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August 31, 2008

New England in rude health, bar a few excess pounds

Posted on 08/31/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





The emergence of Samit Patel has been a revelation © Getty Images

Steve James, in the Sunday Telegraph, is awestruck by England's one-day renaissance, thanks in no small way to Kevin Pietersen's captaincy, Samit Patel and the rejuvenated Matt Prior.

Goodness, that is still hard to believe. This is one-day cricket after all. This is just not supposed to happen. England are wonderfully woeful at one-day cricket: that has long been written in the stars.

In the same paper, Scyld Berry identifies the key areas in which Pietersen has excelled as captain, such as keeping wickets intact in the Powerplays and not overloading his players with training sessions. The Sunday Times' Simon Wilde is impressed by England's run and ponders whether they have hit upon a XI that's likely to last.

Over in the Natal Witness, Peter Roebuck writes that South Africa's failings in the one-day series indicate a lack of ambition.

Rightly, the team celebrated (after winning the Test series) and its praises were sung. After a few days rest, though, it was important to get back to work. Instead, the players went walkabout. As much could be seen for the defeat at the Oval.

Suddenly, batsmen were swishing away outside off-stick or lifting catches to cover. Far from kicking their prostrate opponents, they assisted in their resurgence. Obviously the new captain also inspired England, but he must have expected stiffer resistance.

In his blog on the Times website, Archie Henderson raises a question: Was [Shaun] Pollock allowed to retire, or was he pushed, like Lance Klusener?

August 27, 2008

Had breakfast with KP yet?

Posted on 08/27/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

The Trent Bridge mauling yesterday is a reflection of Kevin Pietersen's ability to transform his players, writes David Hopps in the Guardian.

England players must be queuing up to have breakfast with him, imagining that a few inspirational words over the muesli can transform their fortunes. Yesterday it was Matt Prior's turn - the Sussex wicketkeeper took a stupendous, springing catch in front of first slip to dismiss Herschelle Gibbs.

In dismissing South Africa for 83 yesterday and reaching their target with all wickets intact, England made a nonsense of the world rankings and of the less mathematically solid proposition that they are completely hopeless at limited overs cricket, writes Stephen Brenkley in the Independent. He also feels South Africa have gotten carried away with their Test series success.


It might seem perverse to suggest it, but perhaps South Africa's cause has not been helped by the postponement of the Champions Trophy in Pakistan. While the International Cricket Council's decision was widely applauded, South Africa now know they are homeward bound. Instead of having to head for the sub-continent, as they would have done had the Trophy proceeded, it is as if they can smell brai and biltong again.

Neil Manthorp, in Supercricket, also agrees that South Africa have yet to get over the hangover from the Test series.


In the Daily Mail, Paul Newman writes that Matt Prior's wicketkeeping has brought energy back to England's fielding.

August 24, 2008

Kevin Pietersen's Midas touch continues

Posted on 08/24/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Belying widespread concerns, captaincy hasn't had a detrimental impact on Kevin Pietersen's batting © Getty Images


After his captaincy tenure got off to a dream start in the one-day format as well, the England papers are singing Kevin Pietersen’s praises. Scyld Berry writes in the Sunday Telegraph that while Pietersen has taken his whole game to a new level, his biggest achievement since taking over has been bringing the best out of Andrew Flintoff and Steve Harmison.

His captaincy will no doubt end in tears, for England captains always end in tears, because the job is unsustainable, and nothing is done to reduce the over-load. But with each week of his nascent captaincy, the promise grows that before the premature ending there will be some glorious moments.

In the Observer, Vic Marks says Pietersen’s captaincy is reminiscent of Nasser Hussain’s. He says that for both, when it came to selecting teams, what mattered was talent and not whether players were reliable or matey.

Lawrence Booth, writing in the Sunday Times, is impressed that immediately after the win at Headingley, instead of savouring the win, Pietersen was urging his team-mates to prepare for the next ODI at Nottingham.

August 23, 2008

When not to Skype your wife

Posted on 08/23/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

Neil Manthorp, in his column in SuperCricket, recalls a humorous anecdote involving Michael Atherton, the former England captain and the Times' chief cricket correspondent, during the South Africa Test series.

Forty-five minutes after a day's Test cricket is usually the most tense of the day in the press box. Match reporters are flat out and the 'quotes men' have just arrived back from the press conference, tense and anxious to meet deadlines. It is the quietest time of the day, the most prevalent sound being the hurried, two-fingered bashing of laptop keyboards. Suddenly, a disembodied woman's voice was echoing loudly around the box. "...And don't forget you promised to drop the kids off at Grandma's, and we've got dinner at John and Noreen's tomorrow night, and..."

"How do I turn the volume down?" whispered an anxious Athers. "The whole press box can hear you...shhhh!" There is a time to Skype your wife, and there is a time not to Skype your wife.

The Joy of Six

Posted on 08/23/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

In the Guardian, Rob Smyth looks at six memorable one-day matches between England and South Africa beginning with the infamous 21 off one ball equation during the semi-final of the 1992 World Cup.

For such a cerebral game, cricket can be hideously dunderheaded, happy to toss commonsense into a sea of bureaucracy and another word that begins with 'bu'. The denouements to the 2005 Ashes and the 2007 World Cup spring to mind, but surely nothing will ever match the tragifarce of the 1992 semi-final. The shambolic rain rule was one thing, but the fact that the game could not continue when the players returned to the field, or on the following day, because the host broadcaster Channel Nine wouldn't have liked it is beyond comprehension.

August 20, 2008

New-look England can scoop ODI series

Posted on 08/20/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

England may have lost their last two one-day series, both against New Zealand, but I believe they have a serious opportunity to upset the higher-ranked South Africans in the next fortnight, writes Duncan Fletcher in the Guardian.

It will help Kevin Pietersen that one-day captaincy is nowhere near as complicated as the Test job. There is a decision to be made about when to take your Powerplays and there is the occasional question about which men to keep in the circle, but otherwise the job runs itself far more easily than in five-day cricket. I also think South Africa have got two huge holes to fill in their bowling attack. Shaun Pollock and Charl Langeveldt are no longer there, and they had this knack of landing the ball on a length in the one-day game.

Alex Parker doesn't share the same view in the Johannesburg-based Times.

Pietersen is likely to bring a little enthusiasm for the game and will no doubt put a rocket up those English players who can’t lift themselves for the series. I still don’t think it’ll be enough. South Africa, brimming with confidence and swagger, should take the series with ease. My only real concern is the form of Jacques Kallis.

August 13, 2008

Cricket's new best mates

Posted on 08/13/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

Ah, but isn't it just the cutest volte-face? Just a few years ago, the one who used to be decidedly slimmer was bellowing on about being unpatriotic, while the one with the skunk surgically attached to his head was gleefully labelling his new nemesis 'a complete muppet' in a hastily compiled biography, writes Dan Nicholl on iafrica.com.


Both men have good reason to be in high spirits. A series win in England has been an elusive grail for South Africa, and finally nailing it this time around is a hugely satisfying achievement for Smith — particularly given that the series was sealed by the skipper playing the best innings by a South African since Jacques Kallis in Melbourne in 1997. A firing top order, an exciting pace attack, and a team full of confidence — Smith has every reason to smile. Pietersen might not have won a series, but he did win his first Test in charge, with a first innings hundred for good measure.

August 12, 2008

England can learn from Makhaya Ntini

Posted on 08/12/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

Outside the Eastern Cape where his talent first emerged, Makhaya Ntini is not a name that comes immediately to mind when great fast bowlers are discussed. Yet this lithe and predatory athlete has demanded a place at the top table by the one yardstick with which no one can argue, writes Christopher Martin-Jenkins in the Times.

Ntini links the Donald and Pollock era with the new one of Morkel and Steyn. The first black cricketer to play Test cricket for South Africa when he appeared against Sri Lanka in Cape Town in 1998, he has also greatly helped to ease the transition towards a multiracial team picked these days purely on merit. A little like the prolific Courtney Walsh, he is no one's idea of a thoroughbred - more a workhouse of extraordinary stamina - but he has more victims than the more highly rated Allan Donald.

Pietersen's best man

Posted on 08/12/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





KP's best man? Andrew Strauss © Getty Images

While Kevin Pietersen sets his sights on the Ashes, Lawrence Booth in his blog for the Guardian acknowledges the role of Andrew Strauss as the England captain's best man.

With an eye on the top job himself, Strauss may have offered only equivocal support to Pietersen's nomination. But in a team at times accused of lacking independent thinkers his common-sense advice in the months ahead could be crucial as Pietersen attempts to grow into the job.

Mike Atherton in the Times believes it's time to sit down and reassess after the initial euphoria has passed. He quotes Oscar Wilde on second marriages, calling the Test “a triumph of optimism over experience" and presents few pointers for Peter Moores and the captain to take note.

