Nick's Collingwood Bulletin Board Forum Index
 The RulesThe Rules FAQFAQ
   MemberlistMemberlist   UsergroupsUsergroups   CalendarCalendar   SearchSearch 
Log inLog in RegisterRegister
 
A load of rubbish ? - Chris Ryan

Users browsing this topic:0 Registered, 0 Hidden and 1 Guest
Registered Users: None

Post new topic   Reply to topic    Nick's Collingwood Bulletin Board Forum Index -> Nick's Sports Bar
 
View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
Donny Aries

Formerly known as MAGFAN8.


Joined: 04 Aug 2002
Location: Toonumbar NSW Australia

PostPosted: Fri Apr 23, 2004 2:55 pm
Post subject: A load of rubbish ? - Chris RyanReply with quote

The perils of bits-and-pieces selection

Christian Ryan


Bits-and-pieces was for many years unofficial English selection policy. For Australians, all through the late-1980s and 90s, it provided an annual source of guaranteed hilarity. Year in, year out, such rare and exotic creatures as David Gower or Jack Russell or Phil Tufnell would be guillotined in favour of, say, Dermot Reeve or Richard Blakey or Robert Croft. Sure, none of Bob, Dick or Dermie could actually bat, bowl or keep with any remote sort of flair. But blimey, the reasoning went, did you know they can turn cartwheels and juggle jam doughnuts – rather too many jam doughnuts, in Croft's case – in their spare time? Let's pick 'em.

As with most British inventions, especially the daft ones, bits-and-pieces selection policy appears belatedly to have caught on in Australia.

Yesterday's announcement of the team for Zimbabwe next month – the tour nobody wants to go on but only Stuart MacGill had the balls/morals/mischief to say so – was remarkable for two reasons: the inclusion of someone who has accumulated seven first-class fifties and one five-for but is actually a legspinner (Cameron White), and the exclusion of an explosive, once-a-generation kind of batsman on the grounds that his offbreaks aren't up to scratch (Andrew Symonds). How long till the laugh's on us?

Of course, bits-and-pieces is no overnight flight of madness. It has been seeping in gradually, invisibly almost, for years. MacGill, who boasts the best strike-rate in domestic limited-overs history, has played only three one-day internationals in his life because he bats like a rabbit and doesn't field like a hare. Meanwhile a string of lesser operators – Gavin Robertson, Brad Young, Nathan Hauritz, Brad Hogg – have arrived with a bang and disappeared with a thud.

Darren Lehmann and Simon Katich, two of the happier recent selections, are slyer examples of the ever-creeping bits-and-pieces obsession. Lehmann, despite being picked roughly three years too late, has since reinvented himself as a dextrous and sure-footed, if slightly galumphing, Neil Harvey. Katich has displayed the polish and innovation that was blinkingly obvious to anyone who had seen him make mincemeat of domestic trundlers.

Both, though, were eventually selected not for their bladesmanship but for their two-for-the-price-of-one left-arm dobbers, which deviate half a centimetre this way or that. Their success was down to good luck more than planning. And lest we forget Katich, after his gorgeous maiden hundred against India in Sydney, was promptly shafted for the next two games because Symonds not only bowls a bit of slow stuff but a dollop of medium-pace too.

The emergence of Michael Clarke, whose name was missing for approximately the 217th time from yesterday's team sheet, has thrown the selectors into something of a tailspin. Clarke is the most eyecatchingly gifted young Australian batsman since Greg Chappell. Once upon a time that would have been enough.

Instead the selectors have talked up his left-arm spinners, which are marginal to fair at best, and picked him exclusively in one-dayers. The upshot is that he's played only 37 first-class matches (none of them Tests) across five seasons. That's fewer than 14 hits a year. Logic would normally dictate that when you've unearthed the next Greg Chappell you look after him, not try to turn him into the next Garry Sobers.

Yesterday's biggest loser, however, was not Clarke but Symonds. Nine years ago he thwacked a world-record 16 sixes for Glamorgan, hurtled to 254 in 206 balls, then turned his back on England because he wanted to wear the baggy green. By the time he did, it was for two Tests on Sri Lankan minefields – as unGabbalike surroundings as you could possibly imagine – and his batting was almost an afterthought.

