Australia's dominance is refreshing

The SCG’s 100th Test featured a very convincing Australian side, led by a natural captain

Daniel Brettig at the SCG06-Jan-2012Domineering. There is no other word for it. Australia’s innings and 68-run victory over India at the SCG was the most comprehensive mauling meted out to an opponent of note in more than two years, and the hammer blow in a series that had begun with the visitors considered favourites. How strange and distant that seems now. Michael Clarke’s team are some distance from the finished article, but they will not remain so for long if performances of this completeness can be delivered on a regular basis against the teams sitting above them in the ICC’s Test rankings.Over the past year, Clarke’s men had shown themselves capable of dizzy heights and depressing lows, peaking in Galle, Johannesburg and Melbourne but slipping away alarmingly in Cape Town and Hobart. They entered the Sydney Test having not won more than one match in a Test series since early 2010, a firm marker of how inconsistent their displays had been. This was acknowledged clearly by Clarke, who is part of a leadership and management axis being marked closely on results by Pat Howard, the Argus review-installed team performance manager.But, as anyone who tried to play Shane Warne’s flipper more than once can attest, foreknowledge does not necessarily make the task any easier. Awareness must be followed up with strong planning and sustained performance, something so elusive either side of the captaincy handover from Ponting to Clarke. Some level of inconsistency was to be expected, but the extremes of Clarke’s first three Test series as captain could not be repeated, as that would undermine the foundations being put in place for a settled team to prosper over the remainder of the Australian summer and beyond.Knowing this, Clarke advocated and received an unchanged team for Sydney, starting 2012 on a note of stability and reassurance for the players under him. The bowlers especially have benefited from greater cohesion and understanding of their roles, under the vigilant bowling coach Craig McDermott. It was they who set the match up for the winning with speed, swing and bounce on the first day, perforating India’s batting with the full length of McDermott’s preference, then boring into the tail with short-pitched relish.So much has been said about Clarke’s innings, which towers over all other individual efforts in this match. But in the context of the Test it was less important than the fact it spanned two partnerships as sturdy as granite, 288 with Ponting then an unbeaten 334 with Michael Hussey. Like the combinations provided by the bowlers, it is the runs scored in such unions, so much more than a lone hand, that define a match. Clarke could not have flown so high without Ponting and Hussey, just as James Pattinson could not have have ripped out four of the top five visiting batsmen without Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus offering support on day one.The declaration arrived halfway through the scheduled five days, preventing Clarke from going on to greater personal glory but allowing maximum time for his team to bowl India out. Having stood in the field for more than a few long days against the twirling bats of Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman, Clarke knew he may need all of the two and a half days at his disposal. He was rewarded for his decision with two wickets on day three, a tally that could have been three with a safer pair of gloves from his lieutenant Brad Haddin.Still, Tendulkar and Laxman remained to be dislodged, and after Gautam Gambhir’s belligerent 83 they crafted the foundations of what may have become a significant union. Nathan Lyon created a few half-chances and had one loud lbw appeal turned down but, bowling down-breeze, he was unable to find a way past two batsmen who have clattered many a spinner over the years. So it was left to Clarke to have a go, and soon after lunch he made the crucial breakthrough, coaxing an edge from Tendulkar as he yet again became tentative on the outskirts of his 100th international century. Haddin’s gloves provided an accidental assist to help Hussey claim the catch, and the celebrations were in keeping with the significance of the moment as well as the golden touch of Clarke in this match. His field placements were adroit as ever, removing both Virender Sehwag and Gambhir with men neatly placed at point – a position so many international teams have taken to posting deep as a matter of course.Tendulkar’s wicket opened up one end to the second new ball, though it was not the new man Virat Kohli who fell first. Ben Hilfenhaus benefitted from his off-season efforts to use more of the crease, angling the ball subtly into Laxman then bending it away to flick the top of the stumps, a delivery every bit as good as the one that accounted for Rahul Dravid in the first over of day three at the MCG. Save for the resistance of R Ashwin, the rest followed meekly. It was a case of one team learning to impose itself by beating another that has seemingly become all too used to the motions of defeat.India’s present failings are wide-ranging, but their sequence of six consecutive away defeats have come against the best team in the world, England, and another that is starting to look like it might be in a position to challenge England by the time the 2013 Ashes roll by. At the head of that team, in all probability, will be Clarke, who has put his leadership beyond all doubt by completing one of the most outstanding Test matches from a leader.This is not to say Australia are without flaws. The top order lacks experience and rhythm, Haddin’s standing as a leader in the dressing-room is being weakened by flawed glovework and flighty batting, and Nathan Lyon took only one wicket for the match, albeit against gifted players of spin. Ahead lies Perth, where Ryan Harris will be a likely inclusion for a pace quartet that could do truly fearful damage to Indian minds already filled with self-doubt.Many members of this Australian team, both players and support staff, spoke of the Boxing Day Test as the best victory they had been a part of. Low-scoring and fluctuating, it provided the exhilaration and relief of a struggle won over a higher-ranked opponent in front of an enormous crowd. A week later and those same players may have to revise that declaration. The SCG’s 100th Test did not turn out to be the contest yearned for by purists, but there was plenty of satisfaction to be drawn from the sight of a domineering Australia, led by a natural captain. It has been a while.

Happy venue for Chanderpaul and Ponting

Both Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Ricky Ponting have superb records in Tests against each other in the West Indies, and also in Barbados, the venue for the first Test

S Rajesh06-Apr-2012In times gone by, a Test series between West Indies and Australia would have evinced plenty of interest. Now, thanks to the state of West Indies cricket, most experts and fans expect Australia to win the series comfortably, even though they had a tough time in the ODIs and the T20Is, only managing to share those series. The reason for the pessimism is clear: West Indies have been a poor Test side for a while now, and even their home record has taken a beating recently. Since they last played a home series against Australia, in 2008, West Indies have won only two out of 15 home Tests, and lost series against Bangladesh, India and South Africa. Apart from beating England in 2009, their one bright spark was winning a Test against Pakistan in a drawn series last year.Given these recent stats, and the unavailability of a few key players for West Indies, Australia will feel pretty confident of taking the series, especially after giving India a drubbing in their last Test series.The recent head-to-head record between these two teams is also overwhelmingly in favour of Australia – they have a 15-1 win-loss record against West Indies since 2000, and 5-1 in the West Indies during this period. This recent run has meant West Indies no longer have a winning record against Australia at home – it’s now slipped to 17-14 in favour of Australia.