A top order that only once passed 350 in the first innings, and twice was rolled over for fewer than 250; an all-rounder, Flintoff, who is yet to show that his batting form has returned; a wicketkeeper (Ambrose) who, on present form, would not get into the team of any other leading Test-playing nation and a spinner (Panesar) who, if not exactly regressing, is certainly not progressing as quickly as a cricketer who has played 33 Tests should.

The overriding impression left by this series is one of England batting capitulations on flat pitches consigning their bowlers to hard labour, writes Simon Hughes in the Telegraph.

Pietersen, for all his extravagant gifts, got out three times with the bowlers at his mercy, Collingwood was a walking wicket for half the series, Bell's tally was distorted by his cultured 199 at Lord's (his other six innings produced only 130 runs), Cook continually failed to build on excellent starts and Broad at present has a tail-ender's licence, though that may change.

England's last-ditch win, not without merit of course, is rather like the 18th-hole birdie that masks an otherwise indifferent round of golf, writes Mike Selvey in the Guardian.

August 11, 2008

Monty needs a mentor

Posted on 08/11/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

Monty Panesar's figures in this series bear comparison with any English bowler. His 13 wickets at 31.69 are commonplace but they are enough to maintain his career average, yet the Guardian's David Hopps feels Panesar is in need of a mentor.

England have lost a Test series against South Africa and Panesar is among those attracting most opprobrium, largely because of his failure to bowl England to victory in helpful conditions at Edgbaston, the Test that turned the series ... Panesar's development has slowed, with his lack of an arm ball particularly mystifying, while his batting and fielding have degenerated again, inviting the suspicion that his focus has wavered.

Christopher Martin-Jenkins writes in the Times that this improving South African side could beat Australia, when the two top Test teams play each other in three-Test series in Australia in December and January and then in South Africa early next year.

Their unyielding professionalism on this tour have opened up the possibility that they could be top dogs before long, whatever the computer might say. Like Australia they lack a top-class spinner - Harris is no more than a tidy one - but their batting goes deep and their fast bowling is strong.

Shaun Oakes, a blogger with the Johannesburg-based Mail & Guardian finds himself agreeing with CMJ.

Our top order, traditionally about as strong and dependable as a Baker’s Tennis Biscuit, is suddenly piling on the runs, our fielding is up to the standard last seen during the Jonty Rhodes era and we have arguably one of the strongest seam-bowling attacks in the world today.Watch out Australia, here we come? South African fans certainly have grounds to believe so.


Simon Hughes in the Telegraph applauds Abraham Benjamin (AB) de Villiers for his resilient 97 and the overall impact he has had on the Test series.

... the nickname AB has a powerful legacy. For most of the past two decades it was synonymous with the most prolific Test batsman of all time. Allan Border retired with 11,174 Test runs and a reputation as one of the grittiest sportsmen who ever lived. A batsman who forever valued substance over style, he never countenanced defeat from any position ...

August 10, 2008

South Africa's unsung heroes

Posted on 08/10/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Graeme Smith: "I know I'm not going to repeat what I did at Edgbaston every match but it would have been nice to end on a high" © Getty Images

South Africa have prevailed partly because the unsung men in their line-up have blossomed - McKenzie, Amla, Ashwell Prince and AB de Villiers, writes Vic Marks in the Observer .

Of their batsmen only Jacques Kallis has faltered - this could be his least productive series for 11 years, although he still has one innings left to change that. Once Dale Steyn has recovered from his thumb injury South Africa have a side that can seriously challenge Australia in Australia this winter, their only obvious weakness being the lack of a quality spin bowler.

Graeme Smith writes in the Sunday Telegraph that it was hard to pick himself up for the Oval Test after his epic hundred at Edgbaston.

Read Andrew Strauss' diary in the Sunday Telegraph. He talks about how he felt about Michael Vaughan's resignation, Kevin Pietersen's appointment, and a day at the Silverstone racing circuit.

Kevin Pietersen passes initial test for England

Posted on 08/10/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





It's early days yet but Kevin Pietersen's style of captaincy has received widespread approval © Getty Images

As England's new captain, Kevin Pietersen was too impatient to make up for the time lost, but overall it has been a superlative first attempt at Test captaincy, writes Scyld Berry in the Sunday Telegraph.

Pietersen has been decisive and unfussy (banning the huddle was a significant start). He has been himself, not striving for ostentation or effect (or at least no more than usual). He has been generous towards his men, enjoying their individual success, and paternal towards the youngest player most needing encouragement, Stuart Broad. He has inspired some players, notably Steve Harmison. He has been energy itself in the field since taking over, whereas white South Africans in general have not radiated total commitment while fielding for England.

Also the Observer, Jon Henderson charts Pietersen's progress before he made it big.

On his first assignment in England in 2000 he played for Cannock in the Birmingham League, did not come back and later revealed he had not much cared for the Staffordshire club; he then bolted from South Africa, having told the authorities there what he thought of their quota system; and he departed his first English county, Nottinghamshire, with the air heavy with acrimony. What we must now wait to find out is whether those departures were simply Pietersen hurrying towards the fulfilment he craved, the captaincy of a national side - or whether the door-banging will continue.

Simon Wilde also spoke to people associated with Pietersen during his formative cricket years in the Sunday Times.

If he did not know it before, Pietersen will be fully aware by now that England have receded since 2005. They are becoming as dependent on him as asickly child on its mother. In three of their last seven victories, he has scored hundreds. He may be about to make it four out of eight, writes Stephen Brenkley in the Independent on Sunday.

Also in the Independent on Sunday Stephen Fay is of the opinion that Pietersen’s problem is that England's future will not depend on him waking up in the morning with the intention of getting better. His colleagues will need to get better too.

In the Sunday Times, David Gower writes: A team that has already lost a series needs a dose of tender loving care, and that is what Pietersen delivered by the bucket, along with plenty of positive energy. He was in touch in a tactile fashion and mentally with every one of his players, and their response was excellent.


In the Independent on Sunday, Angus Fraser feels England’s bowlers appear to have responded positively to Pietersen as captain.

"He [Pietersen] also told us quite openly that because he had such limited experience, he was going to be relying on us for our help. It was impressive stuff, even to those of us who have been around the block. When he invited everyone there to have their say as well, it was clear he is going to be a captain who listens as well as he talks," writes Steve Harmison in the Mail on Sunday.

August 9, 2008

An inevitable KP century

Posted on 08/09/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Kevin Pietersen celebrated his first innings as Test captain by scoring a century © Getty Images


The England papers are hardly surprised that Kevin Pietersen made a century in his first innings after being appointed captain and are relieved that leadership doesn't seem to have affected his belligerent approach to batting. Lawrence Booth writes in the Guardian:


He scored three centuries in his first major one-day series against the South Africans in 2005. He made another one against Australia here three summers ago with the Ashes at stake. And he scored one more in his first Test against his former compatriots at Lord's last month. Death and taxes are less inevitable than his century was here.

The Telegraph's Martin Johnson is almost as impressed by Pietersen rendering the snarling Andre Nel speechless as he is by the new captain's hundred.

In the Independent, Stephen Brenkley wonders whether the intensity is lacking in the South African outfit as they have already clinched the series.

And Christopher Martin-Jenkins, in the Times, stresses the need for England to unearth a second match-winning batsman.

Jacques Kallis may be having a lean run with the bat but he has contributed with some important wickets. Simon Briggs writes in the Telegraph that Kallis has become the leading exponent of reverse-swing in either side.

"After a run of low scores, Andrew Strauss saved his skin with a meaty century in the second innings of the final Test in Napier, and Ian Bell, whose place was also then far from secure, did the same. It was Paul Collingwood's turn in the last Test to rescue his career with a doughty century. Sometime over the weekend Tim Ambrose will hope to imbibe from the same restorative fluid with which the others have found salvation," writes Simon Hughes in the Telegraph.

I am afraid that Ambrose simply does not have a presence at the crease and can only score runs from short balls. Anything pitched up is now dangerous because he simply won't get onto the front foot which means that he is particularly susceptible to being caught behind the wicket, writes Jonathan Agnew on BBC Sport.

August 8, 2008

Don't talk about a successor to Brearley just yet

Posted on 08/08/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Kevin Pietersen had a successful first day as England captain © Getty Images

Kevin Pietersen’s first day as Test captain went splendidly with England dismissing South Africa for 194. Here’s what the papers had to say about how he went about his duties at The Oval.

It’s not much of an accolade being promoted on the grounds that there’s no one else – a bit like a lance corporal in the First World War finding himself leading the regiment because everyone else is dead. It may work out, but Geoff Boycott’s granny could probably have captained England yesterday, writes Martin Johnson in the Telegraph.

