their pores.
Have you ever played the game yourself?
I'm a mad-keen fan and I love watching cricket, but I've never played the
game to a great standard. In fact, I had the dubious pleasure of facing
Matthew Hoggard in the nets on the Tuesday before the match, and I think
he did a good job of showing up all the flaws in my batting!
In 2003, you were an ageing side at the very peak of your powers - much
like the Australian cricket team, in fact. All of a sudden, there are
suggestions that the Aussies have hit the slippery slope. How did you deal
with similar carping Down Under?
When everyone starts criticising you, you have to use it as a spur, and
take on an "I'll show 'em" kind of mentality. I happen to read a lot of
the press about cricket, but absolutely none on rugby, because that way
you can cocoon yourself in your own world. Obviously we all hear stuff
that's being said, so if it's negative and it's someone having a pop, you
have to use that to your advantage. That's what any professional sportsman
does - he'll use any motivation he can get, be it positive or negative
criticism.
What makes a great team?
First and foremost, you have to get into a winning mentality, because once
you're there, it's very easy to think like winners and act like winners.
Once you've done that, you tend to find that you'll nick the games that
end up in the balance, because you have the confidence of having done it
in the past. Presumably that situation arises more in cricket, because
when a game gets tight, when it looks like one side might have to bat out
for a draw, there will be someone on hand to pull it out of the bag.
That's what you've found with the Australians over the years. They've
often secured victories when they shouldn't.
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Is Andrew Flintoff turning into the sort of totem that Martin Johnson
was for England's rugby team?
As spectators you always want your heroes to stand out, and Flintoff is
doing that job. Not only is he producing the goods, but he is a great
character with it, and whenever a team-mate takes a wicket, he is always
the first to congratulate him. You always need people like that in the
side to give you a lift and make you feel good about yourself. I've been
impressed with not only the way he's played, but the way he's become a
complete team man - every successful side needs someone like him.
There is a suspicion that this tour will mark the end of Australia's era of dominance. As we saw with England after the World Cup, the decline when it comes can be pretty swift ... You're not going to have world-class players like McGrath or Johnson around forever, so the key thing is to give the guy who steps into his shoes enough opportunities, so that when he does retire, there's a guy waiting in the wings who's an experienced Test player. When Jonno was playing there was always a squad mentality, because we recognised the need to bring on and give time on the training pitch time to his successor. And so, when he did retire, straightaway we had a Test-class stand-in. Nobody can play forever.
What is it that keeps great sides at the top?
For the past few years there has been an aura of invincibility surrounding
the Aussies, and that counts for so much in professional sport. If you go
into a match thinking "can we really beat them", then you're beaten
already. The great thing about this summer is that, regardless of what
happens in the rest of this Ashes series, England have done the
magnificent thing and sent messages around the world. We are really going
for these Australians, and they are beatable. That is the single most
important thing, they have chipped away at that aura.
Both cricket and rugby have tended to labour under football's giant
shadow in recent times. How important is it to have periods like these, in
which they are the only sports anyone is talking about?
It is of massive importance - cricket's a little bit different to rugby,
because it's predominantly a summer game and so is not competing for those
column inches in the broadsheets. I'm no marketing man, but the aim is to
get the sport out as many people as possible, and the best way to do that
is to win the major games.
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What is the trickledown effect of a World Cup win or an Ashes
success?
It is massive. All you're looking to do is give the youngsters a reason to
get up, go out and play the sport. I got a lovely letter from someone the
day after the World Cup win. They were driving through town, it was
raining heavily, and they saw a kid with the exact same Jonny Wilkinson
style, kicking a rugby ball against a garage door. Things like that make
all the difference, all you want is for this to be their introduction to
the sport. Once they get going they'll find they love the sport and
they'll stay hooked. Everyone has stories about how they first got into
their sport, and if it takes a World Cup win or an Ashes Test victory to
get a child playing sport, then that's a fantastic achievement.
So much of rugby and cricket is tactical - are they similarities in the
way a captain must approach a game?
To a certain extent, yes. The greatest coaches in the world can give you
all the tools and make sure your preparation's right, and that is what
they are there for, but as soon as you step onto the park, you're on your
own and have to make decisions on the hoof. If things aren't going
according to plan, you have to change tactics, and that's the major
similarity. The need to change things around and make something happen.
And I find that is particularly evident in the way that Michael Vaughan
captains.
What are your memories of astonishing open-top bus-ride after the World
Cup win?
That was a surreal moment. I remember driving down wandering who was going
to turn up. We got on at Marble Arch and there was no-one around, and the
joke among the lads was that we would just be waving at the shoppers on
Oxford Street. Then we pulled round the corner and the streets were just
lined, absolutely packed with supporters waving flags. This country is
full of nationalistic pride, and it was wonderful to be able to see that,
especially when we pulled into Trafalgar Square. Looking back now I
sometimes think: "did it really happen? Did it happen to that magnitude?"
Because it was just such an immense day - the whole occasion was
phenomenal.
Two years on, do you feel the rugby excitement has died, and is that
likely to happen to the cricket as well?
To a certain extent, we've got ourselves to blame because we haven't
performed as world champions since. We haven't played at the standard to
which we aspire, and while a lot of that is down to our rebuilding phase,
we know what's it's like to win and be at the top, and we want to stay at
the top. The recent world rankings tell a pretty accurate story because we
are quite a long way down. But we've had a taste of what it's like at the
top, and we've got to make sure we keep that as our target.
The England Rugby Supporters Club (ERSC) brings rugby fans closer to the action. Join online at www.rfu.com/ersc or call 0870 2401642.
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo
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