Tests between West Indies and Australia

TestsAus wonWI wonDrawn/ TiedOverall108523223/ 1In West Indies45171414/ 0Since 2000181512/ 0In West Indies, since 20007511/ 0The batting and bowling averages since 2000 indicate how far ahead Australia have been in their head-to-head contests. They’ve averaged 43.58 runs per wicket with the bat in Tests against West Indies, and conceded less than 27 runs per wicket. In the West Indies, their bowling average has gone up to more than 31, but the batting average has also climbed to 46.28. Ricky Ponting has led the charge of the Australian batsmen during this period, scoring six hundreds in 17 Tests and averaging almost 65. He has done even better in the West Indies, averaging 84.60, with four centuries in six Tests.Among the West Indian batsmen, Shivnarine Chanderpaul has been the one batsman among the current lot who has shone consistently against Australia, and there will be plenty of responsibility on him this time around as well. In 12 Tests against Australia since 2000, Chanderpaul averages 47.95; in six home Tests against them during this period, his record matches that of Ponting’s: four centuries in six Tests, and an average of 77.67. Moreover, he also has a superb record in Barbados, the venue for the first Test: in 15 matches there, he averages 63.55, including three centuries. Meanwhile, Ponting hasn’t done badly here either, with two centuries in three Tests, and an average touching 60.West Indies’ fast bowling is probably their strongest suit, with Fidel Edwards, Ravi Rampaul and Kemar Roach all in the mix. Roach created a pretty good impression in Australia in 2009, but in terms of stats, Edwards has the best numbers against Australia, especially in home conditions. In three Tests against them at home, he has taken 15 wickets at 25.13. That included a match haul of eight wickets in Kingston in the first Test in 2008 – the bowlers gave West Indies a fair chance of winning that Test, but faced with a fourth-innings target of 287, West Indies could only muster 191.

Bat and bowl averages in WI-Aus Tests since 2000

Overall – bat ave, 100s/ 50sWkts, Bowl aveIn WI – bat ave, 100s/ 50sWkts, Bowl aveAustralia43.58, 24/ 48344, 26.5646.28, 15/ 15129, 31.55West Indies25.16, 17/ 40221, 47.7729.62, 10/ 1892, 49.73There are many stats which indicate West Indies’ decline over the last few years, but perhaps the most remarkable one is their win-loss record in Barbados. There used to be a time when the Kensington Oval in Bridgetown was a virtual fortress for West Indies: between 1976 and May 2002, they won 17 out of 23 Tests, and lost only two. Since June 2002, though, that record has turned on its head: in their last nine Tests here, West Indies have lost six and won just one. During this period, Australia have won both their Tests here, after losing four of their previous five, including that unforgettable Brian Lara starrer in 1999. (Click here for Australia’s Test results in Barbados.)When West Indies had that dominant run in Barbados, the pitch was quick and bouncy, and that suited West Indies’ battery of fast bowlers perfectly. Perhaps the pitch isn’t quite as spicy, but it’s still better suited for fast bowling than for spin: in the last six Tests here, since the beginning of 2005, fast bowlers average 33.13, having taken 129 wickets. Spinners have only taken 53, at an average of 42.47. Australia’s batsmen have shown some vulnerability against slow bowling on the tour so far, but going by recent history at this ground, their batsmen should be fairly comfortable on this surface. With Australia relying mostly on quick bowling, they’ll be pretty pleased too if the surface and the conditions favour their bowlers.

'I'm a proud mama's boy'

The West Indies captain loves his mum, buys her expensive gifts, and hopes she won’t hear him swear too much. And did you know he’s afraid of flying?

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi07-May-2012What did watching Fire in Babylon teach you?
It is very inspirational. When I first watched the film, it made me even more aware of what cricket is to the West Indian people. It opened my eyes.Your coach Ottis Gibson is not confident you can last five days in a Test?
The coach was just being funny. It would be good if we take the Tests to four days – at least then the people will get their money’s worth.This team has faced a lot of challenges in the last few years I have been captain, but somehow we find a way to overcome the challenges.Tell us a secret.
I am afraid of flying. You should ask the guys when the plane is taking off or landing or going through turbulent weather. I am screaming like a girl, man.Is it true that you never swear?
That is not true at all. Sometimes you just can’t help it. But my mom would be very disappointed if I swear all the time, because I was not raised like that.So you are a mama’s boy?
I am. I am a proud mama’s boy.What is the best gift you bought her?
For her 42nd birthday I bought her a brand new Toyota Corolla, 2011 model. I was away on tour, but I had the dealer deliver it with bows and ribbons and stuff, saying “Happy Birthday to the best mom in the world.” My mom was at church. When she came back, the car arrived. She broke down in tears. My father even videotaped it so I could catch up with all the emotions and celebrations.Are you religious?
I am very religious. I was brought up in a Seventh Day Adventist background. I wanted to be a pastor growing up. I was very good at it, actually, but cricket came up and I did not look back.What happens if an atheist walks into the dressing room?
We have a culture of: whatever we do we include god in it. We are a praying team. But we will not force anything if anyone wants to sit out. But most people in the Caribbean, boys go with their moms on a Saturday or a Sunday to the church, and that is predominantly the culture there.

“Once you listen to Caribbean music, you got to move it, maan! Once I feel the music, I got to dance”