He was picked in the cross-your-fingers fantasy that he'd prove a lively medium quick (which he hasn't been in years) and a canny offspinner (which he's never been). He failed. And so we bid farewell to a beautiful waste, a dazzling old-fashioned six-hitter who, like Colin Milburn and David Hookes before him, could have been anything but instead made selectors jumpy.

The winner is Cameron White. According to all reports he's a good kid with a wise head, which he's gonna need, because those same reports describe his legbreaks as strictly unthreatening works in progress. He is a bowler who has been picked for his batting: the quintessential bits-and-pieces option. Still, he has something about him and you'd be silly to rule out a bright future for him. But as with Lehmann and Katich, you suspect the selectors have backed the right man for the wrong reasons.

All this represents an alarming departure from the Australian way. The nuts and bolts of the Border-Taylor-Waugh dynasties, for all their buccaneering strokeplay and bucking of convention, were built of strictly traditional ingredients. Two exceptional openers (invariably a dasher and a grafter), a kick-arse first drop, three freewheeling middle-order bats, one sturdy keeper-batsman or batsman-keeper, three outstanding quicks and a spinner who gives the ball an almighty tweak. It is a surefire winning formula. Australia ignore it at their peril.

Not that bouts of bits-and-pieces lunacy are unheard of round these parts. The late-1970s witnessed the selection of Richie Robinson, Trevor Laughlin and Phil Carlson. The mid-80s gave rise to Roger Woolley, Peter Sleep and, blink and you missed him, Glenn Trimble.

But desperate times demanded drastic steps. Better for today's selectors to remember what happened to England in the late-1980s and 90s. Bits plus pieces equalled loads of rubbish.

_________________
Donny.

It's a game. Enjoy it. Very Happy


Last edited by Donny on Fri Apr 23, 2004 7:25 pm; edited 1 time in total
Back to top  
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail MSN Messenger  
Donny Aries

Formerly known as MAGFAN8.


Joined: 04 Aug 2002
Location: Toonumbar NSW Australia

PostPosted: Fri Apr 23, 2004 3:34 pm
Post subject: Reply with quote

Well, where do I start ??

Maybe by using his last line and changing it to "Bits and pieces journos equals loads of rubbish"

Paragraph 3: Who would you pick to replace MacGill, Christian ? One of the ones you mentioned arriving on the scene with a bang and disappearing with a thud ?

What better time to blood a youngster with heaps of potential ? He's now in the national Test squad, rubbing shoulders with the best leggie in history. May I also point out Warne was selected after just 1 first class game and he turned out ok, didn't he ?

Next: Lehmann and Katich ? Dead wrong about Boofa. He was selected as a batsman. His bowling is a recent addition and a bloody good one. His 6 wickets against Sri Lanka in the recent 3rd. Test included 5 top 6 batsmen and were taken when Warney was struggling.

Katich WAS selected ahead of Love because of his second string spinners but could well have been in the Test XI on his batting alone, as he is now. Maybe if you had actually seen him bowl, you'd know he's somewhat better than your "left-arm dobbers, which deviate half a centimetre this way or that" description.

Michael Clarke: Yes, a very talented one day cricketer at the moment. He's coming along fine, mate. It is a bit of a catch 22 with young players like Symonds and Clarke. Having already made the national ODI squad, they miss quite a few Pura Cup matches.

And don't give me that nonsense about domestic trundlers in Australia. Our state sides, more often than not, beat/embarrass touring teams. When an Aussie makes it into the first XI, you can bet he's had the best possible grounding.

You mention Symmo's heroics, 9 years ago in England. Now you're talking trundlers. I seem to recall a young Windies batsman whacking 501 n.o., some time back. A lot of pies hit the fence and went over, that day.

There's other stuff in there to pick holes in, Christian, but I'll just move on to your last couple of paragraphs.

All those names you mentioned, not one was picked to fail. They were all picked on form or potential. Check through your records, mate, and see how many first class games Warney, Ponting and McGrath played before they were called up.

Desperate times ?? 15 years of being the best Test side. 10 or so being the best ODI outfit. Speak for England by all means, young Christian (well you sound young) but we seem to have done ok with our bits and pieces.

_________________
Donny.

It's a game. Enjoy it. Very Happy
Back to top  
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail MSN Messenger  
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Nick's Collingwood Bulletin Board Forum Index -> Nick's Sports Bar All times are GMT + 11 Hours

Page 1 of 1   

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You can download files in this forum



Privacy Policy

Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group