Steve Harmison bowling at the stumps is not the kind of luxury Vaughan always had, and there was also the suspicion that South Africa are a little demob happy after wrapping up the series. Furthermore, their post-lunch collapse to Pietersen’s chosen selection of Harmison and Jimmy Anderson could scarcely have been put down to Brearleyesque genius, as Flintoff was off the field having a toe attended to at the time, and Stuart Broad (pictured) was being pinged all over the park. Where Pietersen deserves credit is for encouraging Broad …

Christopher Martin-Jenkins, in the Times, writes that Pietersen had a near-perfect day in charge.

[He was] aggressive with his field placings without going over the top, calm when the early wickets his fast bowlers deserved took time to come, pleasingly orthodox about where he placed his men after the over-elaborations beloved of his predecessor in his second phase, sensible about the bowling changes and imposing without being dictatorial in his general approach. Everyone knew that he was in charge, but there was nothing ostentatious. The star with the leading part seemed quite happy to let the other actors shine.

Welcome to KP's feel-good era, where empathy is king, moods must always be buoyant, where touchy-feely is of show business proportions and where lines of communication are always open. Pietersen is a compulsive texter and England's players received good luck messages the night before the game. If the technology had been available in his day, you cannot imagine Ray Illingworth doing that, writes David Hopps in the Guardian

Also in the Guardian, Vic Marks says "England's cricketers responded well to Kevin Pietersen's first day in charge, but we shouldn't jump to rash decisions."

Hippy, Hippy, Shake, you probably don't need reminding, was a one hit wonder for a group called The Swinging Blue Jeans. Please, Please Me was the first number one for another Merseyside band and we all know about them. Was the cricket we witnessed at the Oval a one-hit wonder or the start of something really quite significant?

When England came out it was noticeable there was no huddle. Nor had there been one in the privacy of the dressing room. But Pietersen does not need huddles to show his team that he cares," writes Stephen Brenkley in the Independent.

Continue reading "Don't talk about a successor to Brearley just yet"

'Steyntjie, these are my net gloves'

Posted on 08/08/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

Dale Steyn revealed that Graeme Smith wasn't his usual self both before and during his monumental, series-winning innings of 154 not out, writes Neil Manthorp on Supercricket.co.za.

"One thing you don't want to do with Graeme is forget the fresh chewing gum at the drinks break. Half way through the afternoon session I ran out with towels, drinks, anything I could think of. The first thing Graeme said to me was 'have you got chewing gum?' I had forgotten it. I couldn't believe it, I felt like dying. But Graeme just smiled and said 'ok, no problem. I'll get some later.' ... Later he called for fresh batting gloves so I sprinted out to make up for my earlier mistake. Graeme just smile at me again and said 'Steyntjie, these are my net gloves!' The man batted through that whole innings with one pair of gloves. Normally he has to change them every ten overs! He was incredible, an absolute inspiration to all of us," Steyn said.

August 7, 2008

KP takes centrestage

Posted on 08/07/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

On the eve of his first Test as captain, Kevin Pietersen get some advice from his former coach Duncan Fletcher, who writes in the Guardian that Pietersen should "be himself" and not change his style of batting because of the added responsibility of being the team's leader.


It's the greatest challenge for any captain: how do you remain the same batsman you were before? The danger, of course, is that the responsibility of the new job will make Pietersen exaggerate whatever approach he wants to take. If he wants to be positive, that can easily spill over into excessive aggression. If he wants to bat with caution, he must not retreat too far into his shell. Captaincy plays with your mind in funny ways - you think you're not making allowances, but then you find yourself batting out of character because of the pressure.

In the same paper, Mike Selvey analyses the England team composition ahead of the final Test.

The Independent's Stephen Brenkley writes that among recent England captains, Kevin Pietersen is most likely to resemble Nasser Hussain.

Meanwhile, over in the Telegraph, Rod Gilmour uses Hawk-Eye to dissect Paul Collingwood's career-saving century in the previous Test and finds that Collingwood's cause was helped by the liberal servings of short and wide deliveries from the South African bowling.

August 6, 2008

'I felt sad for him'

Posted on 08/06/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

Nasser Hussain catches up with the man who not only got rid of him (in 2003), but also Michael Vaughan. Speaking to the Daily Mail, Graeme Smith shares his views on Vaughan, and his reaction to Kevin Pietersen's elevation as captain.

He was always a very calm guy, always in control, difficult to break down. I used to think, 'when is he going to snap?' But in this series he was a lot more combative, had a lot of one-on-ones with people and that seemed unusual for him. It was something I hadn't seen before. He always used to make me feel that he was one step ahead of me but in this series he was different.

He also talks of his love-hate relationship with Pietersen.

Look, we don't really know each other that well. It started with the comments he made about South Africa and naturally, as national captain, I would walk into a press conference and his comments would be thrown at me.

Matthew Hoggard pays his tribute to Vaughan and says he wasn't among those people who were shocked by the resignation. In his column, in Times he says Vaughan's 'greatest asset was having the ability to say the right thing at the right time'.


He told me that my role in the side was to stay on the shop floor doing the grafting while the others - Steve Harmison, Simon Jones and Andrew Flintoff - were upstairs in the office taking the wickets. That clarified my role and made me feel content that I was doing a useful job without bowling at 90mph and knocking people's heads off

August 3, 2008

Sublime Smith saves best for England

Posted on 08/03/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

In the Observer, Vic Marks salutes Graeme Smith after his majestic, series-clinching century at Edgbaston.

Smith had neutered the England attack with his massive resolve and composure. By the end he was toying with an undermanned and exhausted England attack to take South Africa another step towards their long-term goal. They had not won a series in England since their return to the international scene. Next stop Australia. And Smith will not be intimidated there either.

In the Sunday Telegraph, Steve James says the defeat merely exposed England's failings, something a weak New Zealand side had been unable to do earlier in the summer.

In the Observer, Mike Brearley salutes Paul Collingwood for putting England in a position of strength, despite the loss.

Collingwood had clearly decided that he wasn't going to die like a rat in a hole, he would fight his way out.

Stephen Brenkley writes in the Independent on Sunday that following the series loss, "There will have to be some blood on the selectors' carpet this morning (when the England team for the final Test is selected) otherwise the knives will be out for them."

Jacques Kallis was apoplectic after being dismissed when he failed right to to sight a full ball coming out of a dark area of seating above the sightscreen at the Pavilion End of the ground. Angus Fraser, writing in the Independent on Sunday, says Kallis was well within his rights to complain to the umpire and that the sightscreen problem should have been fixed.

Also read John Stern's take on the issue in the Sunday Times.

Whatever the merits of Arthur’s complaints about the sightscreen it was apparent that Kallis had allowed his concerns about it to play fatally on his mind. For a man of his vast experience who is usually so unflappable, it was an uncharacteristic lack of professionalism.

The South Africans had in fact, sent 12th man Robin Peterson, up to the Warwickshire committee room balcony with a white towel to counter the ‘blind spot’, writes Neil Manthorp in SuperSport


"He was verbally abused immediately and told to go away," confirmed team manager Dr Mohammed Moosajee. "They called him an effing cheat."

August 2, 2008

Vaughan feels the pressure

Posted on 08/02/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





It hasn't been the most fruitful of summers for Michael Vaughan © Getty Images

After Michael Vaughan’s poor run with the bat continued, Richard Hobson writes in the Times that Vaughan’s place is under scrutiny for the first time since he took over as captain.


The selectors have to judge whether Vaughan is merely suffering a blip in form or whether he is an ageing player whose best days are behind him, with a knee that is increasingly restrictive. A new man needs time to rebuild a side in his own image. Tours to the sub-continent are a good place for squads to bond and it just happens that England’s next Test trip takes them to India.

After the ebbs and flows of the first three days, Geoff Boycott says in the Telegraph that the match has been a fantastic advert for Tests and that Twenty20 can’t possibly be more thrilling than this.

In the Guardian, Lawrence Booth writes on Mark Boucher’s burning desire to win and lauds the wicketkeeper’s shepherding of the tail.

Courageous Collingwood fights on

Posted on 08/02/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

With a timely century on the third day, Paul Collingwood revived his flagging Test career as well as England’s fortunes in the Test. The crowds, who had booed him earlier in the game, reserved the day’s biggest cheer for his hundred. The Guardian’s Vic Marks leads the praise for Collingwood.

This would be X-rated stuff. Recently, observing Collingwood at the crease has been akin to watching a horror movie, a B movie at that. Look on from behind the sofa if you dare. He pulled Makhaya Ntini for four. Somehow he had mustered 20. We dared to open our eyes. The leading edge pierced the cover field. Then he began playing as if his awful form had been a fleeting nightmare.

In the same paper, Paul Weaver writes that Collingwood looked as stiff as the Tin Man in the Wizard of Oz but slowly, as the runs came, he visibly grew in confidence.

Martin Johnson writes in Telegraph that while Collingwood's knock wouldn't earn too many points for style, it was an innings that was all about character.