We hear you are very good at dancing.
I can shake a leg, even if I am not the best dancer in the dressing room. Coming from the Caribbean, we have a good history of reggae and dance. Once you listen to Caribbean music, you got to move it, maan! Once I feel the music, I got to dance. I know there is a show called Dancing With the Stars. If St Lucia had its own programme, I would be the first one to participate. My son, Darren Dan Sammy Jr, is a better dancer than me.What’s the best dish to eat when in the Caribbean?
If it is St Lucia, it is green fig and salt fish. If you go to Barbados, you got to try the flying fish. In Jamaica go to Courtney Walsh’s restaurant, Cuddy’z, where you’ve got to try the steam fish.What is the fastest you have timed yourself at running 100 metres?
I was too afraid of losing, so I never ran 100 metres.Have you ever met Usain Bolt?
Yes, I met Usain recently when we played in Jamaica and he came in to the dressing room. He is quite a funny guy as well. I kind of see a little bit of myself in him: just the way he carries himself, he looks like he is enjoying what he is doing. You can see the passion when he runs and in his celebrations. It is like me when I go out on the cricket field. I try to live everything out there.Are you better at celebrations than him?
We are in two different sports and we have different styles of celebrations, but we get the same reactions from the fans. In the West Indies dressing room, there is no lack of people when it comes to celebrations: Dwayne Bravo, Fidel Edwards, Chris Gayle, Andre Russell are all good.”We have a culture of whatever we do we include god in it. We are a praying team. But we will not force anything if anyone wants to sit out”•Associated PressYou seemed to have decided on when Ricky Ponting’s last Test would be, recently. (Ponting told Sammy in their last Test that Gayle should have been captain. Sammy replied with: “This is your last Test”)
From the start of the series we had decided we are not going to back down if they sledge. And from the very first game in St Vincent, they were giving us a lot. But we stuck it up to them. I remember Kieron Pollard, before he left for the IPL, told me we need to stay strong in the Test series. I know Ponting was going through a difficult phase, just like me, and was not scoring runs. So we felt it was a good opportunity to stick that line up, and he got angry, actually. I remember two balls before I caught him at leg gully, he gloved the ball. I said, “Oh my god, he is going to finish his career like Muhammad Ali.” The next ball, he once again gloved. I said, “There you go”, and repeated the Ali line. He stared back at me, angrily. But at the end of the series they invited me for a drink, and it was good fun.What is one weakness you have?
I can’t say no. Maybe that is why I get run out.Are you talkative?
I am a friendly guy. I talk to everybody.What is the best compliment you’ve got from a West Indies fan?
There is a song in the Caribbean that runs along the lines “Keep on doing what you doing, Sammy” and fans keep singing it to me. I enjoy that. But the best compliment came from a lady recently. She said, “I know what you are going through is tough but the majority is silent. We are all behind you. Keep on doing what you are doing.” When I hear stuff like that, it gives me hope.

The muddled keeper and Morkel the destroyer

ESPNcricinfo presents the plays of the day from Kolkata Knight Riders v Delhi Daredevils

Firdose Moonda at Centurion13-Oct-2012The near-dismissal
Brett Lee was convinced he had a wicket off his second ball, when he had Mahela Jayawardene in a tangle. He bowled one short of a length and Jayawardene was hit on the top of the hand and the ball bounced back – towards the stumps. Lee thought it had gone on to hit them but the bounce actually carried the ball over the stumps and Jayawardene was safe.The keeper’s challenge
Knight Riders’ wicketkeeper, Manvinder Bisla, seemed to be battling as much against Sunil Narine as an average batsman does. He dropped two chances off Narine’s bowling, both of them against Kevin Pietersen. The first was off the carom ball – Pietersen was on two and tried to cut and his thick edge hit Bisla on the wrist. The next chance came when Pietersen tried to scoop the ball over fine leg on 11. Bisla had the ball lodged between his arm and his hip, and collected it only to spill it while trying to throw it up in celebration.The comical fielding
Lee was giving Unmukt Chand and Ross Taylor a hard time and the pair had only managed to get singles off his final over. Off the final ball of his spell, Chand thought he had broken free. He tried to pull and skied the ball square on the leg side. Four fielders converged: Lee, the wicketkeeper and two from the deep. Manoj Tiwary eventually got there but misjudged the catch and took it on the shoulder instead of in his hands.Comical fielding II
Rajat Bhatia pulled off an interesting catch to dismiss Ross Taylor. Taylor pulled to deep-square and Bhatia lost the ball in the lights but held his hands up hoping the ball landed in them. The ball bounced off his hands onto his knee and popped back up for him to clasp. In the end, he completed the catch but could hardly believe it.Destroyer of the day
Morne Morkel has a habit of injuring future team-mates hands. In the final Test between South Africa and New Zealand in March, he broke Ross Taylor’s arm and Taylor could not make it to the start of the IPL, where he was due to play with Morkel for Delhi. In this match, Morkel was at it again. He hit South African team-mate Jacques Kallis on the glove, forcing Kallis to retire hurt without scoring. In three weeks’ time, South Africa will tour on Australia for three Tests to defend their world No.1 ranking. Kallis could not return to bat and was taken for X-rays shortly after the incident.

Which are the finest cricket books?

Cricket probably boasts the best writing in all sport. We asked five writers to pick the cricket books they love most

08-Oct-2012

Mike Coward: In this very series David Frith noted that of the 10,000 or so books that have been written on cricket, he had read about half of them. He concluded that this represented one a week on average over 60 years. Suffice it to say this is an addiction way beyond therapy.This strike rate is all the more remarkable given Frith is a prolific writer who has made a substantial contribution to the literature and, indeed, the history of the game. His personal archive at Guildford in Surrey is a veritable treasure, as his published catalogue of 2009 attests.Frith, an Aussie Pom, has often felt conflicted when the game’s greatest rivals have been at each other’s throats. Having migrated to Australia with his family at the age of ten, he returned to England to work, and until the last few years always spent some time Down Under during summer. Indeed, he rarely missed the traditional opening Test of the season in Brisbane in November.His body of work is notable for its extraordinary scope – from biography, tour accounts and photographic pageants to comparative studies of the greatest bowlers, to the dark sorrowful subject of suicide within the game’s elite and then some.Frith’s finest work, to my mind, in part deals with premature death but not by the subject’s own hand. is a gentle, loving account of a remarkable cricketer who succumbed to tuberculosis at the age of 23 in the white-hot summer of 1932-33.This season sees the 80th anniversary of the infamous Bodyline series, about which Frith has also written with distinction. And it was during the fourth Test of the series in Brisbane that Jackson died in the Ingarfield Private Hospital in the very same city. Indeed, the mail train that took the grieving cricketers of Australia and England to Sydney for the final Test match also carried Jackson’s body towards its final resting place.

Five others

It has been my good fortune over the past 40 years to have worked alongside the authors of three other volumes that remain atop my reading order. Ray Robinson’s endearing studies of Australia’s Test captains in will always stand the test of time. The indefatigable Gideon Haigh’s fascinating appraisal of Australian cricket of the 1950s and 1960s, , is rightly celebrated, as is Irving Rosenwater’s forensic is a joyful and timeless romp with elements that remain as relevant today as when first published in 1958, and by David Rayvern Allen is a memorable study of the wonderful broadcaster and writer John Arlott.

