Monday 18 February 2013

Better the Devil You Know?


When I first started watching Test cricket, it was drilled into me by commentators and players need time to settle when making their debut, particularly batsmen. It was best summarised by an ex-player (I cannot remember who) who said that when you play elite club cricket, there will be a bad ball every couple of overs. When stepping up into county cricket, there would be a bad ball every four overs. But in Test matches, there would be no bad balls. Instead, as a batsman, you had to change your perspective on what was actually a bad ball.

This meant that even if a player struggled on debut, that they shouldn't be judged for it. Players did often struggle. But a quick look at the debuts of the current England test squad shows that a different dynamic is developing:-

Alistair Cook - 60 & 104*
Jonny Bairstow - 16 & 0*
Ian Bell - 70
Nick Compton - 9 & 37
Kevin Pietersen - 57 & 64*
Matt Prior - 126* & 21
Joe Root - 73 & 20*
Jonathan Trott - 41 & 119

As a group, they average 81.70 on debut compared to 47.74 for their overall Test career. Mid-summer, with Strauss in the team (who scored nearly 200 runs on debut), that figure was even higher. What has caused this success on debut for so many of the England batsmen (for the bowlers, it is a similar story, although not quite as pronounced. It is also easier for bowlers to debut - a nervous opening spell is not the end of their game whilst a nervous shot from a batsman could well be)

There are many factors at play. Half of the above players (Bairstow, Pietersen, Prior and Trott) had made their international debuts in other formats, and with the exception of Trott had at least had some success. The England Lions programme is immensely successful (even if the Australian A team is thumping them currently), and most of the players had experience of that. England now select better players, with more weight since Duncan Fletcher's appointment given to personality and less to pure runs. But for me the biggest factor is a lot of international coaches favourite weapon - video analysis.

Put yourself in Fletcher's shoes before the 4th test in India when Joe Root made his debut. Fletcher, and his bowlers, decide to come up with new plans for England's batsman. They start with Kevin Pietersen. I can say with almost pure certainty that every single innings KP has played at international level will have been shown on some form of live television. Watch him play any Test bowler he has faced, on any Test ground he has played at. Want to watch him play the sweep one hundred times? The drive? The pull? A request to the analysts section of the team support and it should be done.

But whilst coverage of international cricket has increased, coverage of domestic cricket has almost ceased to exist. If India want footage of Joe Root in that situation, particularly in red-ball cricket, then they will have to search long and hard to find it. The absence of footage makes a player harder to plan for, harder to analyse strengths and weaknesses. With the added benefit of the better preparation mentioned above, there has never been a better time to make your debut in Test cricket.




This could well have a significant impact on the Ashes. England have the benefit of home conditions, the more settled side and less injury concerns. A lot has been made of how few of the potential touring party, particularly batsmen, have played in England before. But this may benefit Australia, with the likes of Cowan, Warner, Maxwell, Wade, Cummins, Pattinson and Starc all partially hidden from England. 

There may of course be the perfect storm for England. Enough footage to plan and the Aussies inexperienced enough to deal with English conditions. But if the Australians adapt quicker then the retirements of Katich, Ponting and Hussey may not seem the brilliant news it was in the winter.

Tuesday 5 February 2013

The Curious Case of Craig Kieswetter

For the upcoming tour of New Zealand, England have once again changed their white ball wicket-keeper. For long time England fans this isn't anything new, since the 2001 tour of India when Alec Stewart chose not to go due to safety concerns, England have seemingly changed their ODI wicket-keeper with free abandon. In that time, England have been through Alec Stewart, Chris Read, James Foster, Geraint Jones, Phil Nixon, Matt Prior, Tim Ambrose, Phil Mustard, Steven Davies, Craig Kieswetter and now Jos Buttler. This list doesn't even include the brief experiments with Marcus Trescothick and Eoin Morgan. 

Kieswetter is the latest player to have been tried, deemed to have failed, and sent back to county cricket to re-learn his trade. I am happy to admit that I am no fan of Kieswetter, and was a firm advocate of dropping him for Buttler, but a closer look at Kieswetter's career shows just how hard it is going to be for Buttler (or Jonny Bairstow) to nail down this position.



With the gloves, Kieswetter averages just short of 29 at a strike rate of 90. Those don't sound amazing figures, but of the ten keepers mentioned above (ignoring Buttler) that's good enough for 3rd for both average and strike rate (behind Stewart and Davies, and Davies and Mustard). Whilst his keeping is often maligned, his bye/dismissal ratio is a match for anyone on this list.

So why has he been dropped? Well, firstly it's no surprise. Forced out of the T20 side by Buttler in October, many felt that Kieswetter was merely keeping the gloves warm. The only debate was whether to replace him with Buttler, or bring back Matt Prior. Yet whilst Kieswetter both keeps and bats ahead of Buttler when they play together for Somerset, Prior averages significantly less than Kieswetter and scores his runs significantly slower. 

England's and Kieswetter's problems may simply be that the standard for an international white ball keeper has been set too high. Over the last decade, firstly Adam Gilchrist re-defined what it meant to be a wicket-keeper/batsman, and in ODI cricket, MS Dhoni has taken that even further. Dhoni is not just the keeper, he is the key wicket to beat India. Every ODI against India this winter the message has been clear - "Got to get Dhoni early"



Now, it seems the model for every side is either to try and find a Gilchrist, or a Dhoni. So many keepers can be used as evidence, but one of the best examples is the use of 20-year-old Quinton de Kock in the ODI series between South Africa and New Zealand. Bought in for his debut, de Kock was not given a chance to learn at seven. He was expected to open.

My last thought on this - Mark Boucher is rightly regarded as one of the finest wicket-keepers in international history, and has 295 ODI caps to his credit. His stats? An average of 28 at a strike rate of 85. Matthew Wade, the new Australian wicket-keeping hope who most feel has started his career promisingly? He's averaging 22 at a rate of 67.

I'm not saying Kieswetter is better than Boucher, but simply showing that the standard for an international keeper has reached dizzying heights. Good luck Jos, you're going to need it.