August 1, 2008

The danger of flogging Andrew Flintoff to death

Posted on 08/01/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Andrew Flintoff was an irresistable force on the second day at Edgbaston © Getty Images

"For much of the second day South Africa were blocking their way to victory with, appropriately enough for a side sponsored by a brewery, a laager mentality," writes Martin Johnson in the Telegraph. "But they now know they will only win this series over Andrew Flintoff’s dead body, which may well be the case if England continue to saddle him with the workload of a Skegness donkey."

England have tried many variations in an attempt to unsettle the visitors this summer – including selecting bowlers who no one has heard of — but yesterday their beleaguered captain was reduced to the two most familiar ploys of recent times. Plan A: throw the ball to Flintoff. Plan B: give him half an hour off, then throw him the ball again.

"It takes great players, or men at the top of their form, to turn Test series around. The last time England played South Africa they had a full set of trumps: Marcus Trescothick, Matthew Hoggard and Steve Harmison among them. But right now, Flintoff is carrying this whole team on his back. No wonder he was so anxious to make his fiery spell count," writes Simon Briggs, also in the Telegraph.

"The plan to bowl yorkers at Kallis was hatched during a tea-time chat with England's bowling coach, Ottis Gibson, and Michael Vaughan, and Flintoff admitted he was aided by the dark windows in the pavilion that caused both Kallis and Mark Boucher to lose sight of the ball. But that did not detract from the sustained brilliance of his 10-ball mini-spell to South Africa's very own Table Mountain," writes Lawrence Booth in the Guardian.

Continue reading "The danger of flogging Andrew Flintoff to death"

July 31, 2008

Beware of Gunther

Posted on 07/31/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

In the Guardian, Paul Weaver writes that Andre Nel's, huffing, puffing chuntering and unathletic energy typified South Africa yesterday.

His bowling action should be reproduced in coaching manuals which should then be ceremonially burned at cricket academies throughout the planet. In his delivery stride he impersonates an exploding man. Legs, arms, head and shoulders fly in different directions. It is, one might say, a mixed action. This is a pantomime villain of a fast bowler. Remember Ole Mortensen, the Danish tax inspector?

Andrew Flintoff's batting was the only bright spot in an otherwise abject display by England, writes Simon Hughes in the Telegraph.

At a ground where the packed stands have roared England on to some famous victories, it tells you that Wednesday starts are unpopular with punters' traditional viewing routines, that five Twenty20 matches in quick succession at this venue may have dulled people's appetites for cricket, and that, as the credit crunch bites, ticket prices of £55 are exorbitant.

July 30, 2008

Selection under the scanner

Posted on 07/30/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Michael Vaughan will be aiming for a change of luck at Edgbaston, both for the team and his batting © Getty Images

Derek Pringle in the Daily Telegraph can't fathom England's selection for the third Test, leaving out Stuart Broad and bringing in Paul Collingwood, who has scored 92 runs at 13 in first-class games this season. Pringle writes:

With that kind of form it looks a cosy selection steeped in the nepotism of central contracts, especially when Ravi Bopara is in superlative touch and reeling off hundreds for Essex. But rather than figures, Michael Vaughan appears determined to place his faith in a familiar face, though not Steve Harmison’s, following the disruption to team morale caused by Collingwood’s omission at Headingley.

In the Guardian, Duncan Fletcher sees a bit of sense in Collingwood's return, but is puzzled that Stuart Broad is tired.

He's a young cricketer and he's had a decent break: eight days off should be enough. The problem comes when the guy who plays instead of him does well enough not to be left out the next time. Then the selectors need courage to bring Broad back again.

In the same paper, Paul Weaver says it's the wrong time for Michael Vaughan to pick a fight with the selectors at a time when his own performance is on the wane.

Read Michael Atherton's thoughts on England's selection in the Times.

Andre Nel is likely to be the only new face in South Africa's XI for Edgbaston. Jon Culley profiled the player in the Independent.

July 26, 2008

Rest Broad, pick Harmison

Posted on 07/26/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

While picking the side for the third Test, the Guardian's Mike Selvey thinks the selectors should include Steve Harmison and rest Stuart Broad, who has impressed more with the bat than with the ball in the Tests against South Africa.


Steve Harmison has done all that has been asked of him since he was omitted from the England side at Wellington back in March. He is bowling fast, into the ribs and is the country's leading wicket-taker. He should be brought back.

In the same paper, journalist Barney Ronay lists the attributes he shares with Darren Pattinson and wonders whether a national call-up is around the corner while David Mitchell has an interesting explanation for Pattinson's inclusion.

Meanwhile, over in the Times, Michael Atherton demands more accountability in the selection of the England squad. He also looks at the issue facing the selectors ahead of the third Test.

And the Independent's James Lawton thinks there has been a lack of professionalism in the England set-up since the 2005 Ashes and wants more responsibilty to lie with the team manager.

July 24, 2008

The Pattinson debate

Posted on 07/24/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

In his column for the Telegraph, Alastair Cook feels people have rather conveniently made a scapegoat of Darren Pattinson after the Headingley defeat, forgetting that England were actually outplayed in all departments.


It must have been difficult for 'Patto' to come into the team when he didn't know anybody. And yes, there was a disruptive effect on Friday morning when the changes were made. It always takes that little bit longer to get into the game when you have a turnover of personnel. Even Andrew Flintoff probably had to get used to being back after all the time he has missed.

Staying with Pattinson, Michael Atherton in the Times says no such selection has provoked more comment, most of it adverse.


Jonathan Agnew, the BBC's Cricket Correspondent, was incandescent. Trying to gather some last-minute information on the internet about Pattinson, he was redirected to the Cricket Australia website. Then, interviewing Pattinson shortly after he received his cap, Agnew was taken aback when, in response to a question that asked of Pattinson whether this was a moment he had dreamt of all his life, he simply said, with disarming honesty: “No.”

He also feels the idea that an English upbringing makes for greater commitment in the middle has never struck him as having one grain of truth in it.

With his strong, repeatable action he did not look out of place and if he was trying any less hard than the others, it was not apparent to me. But for most this was irrelevant. Because he had not spent his formative years drinking warm beer in a village pub, somehow he was not as worthy.

July 23, 2008

England need to swallow their egos

Posted on 07/23/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Geoffrey Boycott is of the opinion that England need to temper their attacking approach by batting according to the situation © Getty Images

“Just go out and play your natural game,” he [Michael Vaughan] likes to say. “Express yourself.” But Test cricket is not that simple. It is time England swallowed their egos and started playing the situation, writes Geoffrey Boycott in the Daily Telegraph.

Vaughan has to accept responsibility for the shambles at Headingley. Captaincy takes many forms: it includes setting the right fields, dealing with personalities, and leading from the front with bat or ball. But just as important is the guidance a captain gives his players in the dressing room, explaining how he expects them to play. Vaughan has to tell his batsmen to abandon this one-size-fits-all approach, and show a bit more brains.

Boycott also sees "a touch of Gary Sobers in [Stuart] Broad" and says it was wrong to play Darren Pattinson.

Also in the Daily Telegraph, Derek Pringle lists five ways England can turn the tables on South Africa at Edgbaston.

Find the right role for Flintoff: He has returned to a hero's welcome, but without a hero's role to play. In fact, Flintoff's function in the team appears confused. Is he seen as an all-rounder who can take the odd wicket and be depended on to make runs when needed, or as a strike bowler who can slog the odd fifty?

"I have to say I found the selection of Darren Pattinson very strange," writes Duncan Fletcher in the Guardian. "That is no disrespect to him, and he didn't actually bowl all that badly at Headingley, but as a captain it is vital you go out there with a team you feel comfortable with. It was surprising enough when he was brought into the squad after only 11 first-class games but even more incredible when they actually gave him a Test debut."

Also in the Guardian, Mike Selvey writes: "I'm not sure whether to feel sorrier for Darren Pattinson or Michael Vaughan. On the one hand we have a man - not a "lad" or a "promising youngster" - plucked bemused from obscurity with every chance of returning there, and on the other, the captain of England with an opening bowler on whom he had never clapped eyes until Pattinson rolled up at Headingley on Thursday."

Nasser Hussain, writing in The Daily Mail believes there has been too much passing the buck over the selection of Pattinson for the second Test.

The bottom line is that the selectors chose to bring Darren Pattinson into the squad but it was Michael Vaughan, as captain, and coach Peter Moores who decided he should be included in the side.

The whole point of having Miller as a full-time national selector is to be answerable for all selections so, instead of talking about the issue on Monday night, Vaughan should have referred all questions to the man with overall responsibility.

Should England replace Ambrose behind the stumps? Micky Stewart, a former England team manager, says yes while Richard Blakey, the former England and Yorkshire wicketkeeper, disagrees. Click here to read their debate.

July 22, 2008

Attack or grind?