It is the humanity of Frith’s work that makes this book so utterly compelling. The death of a young person is always troubling. In this case it caused a nation gripped by economic depression and deeply offended by the bolshiness of Douglas Jardine to grieve en masse. Even the devout felt compelled to question their faith. Such was the veil of sadness across the island continent.Jackson’s death was all the more poignant as to so many he was the reincarnation of Victor Trumper. Jackson was just five years old when Trumper died of Bright’s disease at the age of 38, but by the time he scored a century in his first Test match, at the age of 19, he was already hailed as the second Trumper.It was, however, the frailty of his body and not the weight of expectation of being compared with the immortal Trumper that so cruelly crushed him. While his mind was willing, his body only allowed him to play eight Test matches.Don Bradman, who batted with Jackson and helped carry him to the grave at the Field of Mars cemetery in Sydney, believed him to have been a batting genius.By this memorable account Jackson was a beautiful man, a thoughtful, god-fearing soul with an abiding love of his fellow man, of music, and of an ancient game that gave him a precious and timeless identity.Few portraits of a cricketer of any age can have been so sensitively and beautifully drawn.Mike Coward’s books include , , ,

****

Mailey: would rather have been hit for four than have bowled a straight one at a batsman•Getty ImagesSuresh Menon: Today the most prized cricketer might be the one in coloured clothing who hits a ball into the dinner basket of a spectator near third man while intending to clear the fielder at midwicket. But not so long ago, it was the “character” who was the most popular. Of one such, Neville Cardus wrote: “The most fascinating cricketer I have known was the Australian [legspinner] Arthur Mailey, an artist in every part of his nature.”The writer and the cricketer were firm friends; both emerged from slums (though thousands of kilometres apart), both taught themselves to write well, each had a personal manner of demonsrating he had climbed out of the past to walk among kings and prime ministers. Cardus wrote on classical music, while Mailey threw champagne parties.Mailey once said, “I’d rather spin the ball and be hit for four than bowl a batsman out by a straight one.” And on another occasion, “If ever I bowl a maiden over, it is not my fault but the batsman’s.”Yet the line he is best known for is the one he wrote in his autobiography, . He had just dismissed his great hero Victor Trumper, stumped off a googly, and the batsman walked back, pausing only to tell the young bowler, “It was too good for me.” Mailey captured that moment thus: “There was no triumph in me as I watched the receding figure. I felt like a boy who had killed a dove.” This most glorious of lines in all cricketing literature has, in recent years, had doubts cast upon its authenticity. Yet character is revealed as much by what a man has said as by what he would have said. If it is not factual, it is still truthful, and that’s what matters.Mailey, the only Australian to have claimed nine wickets in a Test innings, was an accomplished cartoonist, and his cartoons, which tell of a time and a place, enrich his autobiography. Even if it were merely a well-written story of an unusual life, might still have made the cut among the best books on the game. But it is more, its insights and predictions both startling and original.

And another five

by John Arlott A warm and affectionate story of a great batsman, the highlight for me a letter from Hobbs to Arlott that ends: “Thank you for everything John. You have been very kind and good to me over many years.”
by Peter Roebuck Comparable to the great mathematician G H Hardy’s , this takes you inside the heart and mind of the cricketer and his futile search for perfection.
by Rahul Bhattacharya The cricket tour as excuse for history, travel writing, biography and cultural commentary.
by Ramachandra Guha A historian and cricket nut brings his two passions together in this story of a man, his time and the consequences of the events that took place then.
by Ray Robinson: An incredibly detailed story of Australian captains, most of them even more interesting off field than on.

Like those who go against the grain by temperament rather than planning, Mailey displayed a combination of authority and empathy that was unique. He was the one Australian who was sympathetic towards Douglas Jardine and Bodyline. What the series did, according to Mailey, was, it changed the face of cricket reporting. “On the next tour of Australia came an army of ‘incident-spotters’,” he writes, “just in case there were repercussions that were too newsy… it was then we saw a blast of criticism about umpires’ decisions, about playing conditions, about the advisability of players having two or three eggs for breakfast, and of fried liver being on the menu… some of us viewed the future of cricket journalism with apprehension.”Mailey was an accomplished painter too. At an exhibition of his works in London, a royal visitor told him he “had not painted the sun convincingly”. Mailey’s response was: “You see, Your Majesty, in this country I have to paint the sun from memory.”Mailey, who played his last Test in 1926, was 70 when he wrote this book. And there was nothing wrong with the memory then of the man described by Cardus as an “incorrigible romantic”.Suresh Menon is editor and author most recently of

****

Gideon Haigh: “The appearance of a completely fresh and unpredictable cricket book is a rare event,” began John Arlott’s review of in the November 1979 issue of . It set the cogs ticking in the mind of a 13-year-old in country Victoria, who decided it was a book he simply had to have.These many years later, Derek Birley’s peppery survey of “cricket myths” remains for me a benchmark book, as much for its voice as its content – provocative, sceptical, independent, holding no brief for anyone. It belongs to perhaps the tiniest of all cricket sub-genres – not literature, not history, not reportage or anecdotage, but genuine critical inquiry.Birley’s particular target was the association of cricket with “not cricket”: the game’s self-legitimising claim to the occupation of a special, rarified and inherently English moral universe. Of this he made both utter mockery and delicious fun, concluding that “not cricket” could only be translated in circular fashion as “not the kind of thing which those who claim that cricket observes exceptionally high ethical standards happen to approve at any given moment”.In the course of his travels, the then-Rector of Ulster Polytechnique scourged almost every reputation precious to cricket’s establishment: Lord Harris was a punitive reactionary; Lord Hawke was a tiresome braggart; Sir Pelham Warner was a brazen hypocrite; Sir Neville Cardus was a snob, a sycophant, and a “blatant purveyor of debased romantic imagery”, capable of “shameless if sometimes skillful assemblages of emotive language”. In his essay “Cardus and the Aesthetic Fallacy”, Birley argues that it was Cardus “as much as anyone who created the intelligentsia of the game, giving respectability to attitudes that would otherwise have remained inarticulate or seemed merely snobbish special pleading”.For good measure, Birley took to task both CLR James, for his guileless effusions about WG Grace (“drawing a distinction between the sort of thing WG was reputed to go in for and cheating’), and EW Swanton, for his majestic condescension toward cricket north of Watford (“‘The North’ is all the same to Swanton – accents, social standing, smoky chimneys – and all quite different from the leisured and gracious south”).The condition of my copy – battered, yellowed, dog-eared, annotated – is testament to its inspiriting qualities. I’m bound to say that here and there, it has worn less well. Birley’s jeremiad against the “virility cult” of short-pitched pace bowling seems dated, for something has gone from the game with the lack of physical threat to batsmen. Birley was also probably too indulgent of his fellow Yorkshireman Geoff Boycott, and unduly hostile towards Tony Greig. But Birley was among the first to identify the implications of the game’s infiltration by “the values of show business”, noting its abiding tension: “The needs of cricket as a contest have always been to some extent at odds with the notion of providing entertainment.” He thought also that cricket’s survival depended on the emergence of a “new and more astringent literature” – and provided a sterling example.Gideon Haigh is the author of ,

****

Ramachandra Guha: Although weaned on the English romantics, as I grew older I grew to appreciate Australian cricket writers more. They had a knowledge of the game’s history and of its technique that men like Neville Cardus and AA Thomson lacked. For someone who had played some decent cricket himself, this mattered – the English knew to turn a phrase (if also to mix a metaphor), but reading them, one rarely got a sense of how an innings was crafted or an over bowled. This preference, once established, has stayed with me. My favourite contemporary cricket writer is Gideon Haigh, my favourites among writers of the past, Ray Robinson and Jack Fingleton.Robinson had an economical, witty style and a capacious internationalism. While his style was not the equal of Robinson’s, Fingleton was not a narrow nationalist either. And where he scored over his compatriot was in the fact that he had played 18 Test matches himself. His writing thus carried an authority that the work of a club cricketer, or even one who had played Sheffield Shield cricket, could not convey.Fingleton wrote four top-class cricket books. One was on the first Tied Test; a second on the Bodyline series; a third a report on Don Bradman’s last tour of England. These I have read and re-read, but my favourite “Fingo” book remains (1958). A much-loved teacher, Vijayan “Unni” Nair, loaned it to me when I was in college, and I must have read it half a dozen times before I graduated. Years later I came to possess a copy of my own, in the handsome green-and-yellow hardback reissue from Pavilion Books.

Top six

Twelve years ago, in the appendix to , I listed 50 of my favourite books on cricket. The editor now asks me to pare this down to six – and five others. These might be Ray Robinson’s (a study of cricketers of the 1940s and 1950s), Sujit Mukherjee’s Autobiography of an Unknown Cricketer (whose title says it all), Alan Gibson’s , RC Robertson-Glasgow’s (another charmingly whimsical cricketing memoir) and Ralph Barker’s Ten Great Bowlers (since batsmen hog too many headlines anyway).

Where Fingleton’s other books are on a single theme, ranges widely. There is a wonderful portrait of Victor Trumper, a essay in which not a word is wasted (years later, Fingo returned to the theme in a full-length book, which did not work); fine sketches of Warren Bardsley and HL “Horseshoe” Collins, and a superb short study of SF Barnes, whom I still think, Shane Warne and all, to be the greatest bowler who ever played. These portraits paid tribute to cricketers of a generation before Fingleton. A brilliant cameo, called “Cricketing Farewells”, saluted English cricketers of a generation after his.I recently read again after a gap of about a decade, and it still moved and educated me. Fingleton was the least chauvinistic of writers, more ready than the rest of us to praise foreigners, and youngsters too. His own cricketing expertise and experience informs every page, albeit very subtly. Although he had a reputation for being gruff in person, on the page he was unfailingly generous, and even, when the occasion demanded, tender and sentimental.Like most others who write on the game, I would have to name, as my favourite book on cricket, CLR James’ . It is sui generis – simultaneously a memoir, a sociological study, a literary-critical exercise and a work in cultural studies. Asked to choose my favourite “cricket book” (rather than “book on or around cricket”) I nominate Fingleton’s .Ramachandra Guha’s books include and

Wade likely to hold Test spot

At 24, Matthew Wade is set to become Australia’s youngest first-choice Test wicketkeeper since Ian Healy

Brydon Coverdale28-Oct-2012Matthew Wade is expected to be installed as Australia’s full-time Test wicketkeeper on Monday when the selectors name the squad for the first Test against South Africa, which starts at the Gabba on November 9. The choice between Wade and Brad Haddin was the major decision for John Inverarity’s panel over the past few weeks, with the top six having been locked in since Australia’s last Test six months ago and the wider bowling group remaining settled.Ed Cowan will retain his position at the top of the order alongside David Warner, while the rest of the batting group – Shane Watson, Ricky Ponting, Michael Clarke and Michael Hussey – will also remain in place. The bowling unit will be led by Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus and the squad is expected to also feature James Pattinson, Mitchell Starc and Nathan Lyon, with Pat Cummins more likely to come into contention later in the series.Possible squad for first Test

David Warner, Ed Cowan, Shane Watson, Ricky Ponting, Michael Clarke (capt), Michael Hussey, Matthew Wade (wk), Peter Siddle, James Pattinson, Ben Hilfenhaus, Mitchell Starc, Nathan Lyon