Posted on 07/22/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Dale Steyn removes Tim Ambrose at Headingley © Getty Images

It was a day of conflicting approaches to England's intractable problem - a deficit of 269. There was the Ian Botham Headingley '81 approach - attack, and attack some more; and the wearisome but also proven grind-them-into-the-ground method. Neither Kevin Pietersen's flamboyance nor Andrew Flintoff's patience had worked, writes Tanya Aldred in the Guardian.

Kevin Pietersen stood on the balcony in the morning session watching Jimmy Anderson and Alastair Cook. He twisted and turned his tall primed body for everyone to see. This was a warrior and you could smell his anticipation . . . and the crowd's . . . and the South Africans'.

In the Telegraph, Simon Hughes feels there is frequently a one-day impetuousness about England's batting in Test cricket.

England showed only flashes of such precise judgment. They couldn’t sustain it. The South Africans plugged away outside off stump knowing that 'leave’ is something that only applies to some English batsmen when their wife’s having a baby. They are drawn to widish balls like moths to the light.

In the same paper, Derek Pringle feels England should make note of the fact that South Africa have not gone on to win their last three Test series in the country despite taking the lead. He says England need to recharge quickly and reclaim the energy with which they rocked South Africa early into the Lord's Test.

Back-to-back Tests may be commercially seductive but they often punish the team making the running in the first instalment, in this case England, whose players were mentally jaded after three successive days in the field at Lord’s.

In the Independent, Chris McGrath praises James Anderson's gutsy display as a nightwatchman, something the rest failed to mirror.

What makes diamonds unique is not their lustre but their hardness, and there is no mistaking which of these sides is best equipped to resist abrasion. For this success was hewn from a stratum that often seems to lie far beyond the reach of an Englishman with a bat in his hand. In fairness, the bravest performance yesterday came from one such in James Anderson – and the frothiest, come to that, from a son of Natal in Kevin Pietersen.

July 20, 2008

Lancashire club keep tabs on Prince

Posted on 07/20/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

Morecambe were locked in a top-of-the-table clash with Barrow yesterday afternoon, but at least half an eye was kept on the progress of one of their own at Headingley, says Andrew Longmore in the Sunday Times. The reason:

For two seasons as a young man, Ashwell Prince was the professional at the Northern League club and it is a tribute to the allure of club cricket that he still keeps in touch nearly seven years after he forsook the northwest for wider horizons.

In the heat of battle

Posted on 07/20/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





David Gower thinks that was taken cleanly © Getty Images

It is amazing there are not more off-field confrontations similar to that between the England captain, Michael Vaughan, and South Africa's AB de Villiers, Angus Fraser says in the Independent on Sunday, given the close proximity of the opposing dressing rooms at most venues. Fraser recollects one such rare flare-up.

There was an ugly incident in a one-day international I played in Barbados when Gladstone Small, one of the nicest men to play cricket for England, pointed to the dressing room when he dismissed Gordon Greenidge, the rather angry West Indian batsman. At the Kensington Oval the dressing rooms are divided by a narrow walkway, and at the end of the match an England player stuck his head in our room to inform us that an irate Greenidge had Small by the throat
.

Both Vaughan and de Villiers were at the centre of controversial catches, both of which were given not-out after being referred to the third umpire. In the Sunday Times, David Gower says he thought Vaughan's catch off Hashim Amla was clean, and feels perhaps the player's word should be taken.

My view was that Vaughan had caught it. Sky tried before play yesterday to demonstrate how the ball can look to be on the ground to the long lens when in fact it is safely in a fielder’s hands. The method of Vaughan’s catch, with a dive involved, left it open to suspicion that the ball might have just touched the grass. In our commentary box there was little agreement. I can sympathise with the third umpire and understand there was enough doubt for him to deny the catch.
So here is the key question: should we return to the days when players were trusted to say if a catch was good or should we be heading for greater use of TV pictures to help in the decision making? The answer has to be a bit of both, including selective use of the latter, which could be extended from its current scope to include a second look to check on whether a batsman has hit the ball for a catch or inside-edged it when the arms are up for an lbw appeal.

The dodgiest of all decisions

Posted on 07/20/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Darren Pattinson: The most numb-skulled of choices? © Getty Images

In a week full of decisions, the most numb-skulled of all was England's decision to select, from nowhere, the uncapped Darren Pattinson, says Steve James in the Sunday Telegraph.

Pattinson's inclusion proffers a depressing statement, the antithesis of the England and Wales Cricket Board's desired message. For they are desperate for their counties to rely more on talent reared in their own academies than ready-made hired hands from abroad. And now this from the national team. It is a dreadful example for the head boy to be setting. And Pattinson doesn't even look that ready-made.

Pattinson's was an extraordinary selection, writes Vic Marks in the Observer.

Our selectors have been boring us to tears for six matches. Same team, same team. Meanwhile, the hacks have been pining for change - just to have something to write about. Geoff Miller has smiled enigmatically when announcing yet another unchanged side; his function is not to make life easier for journalists. Miller, we had decided, was meticulous, logical and conservative in his selections: a policy that would breed trust among his players, boredom among the scribes.
Then, out of the blue, Miller - dear, dour old Dusty - has pretensions to be another Uri Geller: to pluck from his flat, Derbyshire cap some gobsmacking magic in the form of the former roof tiler. A fresh face, albeit a fresh old face.

The selectors have failed their first big test. That's Stephen Brenkley's verdict in the Independent on Sunday.

Read John Stern's take in the Sunday Times. He says:

Seven years ago on this ground, a man whom nobody recognised walked out to bat for England in an Ashes Test. It turned out to be the serial hoaxer Karl Power, whose other stunts included having his picture taken with the Manchester United team on the pitch in Germany against Bayern Munich and playing on Centre Court at Wimbledon.
In a way, history repeated itself on Friday, in that there was a man bowling for England whom almost nobody recognised. It quickly became apparent that the only remarkable thing about Darren Pattinson is his selection.

Pattinson did not appear to have the resources to deal with the leap into Test cricket, Mike Brearley says in his blog on the Guardian website.

July 19, 2008

Forgotten brands alive in cricket

Posted on 07/19/2008 in Miscellaneous





Jacques Kallis, in the more traditional vanilla by Hummel, cleans up an Ian Bell sporting the bright Mr Whippy white by Adidas © Getty Images

While England trot out at Headingley togged out in bright Mr Whippy white by Adidas, South Africa are in more traditional vanilla by Hummel, which is the subject of Rob Bagchi's article in the Guardian.

The latter, particularly, seems a strange marriage - the chevron merchants first gaining prominence with Alan Ball's white boots in the early 1970s and Denmark's "we are red, we are white, we are Danish dynamite" Euro 84 strip worn by Preben Elkjaer and Soren Lerby.

...

They are not the first half-forgotten brand to latch on to cricket in a bid for renewed prominence. Admiral, manufacturers of iconic kits for England and Leeds United in the 1970s thanks to their close ties to Don Revie as well as that infamous "chocolate" Coventry City away strip, recently finished an eight-year contract with England that put them back on the radar after two relatively moribund decades.
If cricket works wonders for retro brand chic, this trend will surely continue. Give it five years and Bangladesh will be decked out by Patrick, Sri Lanka by Bukta and New Zealand by Stylo Matchmaker. Old labels never die, they just change sports.

Umpiring cock-eyed

Posted on 07/19/2008 in Technology

Billy Bowden and Daryl Harper had a moderate day, but their reputations could have been saved by use of television replays and a greater trust of the player's word, writes Simon Hughes in the Telegraph.

Unfortunately, the ICC, who rule on how technology should be used, display a total lack of comprehension of its benefits. Television can quickly evaluate whether a ball has brushed a pad or a glove, but cameras used to adjudicate whether a catch has been grassed present a flat image and usually cloud the issue. Yet the umpires are allowed to refer the latter and not the former. They are effectively umpiring cock-eyed.

Pattinson in the limelight

Posted on 07/19/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Ryan Sidebottom's injury has surely put the focus on his surprise replacement Darren Pattinson © Getty Images

Darren Pattinson's surprise selection in England's XI for the Headingley Test against South Africa has not just bemused Englishmen, but also a few Australians. Pattinson, two weeks away from his 30th birthday, had spent the last 24 years of his life in Australia, is a roof tiler by trade and has played 11 first-class matches. (Read more in the piece by Cricinfo's Andrew McGlashan.)

Damien Fleming tells Chloe Saltau in the Age:

"It's unbelievable. I don't reckon he'll be doing any roof-tiling for a while."

Jonathan Agnew is surely not impressed. He writes in the Test Match Special blog:

What message does this send to English county cricketers who dream of playing for England - and, specifically in this case, to Chris Tremlett, who was actually called into the squad before Pattinson?

Graham Gooch terms it one of the most leftfield decisions he's seen.