The choice between Haddin and Wade did not appear clear-cut when both men were given Cricket Australia contracts in June. But Wade is expected to win the battle and was told by Australia’s physio Alex Kountouris to rest from Sunday’s Ryobi Cup match at the MCG, after suffering a minor injury to his thumb during last week’s Sheffield Shield match, although he will play this week’s Shield game for Victoria.”I got a hit on my thumb during the week in the Shield game and spoke to the medical staff and I made myself available but they told me to have a rest,” Wade said on on Sunday. “I had a hit yesterday and everything felt fine, I just spoke to Alex Kountouris and they decided to give me a rest.”I’m pretty relaxed. I’ve done everything that I can do in Shield cricket. Fingers crossed I get that opportunity … Hadds is a terrific player and I’ve hopefully done enough to get that opportunity but we’ll know tomorrow.”Wade is the incumbent gloveman having been given a chance in April in the West Indies, where he played all three Tests and finished the series with a Man-of-the-Match performance in Dominica, where his first-innings 106 set up Australia’s series-winning victory. However, Wade only earned his baggy green after Haddin had flown home before the first Test in Barbados to be with his ill daughter Mia.Until that point, Haddin had been Australia’s incumbent Test keeper for four years, missing only five matches through injury in 2009 and 2010, when Graham Manou and Tim Paine filled in. But on virtually every criterion, Wade deserves to be given the gloves for the Gabba Test, the start of Australia’s battle with South Africa for the No.1 Test ranking.Haddin, 35, is nearing the end of his career while Wade, 24, has a long future ahead of him. Not since Ian Healy joined the side at 24 in 1988 have Australia had a full-time Test wicketkeeper so young, and Healy provided them with more than a decade of sturdiness behind the stumps. The time is right to give Wade an extended run in the side, while there remains an abundance of experience in the middle order. Wade and Warner will be the only two men aged under 30 in Australia’s top seven.But age is far from Wade’s only advantage. Over the past five years with Victoria, he has earned a reputation as the kind of man any team would like to walk to the crease in a crisis. His Test century in Dominica came after he joined Michael Hussey with Australia wobbling at 5 for 157, and he impressed Inverarity with 89 for Victoria earlier this month, after he walked out onto the Gabba at 4 for 39.”It shows what a very good batsman Matthew Wade is,” Inverarity said of the innings. “That innings, in the context of that game was the match-winner. They [Queensland] bowled very well in helpful conditions and that 89 was a very significant batting performance.”Notably, Wade’s record is best at the Gabba and Bellerive Oval – arguably the two toughest domestic pitches in Australia. His glovework is very good – it has improved enormously since he first appeared on the Sheffield Shield scene – and with 55 first-class matches and nearly 3000 runs to his name, lack of experience is not an issue.Wade’s case was strengthened because Haddin’s past year has been far from his best. His 114 for New South Wales in the Sheffield Shield last month, before he headed to South Africa for the Champions League Twenty20, was impressive, but against India last summer he was disappointing with bat and gloves. And his reckless slash outside off in Cape Town last November, when Australia were 5 for 18, is hard to forget.That South African tour also provided Cummins with his first taste of Test cricket and he was Man of the Match on debut in Johannesburg. However, he has not played a first-class match since, last summer due to injury and this season because of his short-format duties with Australia and the Sydney Sixers. There is a chance he will be named in a 13-man squad for the Gabba, but he is unlikely to be a realistic Test option until he has some red-ball cricket behind him.Australia’s plans to rotate their young fast bowlers this summer will bring Cummins, 19, into contention later in the South African series. At the Gabba, Australia are likely to play Siddle and Hilfenhaus, with Pattinson, the leading wicket taker so far this Shield season, as the third fast man. Starc should only be considered if conditions are excessively favourable to the pace bowlers, while the injured Ryan Harris won’t be available until the series against Sri Lanka.Almost every year since the retirement of Shane Warne, there has been pre-match speculation that Australia will play an all-pace attack at the Gabba, which is always friendly to the seamers in Sheffield Shield matches. But Brisbane generally provides a better surface in Test cricket and last summer the offspinner Lyon took seven wickets in the Gabba Test, and he deserves to be part of the starting XI again.The first Test will also provide Cowan with an opportunity to make the opening position his own after he missed out on a central contract this year. However, should Cowan stumble early in the South African series he will come under pressure, most likely from the resurgent Phillip Hughes, who has tightened up his technique and is still viewed by the selectors as a Test player of the future.

Killing the ODI spinner by decree?

Only four men are now allowed outside the 30-yard circle in ODIs. The ICC intended this to invite more aggression from batsmen and fielding sides, but it may also have stifled attack and creativity in spin bowling

Andrew Fernando in Pallekele05-Nov-2012At the dawn of one-day cricket, the only fielding restriction applied to the format was the rule it had inherited from Tests: only two men on the leg side behind square. Since then ODIs have been through several facelifts. The 1992 rule change that allowed only two men outside a 30-yard perimeter spawned a new breed of opening batsman. Perhaps sensing that none of the more recent changes had helped enhance ODI cricket to any great extent, the ICC has now enforced perhaps its most radical change to the format since 1992. Only four men are now allowed outside the circle at any time.Superficially, the rules should achieve what they are intended to do. Batsmen need no longer accumulate dourly in the middle overs and are guaranteed more frequent reward for their aggression. Fielding captains are forced to innovate and be more aggressive. In the first match played under the new rules on Sunday, Mahela Jayawardene employed his extra man in the circle as a catcher for much of the New Zealand innings and had a man caught at short midwicket in the 34th over as a result.On the whole, strokemaking remains well rewarded throughout the innings, and ODIs are accorded the distinction they supposedly require to remain relevant in a three-format universe. But has the collateral been adequately considered?”I’m not very comfortable with all these changes and I don’t think it’s the right way to go forward,” Jayawardene said. “Unless there is sufficient assistance to the spin bowlers on the wicket, I feel the spinners will get targeted. They will try to bowl on one side of the wicket and become one dimensional, whereas the art of spin is about turning the ball and getting batsmen out. A spinner needs the cover, and you’re not getting that with the new rules. As a batsman, it’s easy for me, but as a captain, I feel for the bowlers.”The major problem for spinners is that they must now sacrifice one of their deep fielders down the ground in order to have three men patrolling the fence square of the wicket. This makes overpitching particularly hazardous and discourages flight. When batsmen use their feet, even if the spinner beats him in the air, the batsman need only muscle the ball beyond the fielder in the circle. On quicker outfields, a batsman might collect four from a ball that dipped before he anticipated and caught the toe-end of the bat before clearing mid-off or mid-on.The other option for spinners is to have both men down the ground back on the boundary, and have a sweeper either side of the pitch. But this would greatly reduce the risk of slog-sweeping, as the batsman only needs to avoid a single deep legside fielder. If they were to put two men back on the legside, the off side is susceptible to shots played inside-out, and even slight errors in line will result in boundaries.The ICC intended this rule to invite more aggression from both the batsmen and the fielding side, but in doing so, it may have stifled attack and creativity in spin bowling. The darters and arm-ballers that now abound in Twenty20 cricket may not find the new rule an insurmountable hurdle, but the servants of flight and guile will suddenly find their already difficult plight direr. Fewer men on the boundary means the variety of deliveries they can confidently attempt is reduced. Flat, fast and accurate becomes the preferred modus operandi.”The two new balls have already made it difficult for spinners in some conditions, and now this new rule makes it tougher again,” Jayawardene said. “Yesterday, the pitch looked much slower than the previous match and both teams would have been tempted to play two spinners, but both opted out, purely because of the new rule. The way things are going, unless you are a brilliant spinner who can bowl well in any conditions, most spinners will find it difficult to find a place in the playing XI. You’ll probably just go with the part-time bowlers and see if you can get the job done that way.”By imposing a new ball at each end, the ICC has rid ODIs of one of cricket’s most compelling sights. Countless youngsters have been inspired to bowl fast by the reversing delivery that dives late at the stumps like a snake suddenly smelling prey, but that is no longer achievable with balls that do not age more than 25 overs. Now, attacking spinners have been put in peril. Isn’t its skill and artistry the reason most fall in love with the game in the first place?

Among weights machines and leaky pipes

The WACA gym setting for Ricky Ponting’s retirement announcement was far from pretty but somehow fitting

Brydon Coverdale29-Nov-2012Windowless and feeling like a basement, the WACA gym is not the most salubrious room in Australian cricket.It is tucked away on the ground floor of the Lillee-Marsh Stand, and during Test matches becomes a makeshift press conference venue, weights and machines pushed to the sides and chairs lined up in the middle of the room. During a press conference last year, a cameraman had to shift his lighting equipment to avoid damage from a leaky pipe that runs along the ceiling carrying goodness knows what.In these surrounds Ricky Ponting announced his decision to retire from Test cricket. Somehow, it felt appropriate. Ponting has spent more than two decades in rooms like this, working on his fitness, preparing for battle. Ponting’s career has not been about looking pretty, although his pulls and straight drives are among the finest sights in cricket. It has been about getting down to business, wherever, however required. From Harare to Peshawar, from Georgetown to Guwahati. From Perth in 1995 to Perth in 2012.So he got down to business here as well. Ponting walked into the gym holding the hand of his young daughter Emmy, followed by wife Rianna holding their younger daughter Matisse. His family filed off and sat down at the front of a packed room. Ponting’s team-mates were already present, standing at the back of the room behind the bank of television cameras, waiting to hear Ponting tell the world what he had told them before training.For nearly an hour before Ponting arrived, murmurs had been spreading. Ostensibly, the collection of journalists had gathered for captain Michael Clarke’s pre-match press conference. But one by one, the reporters started to make or take calls, sidling out of the room to confirm the rumour that was rapidly spreading. Twitter began to rumble as the news emerged. It was known that Ponting had been seriously considering his future after the Adelaide Test, but not that he had made a decision.After a matter-of-fact confirmation that the Perth Test would be his last, Ponting asked that he not be pressed to reflect on his career, his highs and lows, the great players he had played with and against. It was typical of Ponting that he wanted the focus to remain on the upcoming Test, inasmuch as that was possible. A battle for the No.1 Test ranking. A match that Ponting said he wanted to win more than any other game he has ever played.Ponting had been emotional when he told his team-mates of his decision earlier in the day; naturally, so were they. But during his public announcement, there were no tears. All his face betrayed was a disappointment that in his own mind he was no longer good enough to play Test cricket. “I know I’ve given cricket my all,” he said with a look of resignation. “It’s been life for 20 years. Not much more I can give.”The display of emotion was left to Clarke, who had the task of facing the press after Ponting had left the room with his family – or “my new team”, as he had described his wife and daughters – to a standing ovation from all who were present. Clarke was asked how the team had responded when Ponting had told them of his decision before training.”The boys are obviously hurting at the moment,” Clarke said. “He’s been an amazing player for a long time.”That was as much as Clarke could get out. His chin started to wobble, he fell silent and looked down at the desk in front of him. Ponting had been the one constant in the Australian team since Clarke debuted in 2004. Though they took different approaches to captaincy, there was no question Ponting had been a significant mentor to Clarke over the years. And now he was leaving. It was like a death in the family.The next question asked of Clarke related to Nathan Lyon’s chances of playing the Test. The focus had returned to the match at hand. Just as Ponting wanted.

Quaint bookstore v glitzy chain

It is widely predicted that the older forms of cricket and bookselling will go the way of the dinosaur. But, like their book-loving counterparts, fans of the five-day format are a determined lot

Suhas Cadambi25-Feb-2013There exists a certain type of book-lover who is particular not just about what he reads, but also where he buys it from. It is mostly people of this ilk who are responsible for keeping the cult of the ‘friendly neighbourhood bookstore’ going strong. Clearly, there is a certain romance associated with the local bookshop struggling to compete with the rise of a big chain counterpart; director Nora Ephron even made a well-known romantic comedy on the theme.One might wonder why a reader should prefer the smaller, minimalist store to the giant, glitzy establishment when the latter offers essentially the same product, at superior levels of convenience. The reader would probably offer a multitude of reasons: the sense of personal belonging which you simply don’t get with the larger stores, the presence of knowledgeable owners or astute staff who wouldn’t need a computer to tell you if a certain book were available, the likelihood of finding a rare title, or simply the stimulating environment. This is a real-world parallel I hit upon while thinking about a seeming contradiction in cricket: the attitudes of die-hard Test cricket fans, including myself, towards the various formats of the game.I may profess not to like it, but every year I end up watching a fair bit of the IPL anyway. I’m often asked why this is so; the best explanation I can provide is that an IPL game, at its core, is still bat versus ball, and any cricket on television is better than none at all. Yet, my feelings about the Twenty20 format persist. Perhaps it’s not the league itself, but its knock-on effects – the proliferation of domestic T20 leagues, player availability, a badly compromised schedule – that leave some of us cold.Whatever it may be, like many others I am the proverbial passenger on the train who simply has to catch a glimpse of the game being played outside, driven by that compulsive need to know what will happen next ball. Similar to this is how the reader who swears by the smaller store can still be found leafing through a book in the bigger one; the effect of a flame on a moth.The older ways, however, continue to inspire certain affection. Every major Indian city now boasts an IPL franchise, but the Test match still has more of a community feel to it than the league. When we were discussing the schedule for New Zealand’s upcoming tour of India (Tests in Hyderabad and Bangalore), a Hyderabad-based friend insisted he would rather get tickets for the Bangalore game because “nothing beats the experience of watching a Test in your hometown”. People of Bangalore feel equally strongly about the quaint Premier Bookstore, which shut down three years ago, to the extent that a documentary film has been made on the owner.Further similarities can be uncovered. The big-chain bookstore is usually found in a bustling shopping mall, and is seemingly incomplete without additions such as a DVD section and a coffee shop. By the same token, it is difficult to imagine a T20 game without floodlights, an excitable crowd, loud music, and cheerleaders. It sure hits home with the larger public, even if the purist finds this all a bit repulsive.It is widely predicted that the older forms of cricket and bookselling will go the way of the dinosaur. But, like their book-loving counterparts, fans of the five-day format are a determined lot. Today, any reasonably absorbing Test match, never mind the attendance figures, is a reason (or is it excuse?) for renewed optimism. The cause may be a losing one, but it is still worth fighting for.

Viva New Zealand

Whatever would connoisseurs of inconsequential stats do without their contributions?