Vic Marks has an interesting take on Pattinson's selection in his blog on the Guardian website.

Headingley can do odd things to selectors. It was here, for example, that David Graveney had a brainwave. He opted for Mike Smith, the little Gloucestershire swinger, rather than Andy Caddick against Australia. A catch went down; the ball refused to swing, England were thrashed and Smith never resurfaced again. Moreover Graveney's confidence and standing as a selector was dented.
As for Pattinson, it's too early to tell. CMJ had a Machiavellian theory: that Miller had picked him as a prelude to next year's Ashes encounter. Until yesterday it might have been possible for Pattinson to play for either country. Now he is English, despite what his father has said - "Darren, he's Australian"- when he was called into Champions Trophy 30. Having been selected Pattinson is committed to England; the Aussies can't have him. So when he takes seven against the Aussies at Headingley next year I shall be leading the calls for Miller's knighthood. Until then I remain confused.

Just the thought of Headingley makes fools of wise men, writes David Hopps in the Guardian.

Remember Martin Bicknell. Well, he too made his debut at Headingley like Pattinson. England selectors have often made interesting picks to exploit the conditions in Leeds, Cricinfo looks at how they fared.

Things like this are not supposed to happen any more. Not in this regimented era of central contracts, national academies, selectorial continuity and all the other trappings of Team England, says Alan Lee in the Times.

Chris McGrath writes in the Independent:

If we learned one thing here yesterday, it is that obscurity and celebrity are just different shades on the same spectrum. All it takes to bring them together is unreasonable expectation. We may think we know an awful lot more about Andrew Flintoff than Darren Pattinson, whose names stood out like neon when the team sheet was handed out on a dank, melancholy morning in Leeds. But just as the superhero exists in only two dimensions, the judgements that brought Pattinson here can hardly be deemed any less trite.

July 18, 2008

Flintoff's new weapon

Posted on 07/18/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





The one that comes in © Getty Images
Andrew Flintoff returns to the England Test side after more than a year. Alastair Cook, the team's opening batsman, reveals the new delivery that Flintoff has worked on during his time out. He writes in the Telegraph:
When I faced Freddie on Wednesday, I was expecting him to push the ball across me, as he has always done in the past. So I was leaving one that started out wide - and suddenly it came booming back in and hit me on the knee. I was about three hours late on the shot, and was left hopping about in pain.

Allan Donald has called for the inclusion of Andre Nel in place of the left-arm spinner Paul Harris in the South African team for the second Test. Click here to read his article in the same paper.

In the Guardian Mike Selvey wonders whether Flintoff's return will disturb the ecology of a side that has been put together for a record six successive matches.

In the same paper, John Ashdown chats with Ian Bell about pedalos, pork pies and pints of Carling.

The New Zealand Herald looks back at the good and bad sports news of the week.

A good week for ...

Cricketing acronyms

Stunning news from the ECB this week, which is to launch the EPL T20 in a bid to rival the ICL and IPL. An ECB release said the tournament would replace Pro40. It will involve all 18 counties and two sides from overseas, probably the winners of IPL plus a side assembled by Texan billionaire Allen Stanford (RBs or Rich Bastards). No word yet on the fate of the ICL rebels, but when we hear we'll let you know ASAP.

July 16, 2008

Handle Freddie with care

Posted on 07/16/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

Andrew Flintoff's return to Test cricket from injury should be handled with care and importantly, shouldn't be used as a strike bowler straightaway, writes Derek Pringle in the Telegraph.

Becoming a strike bowler is not something a player can just wake up one morning and decide to do. It requires a nose for wickets, a sharp mind with an even sharper bouncer, and a swagger that falls, usually, to those who take the new ball. Flintoff possesses most of these attributes except taking the new ball, which, apart from the odd desperate foray in the last Ashes series, he has tended to leave to others.

In the same paper, Geoff Boycott feels England may have missed the trick by not selecting Steve Harmison for Headingley.

I would have added Steve Harmison to the squad. I have been critical of his attitude and his bowling in the past but he has gone back to county cricket, is bowling better and getting wickets. It was obvious during the first Test that on a flat pitch England lacked pace. After three days of bowling, our three fast-medium guys are knackered. If England bowl first at Headingley, they could be bowling five days out of eight. That is a tall order, let me tell you.

July 15, 2008

A farce on a bland pitch

Posted on 07/15/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Why was the light offered when the batsmen weren't really in any danger? © Getty Images
The first Test between England and South Africa was the sixth successive draw at Lord's but Patrick Kidd wants to know why the umpires offered the light at 4.35pm given that the batsmen weren't really in any danger and that England had given up trying to get them out. He writes in the Times:
OK, the game was going nowhere, but surely the only reason you forfeit the final hour is if neither side can win. By declaring 47 runs ahead, hadn't Smith given England a chance of winning? Scoring 47 shouldn't be beyond England in an hour. Of course, Smith's declaration was only made because England had promised not to chase it, but it leaves a nasty taste in the mouth.

Kidd and other Times cricket correspondents pick their World XI based on the players they have seen.

In the Telegraph Simon Hughes in unimpressed by the bland pitch, which according to him was was like a cover girl's face after it had been airbrushed: pale, smooth and blemishless: beauty in the eye of the batsman.

The culture needs to change. Batsmen don't want bland pitches any more than bowlers. More risks must be taken. At the moment grass, which can add life, meets the same fate as body hair on Olympic athletes, and is unceremoniously shaved off. Steve Rouse, at Edgbaston, has the right idea and is more expermimental. He relishes a low scoring match. Maybe we need more ex-bowlers as groundsmen.

On iafrica.com, Rob Peters and Ebrahim Moola debate whether Kevin Pietersen is a loss to South African cricket.


Moola: KP could easily be in Hollywood or the House of Lords, such is the man's charisma. He represents the evolution of the game from a twee, limp-wristed game of rounders to a high-octane slugfest suited perfectly to an audience with a concentration span about the length of Glenn McGrath's batting average.

Peters: If cricket was not a team game I might have conceded that Pietersen was a loss to South Africa. If for example, he was a loud-mouthed and far less humble version of Roger Federer, I would admit that I would find it hard to see him turning out in English colours at Wimbledon. But Pietersen is nothing like Federer, not in ability and certainly not in the way of humbleness.


July 14, 2008

Panesar's lawn at Lord's

Posted on 07/14/2008 in English cricket





Monty Panesar hogs the attention at Lord's © Getty Images

Wimbledon has its Henman Hill and yesterday afternoon Lord's had its equivalent: Panesar Lawn, reports Richard Hobson in the Times. The MCC have installed a big screen on the Nursery Ground - the stretch of grass behind the Compton and Edrich Stands - and on a good-day for lazing around, one man stole the attention.

Panesar continues to grab the popular imagination but, as the game moved well beyond its halfway stage towards the climax of today, he started to resemble Henman on semi-finals day. He tried, tried again and then tried harder, but for all the optimistic whoops, balls narrowly missed the edge or fell short of fielders.
A delay between the real-time action and transmission on the screen created a double echo whenever Panesar bellowed one of his famous appeals. First would come Panesar's roar, then a chorus from the 25,000 or so watching live and another cheer from those following the big screen.

A not-so-dour partnership

Posted on 07/14/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Smith and McKenzie: Positively frisky © Getty Images
Graeme Smith and Neil McKenzie added a record 204 together as South Africa looked to save the Lord's Test on the fourth day and while the crowd shouted about the slowness of the first two sessions, Guardian's David Hopps believes this was positively frisky when compared to other dour innings in the history of Test cricket.
Call this dour? It was positively frisky compared with the habits of Jackie McGlew, who once entrenched himself for more than nine hours to reach a century against Australia in Durban in 1957-58. McGlew was one of Test cricket's great stonewallers. He was first pictured waving a cricket bat at four years old and it may well be that he never waved it so fearlessly again. South Africa dubbed him "the little general", with memories of Napoleon, and praised his orthodoxy but there were others who would have happily exiled him to Elba.

Cricinfo's Sambit Bal feels in the context of this match, and the series, it was a compelling day: slow, but always simmering; lacking in action, but not plot and intrigue.

In the Telegraph, Simon Hughes writes that McKenzie on the crease yesterday was entirely different from the eccentric guy batting in South Africa's middle order on their last tour to England.

It is hard to imagine someone suffering from Obsessive Compulsive Disorder ever being in an ideal frame of mind to play a major Test match innings. Such behaviour is a serious energy drain. Judging from his demeanour at the wicket yesterday he has purged himself of these affectations. He remained calm and unflustered during a crucial morning session when he would have known that early wickets spelt the end for South Africa. He has an idiosyncratic way of leaving the ball, withdrawing the bat inside the line at the last second, a method referred to as the 'curtain rail' because the movement is similar to drawing the curtains.

A thrilling final day at Lord's may be on the cards but the England papers can't stop speculating on who will make way for Andrew Flintoff in the second Test. Lawrence Booth writes in the Guardian that bringing in Matt Prior at No 6 could be an option though he adds recent research reveals Prior has so far cost England more runs in byes and missed chances than he has actually scored with the bat.

July 13, 2008

Contrasting captaincy of Smith and Vaughan

Posted on 07/13/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Graeme Smith wasn't proactive enough © Getty Images
Graeme Smith and Michael Vaughan are contrasts as captains in this Lord's Test, writes Vic Marks in the Observer. While Smith seems to have an air of resignation around him, Vaughan's grey cells seem to be in overdrive.
Smith had nowhere to turn, no variety to offer. Jacques Kallis? He often looks a reluctant bowler and it is counter-productive to bowl him into the ground when his runs are so vital. Paul Harris? So far, he gives the impression of a journeyman left-armer who makes Ashley Giles look like Hedley Verity. Even so, it was odd that Smith was not more proactive. Kevin Pietersen dominated all too easily and the South Africans took their punishment all too passively.

Contrast all of this with Vaughan. Any criticism of him in recent times has been triggered by the notion that his captaincy has become too quirky, too restless - but, with so many runs on the board, he was allowed his quirkiness yesterday. So we saw Paul Collingwood bowling to Ashwell Prince with seven on the off side and three fielders at point who could almost hold hands with one another. James Anderson bowled to AB de Villiers with three fieldsmen loitering randomly on the leg side in no man's land.

Marks also highlights the similarities between Pietersen and Basil D'Oliveira.

For all the grandeur of his stroke play Pietersen, like D'Oliveira, spends plenty of time in reconnaissance. Both players have been reviled in the country of their birth when successful for England albeit, in D'Oliveira's case, by the potent minority. And there is the small matter of the 158s against Australia at The Oval.


In the Sunday Times John Stern writes that ever since Troy Cooley, England’s Ashes-winning bowling coach, returned to Australia two years ago, England have been trying to rediscover the art of taking wickets with the “old” ball.

In the same paper, David Gower tries to work out who will make way for Andrew Flintoff, if he is picked for the next Test. While Gower feels Tim Ambrose should be dropped for Flintoff, Angus Fraser, in the Independent believes it's Paul Collingwood who should be left out.

Continue reading "Contrasting captaincy of Smith and Vaughan"

July 12, 2008

England's nearly man shines

Posted on 07/12/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





After Pietersen departed, Bell was the one in charge of the hammer © Getty Images
Ian Bell came in to the first Test at Lord's under pressure with Andrew Flintoff fit for action against for the next match, writes Derek Pringle in the Telegraph. There have been criticisms that Bell makes hundreds in undemanding situations and that he is too introverted, playing the theory of the game rather than the game itself. His 199 on Friday laid to rest some of these doubts.
To get the ball in the gap behind square leg, Pietersen had to rotate his wrists as if turning a car steering wheel sharp left at the lights. Bell may lack that kind of elasticity in limb but not in mind, and his late cut for four off Ntini, through an empty slip cordon, was like a deadly kiss, delicate but lethal in its effect on South Africa's morale. Before that his finest shot had been a lofted six off his eventual nemesis, Harris, but this came with that delicious cruelty closer to sadism than sport.

In the Guardian, Neil Manthorp catches up with Gulam Bodi, the man KwaZulu Natal picked ahead of Pietersen ten years ago, a selection which turned KP's career for the better.

"We had a couple of issues but we resolved everything afterwards. There's no problem now. Just a couple of misunderstandings."

In the Times Mike Atherton feels Bell's transformation from youth to manhood has been almost overnight.

The Guardian 's David Hopps writes that in Test cricket terms, when Bell finally opened his own bank account.

Allan Donald, the former South African bowler, has seen him progress at Warwickshire and his loyalties seemed with the batsman when he predicted before the Test: "It's only a matter of time before Ian Bell absolutely nails it." Well, he has nailed it, with utter certainty. And, after Pietersen departed, Bell was the one in charge of the hammer.


July 11, 2008

Day of mixed emotions and a skip to the loo

Posted on 07/11/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

Billy Bowden, the umpire, shares his experience of officiating on the first day of the first Test between England and South Africa. Read his thoughts in the Times.

I thought the fact that my mother was not at Lord's to watch me - she died three weeks ago - would hit me hard when I took the field yesterday .. The one intervention that I needed to make came when I picked up Pietersen's necklace when he was hit on the helmet.

Telegraph's Martin Johnson writes that the Lord's Test was a welcome dose of Twenty20 antidote.

There were 41 dot balls in the first six overs of this game, but it didn't mean it was any less intriguing than the instant biff-bang-wallop of Twenty20. Did those spectators who turned up to see whether the self-proclaimed South African mean machine would live up to their arrogant pre-match propaganda feel disappointed when it turned out their fast bowlers couldn't hit a cow's arse with a banjo?

Writing in the Times Mike Atherton believes Kevin Pietersen has passed the test of character.

Rather than verbals, this time South Africa gave Pietersen the silent treatment, the cold shoulder. So much so that he was reduced to striking up a conversation with Billy Bowden, the umpire, within his first few minutes at the crease. Not that the silence equated to a softly-softly approach. South Africa's plan for Pietersen clearly involved a liberal sprinkling of bouncers and, er, a few more bouncers ... But after that there was precious little evidence of the planning that Smith had spoken about before the match. Mid-wicket, for example, Pietersen's favourite area, was constantly left untenanted.

Read Stuart Broad's weekly diary ahead of each Test in the Daily Mirror .

Wednesday: The game is at the forefront of my mind and I'm trying to visualise my first ball - hitting the bat hard or over the top of off stump. We had a good net session and Fred was back, which was great to see, although I had to face him and he nearly took my nose off!

July 10, 2008

A highly anticipated clash

Posted on 07/10/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

Michael Atherton previews the upcoming Test series between England and South Africa, and is happy that the home side is going to play a new opponent after a while. Click here for the article in the Times.

Not since the beginning of the Ashes series three years ago has there been such anticipation about the start of a Test series. Yesterday, Michael Vaughan suggested that a series against South Africa is “nearly up there with the Ashes” and if the England captain overstated the case a touch, it was partly in recognition of the fact that the bland fare offered up by 19 consecutive matches against New Zealand will be replaced by something much richer and more varied for the palate.

The Guardian's Mike Selvey says it will be series that "defines England's progress" since Peter Moores took over last year.

The Times' Ivo Tennant talks to the eccentric Billy Bowden ahead of his maiden appearance as an umpire at Lord's.

Meanwhile, the punters, as revealed in the Guardian, are backing South Africa to claim the series.

Meanwhile, Paul Collingwood talks candidly to the Independent's Glenn Moore about the controversial Grant Elliott run-out.

July 9, 2008

Flashback 2003

Posted on 07/09/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Jonty Rhodes: "Hashim Amla gives us something different, as he isn't really a 'South African' batsman. He is much wristier than any of our other batsmen, which gives the team something different" © AFP
South Africa play England in the first Test at Lord's on Thursday and iafrica.com's Barend Prins asked former national coach Eric Simons to share his experiences of the 2003 tour to England.
What went right during the tour in 2003:

"We got input from many cricketers that knew conditions intimately and passed on that advice in a camp we held. We had a young squad with a strong self-belief that through youthful attitude wanted to make a statement. Englishman Mike Finnigan did amazing work with the squad after the one-day series and developed real self-belief and desire to make this statement. Mike had worked with Sam Allardyce at Bolton Wanderers and is now with David Moyes at Everton."

Where it went wrong:

"Ultimately, we could not handle the pressure when it came down to the wire in the final Test. A team should never score 480 in the first innings and lose the way we did at The Oval. England did not win the last Test from that position — we lost it. In some ways we were the victims of our own success as we scored the runs in 128 overs which meant the match moved on very quickly — so by lunch on the second day we were virtually bowling already whereas 484 would previously take you till at least tea, and then the time factor makes it difficult for team batting second to come back."

Prins also caught up with Jonty Rhodes and asked him who he thought would be South Africa's performers on this tour.

"Obviously Graeme Smith and Jacques Kallis are very important for us. Graeme has played some County cricket now and scores his runs very quickly. Neil is batting out of position a bit, but he is very experienced. Hashim (Amla) gives us something different, as he isn't really a 'South African' batsman. He is much wristier than any of our other batsmen, which gives the team something different. AB de Villiers is another to look out for. Ashwell (Prince) is probably the only one of our batsmen that hasn't scored much in the last series or two. All of our top six can score big scores though, which is something we've not had before."

In supercricket website, Mike Haysman explains how Hawkeye works.

Five things that England need to do

Posted on 07/09/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Will Kevin Pietersen to able to keep his cool against South Africa? © Getty Images
The Guardian's Mike Selvey lists out five areas England need to focus on during their upcoming Test series against South Africa. One of his suggestions is to ensure that Kevin Pietersen keeps his cool.
Will he be able to restrain himself when the wind-ups come, though? I recall how Shoaib Akhtar got him in Faisalabad by suckering him into indiscretion and then producing his chicken dance to send him away. This is a more mature batsman now, however, who plans and prepares meticulously. He has probably had his wife shouting insults at him just to get used to it. I think Pietersen will have a great series.

Brian Viner of the Independent interviews Graeme Smith, who talks about South African cricket's controversial transformation policy among other things.

"Look, transformation is something you have to face. We are a young sporting nation since readmission, and we face many challenges. One of them is developing the country, what's the right way to handle that, to make it a representative nation? That's not something we can hide from. But one thing I can say in terms of these players here is that I've never seen a team before in which no one doubts anyone else's ability. That shows we're getting somewhere."


Angus Fraser, in the Independent, laments the lack of an established wicketkeeper in England's ranks while interviewing Mark Boucher.

In the Cape Times, Zaahier Adams picks the 10 most memorable moments in South Africa-England Tests.

Alastair Cook, in his column in the Telegraph, says he is happy with the extra pace that will be provided by the South African attack.

In the Guardian, Paul Nixon and John Buchanan debate on whether the Ashes 2005 quartet - Flintoff, Harmison, Hoggard and Jones - should be reunited.

July 8, 2008

The bearded wonder

Posted on 07/08/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Hashim Amla has one of the more prominent beards in international cricket © AFP
The Guardian's Donald McRae interviews Hashim Amla, who, among other things, talks about his famous beard.
Revelling in the suggestion that Lord's will see the best set of whiskers in cricket since WG Grace, Amla contemplates his beard proudly. But as his father and sister are both doctors, like Grace, he is not about to claim precedence over the bearded master.

"I have seen pictures of his beard but mine is definitely shorter. The optimum length for me, as a Muslim, is for the beard to be of fist-length. But it is not purely a tribute to Islam. If you go back many years the beard is a tribute to all the faiths stemming from the biblical Abraham - or Ibrahim, as we say in Islam. In the Christian tradition Jesus, peace be upon him, has a beard. In the Jewish tradition Moses has a beard. And in Islam we have Muhammad, whom Muslims believe is the final messenger, and he kept a beard because it was the tradition of all the other messengers before him. We see it as universal."


July 7, 2008

Choke or panic?

Posted on 07/07/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

"The 'chokers' tag attached to South Africa's cricket team since their return from sporting isolation 17 years ago may be due a revision following the appointment of a bit-part England one-day player called Jeremy Snape to their coaching staff," writes Derek Pringle in the Telegraph.

If Snape had been involved back then [1999 World Cup semi-final], he could have told [Allan] Donald that what he and [Lance] Klusener did was not choke but panic. The responses look similar to the untutored eye but, according to studies in America, they are actually poles apart. According to research, choking comes from thinking too much, panic from thinking too little. Ergo, if Klusener had thought about the broader context of his situation, that a World Cup final was as good as theirs (a big thought beyond the present), he might not have been able to hit the ball, which would have been a choke. But if he had thought a bit more about that over in hand, focusing on the fact there were still two balls left (a small thought very much in the present), then he might have averted the panic that saw him set off for that risky run.

"Days before England face the first stage of a pace ordeal against South Africa, Michael Vaughan, the captain, has expressed his desire to create a reunion of the fast bowling club that helped deliver the 2005 Ashes," writes Mike Selvey in the Guardian.

In Supercricket, Neil Manthorp feels the typically English attitide of sporting pessimism has made South Africa favourites to win the series. The stalemate at Taunton is an example.

It won't be Dale Steyn's or Morne Morkel's wickets, or Jacques Kallis' runs or Graeme Smith's captaincy which will win this series, it will be the team's collective ability to recognise the look in the eye of whichever Englishman is calling upon his last reserves of desermination and strength.

July 6, 2008

The summer picks up speed

Posted on 07/06/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





Kevin Pietersen: Bring it on... © Getty Images

It's time to wave goodbye to New Zealand's trundlers and welcome Dale Steyn and his charismatic chums. South Africa's pace attack should inspire their English counterparts to crank up their pace, which means more fast bowling thrills and hostile spells. Kevin Pietersen's duel with the fast bowlers will form a vital strand of the series, writes Steve James in the Sunday Telegraph.

A pace attack of Steyn, Makhaya Ntini, Morne Morkel and Jacques Kallis merits careful consideration. It not only has gas, but variety too: the skiddy, swinging Steyn; the wide-of-the-crease, hitting-the-pitch-hard Ntini; the unadulterated bounce of the 6ft 6in Morkel and the sparingly used Kallis, with know-how of when best to release an increasingly creaky handbrake.

In the same paper, Scyld Berry feels England need to be wary of Neil McKenzie, South Africa's new opening batsman whose Test career has entered a refreshingly-new phase.

The obvious option would have been to emigrate to English county cricket, and the pound sterling, but McKenzie saw Test cricket as the ultimate; and he has more roots, more depth. "It would have been easy to run away, and at Somerset there were some talks about 'Kolpaking'. But the will to play for South Africa and the unfinished business - I'd let myself down giving my wicket away and averaging only early-mid thirties."

In the Sunday Times, John Stern looks forward to an exciting duel between Dale Steyn and Pietersen.

There has been so much water under the bridge, so much trash talk, so many ego clashes that this contest cannot fail to move. This will not be a goalless draw. In one corner is KP himself, his star back in the ascendant after a moderate winter. In the other corner is Dale Steyn, the irresistible force of world cricket, the fresh-faced 90-mile-an-hour quick who has taken 78 Test wickets at 16 since the start of May last year and the rightful heir to Allan Donald’s “White Lightning” throne.

In the same paper, Simon Wilde compares the two captains - Graeme Smith and Michael Vaughan - and feels Smith's side has a more settled look.

Smith has matured greatly since Vaughan last crossed swords with him in the Test arena. In those days, Smith exhibited the insecurity of a young man who had been catapulted into the captaincy. He went out of his way to convince everyone, not least himself, that he was worthy of the job. But now, Smith has plenty of younger players under him prepared to follow his lead unquestioningly.

In the Observer, Allan Donald chats with Will Buckley on the forthcoming series, his famous duel with Michael Atherton at Trent Bridge, South African cricket post readmission and the fateful final over at Edgbaston which cost South Africa a shot at lifting the 1999 World Cup.


"It was the most disgusting thing that could happen. A shocking place to be. Not a lot of people came up to me and said "bad luck". 'To get over it I had to watch it. And I watched it again and again and again.' The headlines in South Africa were not friendly. 'There was one saying "Donald, don't bother coming home". And when I arrived back the first person I met at one of the gates looked at me and said, "What are you doing back here?" That's how serious it was.

July 5, 2008

The test against speed

Posted on 07/05/2008 in South Africa in England 2008

"Over the years you begin to realise that your life is not in peril every time you walk out to bat against the likes of Donald, Walsh, Ambrose or Malcolm Marshall. A blow to the ribs, knuckle, shoulder or elbow can be mighty painful but fast bowlers don't kill you, they just chip bits off you," writes Angus Fraser in the Independent.

During the next five weeks it will be just such contests that dominate the sporting landscape here and it will be the ability of Alastair Cook, Andrew Strauss, Michael Vaughan, Kevin Pietersen, Ian Bell and Paul Collingwood to handle South Africa's hostile and much vaunted pace attack that will ultimately decide the result of the four-Test series. If England defeat the Proteas they can look forward to next summer's Ashes with confidence. Lose, and the international future of a couple of players in Michael Vaughan's side must be in doubt.


Meanwhile, Lawrence Booth meets Allan Donald and talks to him in the Guardian about how South Africa are seeing Ian Bell as a threat in the Jacques Kallis mould.

July 1, 2008

Memories of Donald

Posted on 07/01/2008 in South Africa in England 2008





'The man was a champion' © Getty Images
Michael Henderson, in the Guardian, reminisces about Allan Donald's performances in '98 while looking ahead to the Test series between England and South Africa.
How beautifully Donald bowled that summer. The bare bones reveal that he took 33 wickets at 19. They do not tell you how fast he bowled, for so long, in all conditions. His performance at Old Trafford, where Shaun Pollock was absent, and where injuries robbed him at different times of the support of Lance Klusener and Jacques Kallis, was one of the great feats of fast bowling in the modern age.

However well the South Africans bowl this summer, and Steyn in particular looks primed, they will do well to rival the Donald of '98. He was a magnificent athlete, an admirable competitor and, yes, a great fast bowler. Sometimes, when people reflect on the outstanding fast men of the past three decades, of whom there have been so many, his performance can be overlooked. It shouldn't be. The man was a champion.


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