Andy Zaltzman25-Feb-2013One of the joys of the unceasing smorgasbord of international cricket laid before the modern cricket fan’s groaning stomach is that, in any week, something will probably happen that has never, or seldom, happened before. Admittedly this is not necessarily a joy that cancels out the less alluring sensation that what you are watching is not always sport at its global pinnacle, the best against the best at their best, or anything much more significant than the fulfilment of a contractual obligation or the scratching of an eczematous commercial itch. But it is a joy nonetheless.Carving each other’s names and numbers into the easily-erodable sandstone bench of history over the last seven days have been England and India’s top-order batsmen, some of their bowlers, plus the entire New Zealand team, and, by association, the South African bowling attack.The first ODI in Rajkot was a compelling match for spectators, and a delectable one for fans of minimal-interest statistics. I, consequently, enjoyed it thoroughly. It was a truly historic game. Truly, if not relevantly. It was the first-ever ODI in which nine batsmen had scored 40 or more. Only eight times in the previous 3318 matches since the format was unexpectedly born in 1971 have eight batsman reached 40. Truly the universe tilted momentarily on its axis at the uniqueness of it all.It was only the second time five England batsmen had passed 40 in an ODI innings (and the 17th time by any team, all in the last ten years), and their innings was one of the very few occasions in international cricket history on which the top six batsmen have all hit a six. (I will be honest, I have not checked this. If I find a fallow hour this week to mooch about with Statsguru ‒ a Mushfiqur-Rahim-sized “if” – I will find out if it has ever happened before.) (In the meantime, please try not to let the uncertainty disturb your sleep. I know you must be very worried about it.) (Someone else has probably already found this out. Ask him. Or her. If you know who he or she is.) (It was certainly the only time England’s top six have ever all hit a six in an ODI. There had never even been a game in which their top four had all cleared the ropes.)The match also provided the first instance of three England bowlers conceding more than 60 in a one-day victory; and Tim Bresnan’s 8.37 is the second-highest economy rate by an England bowler who has bowled more than five overs in an ODI win (only Liam Plunkett’s 1 for 71 off seven against West Indies in the 2007 World Cup beats it, with 1377 other spells lagging behind, the 1377th of them being Mike Hendrick’s 1 for 5 off eight against Canada in 1979). For India, Ishant Sharma conceded the third most runs ever by an Indian in an ODI (86), and the most ever by an ODI bowler who has bowled two maidens (beating Dwayne Bravo’s 10-2-80-0, also against England, in 2004).It was only the third time India have lost an ODI despite five of their top six passing 30, and if Ajinkya Rahane had scored three more runs, it would have been the ninth ODI in which all four openers scored half-centuries (the last instance was the previous ODI in Rajkot, at a different stadium, in December 2009). Instead, it was the 11th ODI in which all four openers scored 47 or more. And if Rahane and Gautam Gambhir had added four more runs, it would have been the 12th ODI in which both opening partnerships posted century stands. It could have been truly, epically, unforgettably, only-occasionally-precedentedly almost unique.The conclusion we can draw from all this: both sides are better at batting than bowling.All of this however pales into insignificance compared with New Zealand’s heroic efforts in South Africa to put a smile on the cricket world’s statistical face. On the positive side, the Kiwis have never batted better in their second innings in an away series against the Proteas. An open-top bus parade through Wellington surely awaits ‒ their collective second-innings average of 23.5 was their best performance in their seven visits to South Africa.Sadly for that hamster of consolation, bouncing up and down on the negative end of the statistical see-saw are several rhinoceroses of ineptitude. Only a tenth-wicket slapabout, as BJ Watling and Trent Boult added 59 in the second Test in Port Elizabeth prevented them from recording the worst-ever first-innings series performance in the history of Test cricket.Even that only lifted them into second-last place (out of 1187), averaging 8.3 per first-innings wicket in the two Tests, compared to South Africa’s 6.5 in their first ever Test series, way back in 1888-89, when a trip to that part of the cricketing universe was rather less intimidating for visiting batsmen than it is now. Given that the 1888-89 games were only retrospectively awarded Test status some years later, New Zealand can still unproudly claim to have compiled the most dismal first-innings performance in a Test series by a team that actually knew it was playing in a Test series. And they can still also anti-boast that no team has ever lost its first-innings wickets more rapidly in a series than their once-every-19.2-balls, a figure boosted by the 50 balls of marathon resistance that Watling and Boult put together last week.New Zealand also proved the two age-old cricketing truisms: “If you go to South Africa with three of your best batsmen missing from a team that habitually gets thrashed by South Africa, the fact that you are also missing your best pace bowler and best spinner will become swiftly irrelevant”; and, “If only two of your batsmen average over 21, and none of your bowlers takes more than four wickets, then you will probably struggle to win a series against the world’s best team.” Wise words.Even their two second-innings microredemptions did not spare them further statistical brickbats. Their collective series batting average of 16.30 was the equal second worst by a top-eight Test nation since 1959 – only India’s cataclysm in New Zealand in 2002-03 eclipses it, when a batting line-up including Virender Sehwag, Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly and VVS Laxman contrived to average 13.3 (all out for 161, 121, 99 and 154 in the two Tests), and proved another age-old cricketing truism: “When Ashish Nehra finishes third in your series batting averages, you have serious problems.”● Martin Guptill came within one review of adding his own personal piece of unwanted immortality to his team’s collective numerical mauling. If he had not been reprieved by the DRS in his fourth and final innings of the series, he would have recorded the worst Test series ever by an opening batsman. The duck from which technology mercifully saved him would have left him with the unarguably insufficient total of 2 runs from four innings, his 0.5 average obliterating the previous record by anyone who has opened in three or more innings in a series ‒ 1.33 by Kenny Rutherford in the three innings (0, 0 and 4) in which he opened for the Kiwis during his nightmare debut series in the West Indies in 1985. Guptill went on to score 48. And finish fourth in the New Zealand batting averages with 12.5. Which was not particularly good news for him, New Zealand, or cricket.Rutherford was shepherded down the order to No. 3 in the third Test, and the runs remained elusive – he scored 0 and 2. He was shuffled down to six in the fourth Test, and, away from the new ball, the floodgates opened. And the runs began to trickle. He scored 1 and 5. His 12 runs at 1.71 remain the worst return by a top-seven batsman who has played four Tests or more in a series. He was dismissed five times by Malcolm Marshall, once by Joel Garner, and once by a run-out. Twelve runs at 1.71 might with hindsight be considered reasonably promising in the circumstances. The West Indies in 1985 was a bad time and place for a young batsman to begin his Test career. Unless he was playing for West Indies.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus