Thursday 28 March 2013

England's Top 25 Cricketers After New Zealand




Including less Ben Stokes than it should....

25 (22) – Samit Patel – After just two disappointing T20’s, Patel’s career is slipping away after his failure in India. In his defence New Zealand was never likely to offer him much but a strong start to the season is needed.

24 (12) – Graham Onions – This tour really was it for Onions, and in the only warm-up game, he was battered out of the England side. One (extremely) poor game doesn’t make him a bad bowler, but there are younger options who will get a chance in white ball cricket.

23 (21) – Jade Dernbach – Expensive as always, but really showed his value in the T20’s. Despite not bowling his best, he offers something that the other seamers really don’t with not only his variation but his confidence in trying it. Until a fast bowler comes along that offers something as varied, Dernbach will keep picking up caps.

22 (17) – James Tredwell – New Zealand was never likely to be favourable for Tredwell, and unsurprisingly he got battered in the T20’s. Drops down but can consider the winter a success overall.

21 (-) – James Harris – Ever since he burst onto the scene with 11 wickets in a match at just the age of seventeen, Harris has been marked for England. When he found out he’d be carrying drinks for the ODI series instead of playing for the Lions, he might have been a touch disappointed, but the Lions tour descended into a melee of poor discipline both on and off the field, and then the Test bowler he most resembles in Onions suffered an almost terminal tour. A move to Middlesex should give him a greater reputation and an opportunity should present itself this summer.

20 (25) – James Taylor – A good winter for the Lions in terms of runs and one of only two players (the other is Varun Chopra) to emerge from Australia with any credit. Bairstow’s failure in the last Test should push Taylor to back up batsman for the home New Zealand series.

19 (23) – Luke Wright – He remains T20 only, but produced an excellent series in New Zealand, bowling well and most importantly providing decent leadership throughout that section of the tour. After Pietersen and Morgan is England’s most important T20 player.

18 (20) – Alex Hales – A brilliant cameo in the Big Bash, and once again England highest scorer in the T20’s, Hales was unlucky not to get a shot on the ODI tour. Nottinghamshire’s decision to prevent him playing in the IPL will probably benefit his career too.

17 (15) – Jonny Bairstow – The final Test completed a fairly miserable winter for Bairstow, who had two opportunities and failed to take them, and watched Jos Buttler scoot past him as the white ball keeper. Batting does not look ready for a full-time Test role and isn’t getting the hours behind the stumps he needs to be Prior’s long term replacement.

16 (18) – Chris Woakes – Did a decent job in the ODIs, didn’t go on the Lions tour and thus avoided any reputational damage and by all accounts was a decent tourist. England definitely seem big fans of his batting which does he claims no harm whatsoever.

15 (14) – Monty Panesar – Another great escape completed, and whatever he achieves with the remainder of his career, will always be remembered as an England cult hero. Pitches offered him very little, neither did his captain (more on that later) and it was generally a struggle despite a couple of excellent spells of control. Might get another go in the home series but pitches will offer him little.



14 (16) – Jos Buttler – The ODI keeper for now, but the T20 keeper for a long time. He’s inventive and confident, and whatever he lacks as a keeper he makes up for with his batting. He is one player who could have benefited from going to the IPL.

13 (19) – Tim Bresnan – Sometimes not playing at all can do a lot for a player’s reputation, as Bresnan’s inactivity after his operation meant chances for other which they did not take. Woakes probably didn’t do enough to displace him long-term and England’s policy of resting players should mean plenty more caps this summer.

12 (11) – Eoin Morgan – He’s going to the IPL, which may well prove to be effectively a retirement from Test cricket. But he’s still a vital part of England’s white ball sides where he remains one of the best and most unique players in the world.

11 (13) – Nick Compton – There was a lot of bumgush spoken before the 1st Test about Compton, beautifully answered by consecutive hundreds. This series was the polar opposite of India for Compton, with two big scores and three failures after a succession of middling scores in India. He has surely done enough to start the first Ashes Test but faces competition for his spot from not only Root but Chopra as well.

10 (10) – Joe Root – The ODI series was a real announcement from Root, particularly as England have struggled to find a four in ODI’s for a while, but the Test series may be more important in his development. He couldn’t possibly live up to the hype of the ODI series, and a struggle in the Tests, particularly in finding the right pace to score at, lowers expectations and relieves pressure.

9 (6) – Steven Finn – I will state straight off that I am no fan of his new run-up, because whilst it should stop him running into the stumps, I’d rather have a good bowler who kicks the stumps than a mediocre one who doesn’t. His 6-for flattered him and generally looked down on pace for the series, bowled too short and was worryingly erratic, although the improvements in his batting are as pleasing as they were unexpected.

8 (9) – Stuart Broad – Excellent in T20’s, where he deserves credit in particular for being prepared to pit himself against McCullum despite the need to perform to ensure his Test place. Suffered at McCullum’s hands in the ODI’s, but fronted up in the Tests. His batting however has gone backwards and that plays into Bresnan’s hands.

7 (8) – Ian Bell – Reasonable in both series, the next 12 months are crucial for Bell. He’s in a place where he’s secure in both sides, and he can start to think about his legacy. New Zealand don’t have a world class spinner, and neither do Australia (although Lyon is better than people think), which has always been his major weakness in the past. There are a lot of runs for him there to score, he’s protected from the new ball in the Tests, it’s a huge chance for his scores to live up to his technique.

6 (7) – Jonathan Trott – I don’t often agree with Bob Willis, but he did score too slowly in the ODIs and should be replaced by Pietersen come the summer ODIs, despite the incredible volume of runs in that format. When it came to the Tests, he looked in fantastic touch, and despite averaging over fifty would have been disappointed not to score bigger having reached at least 27 in all five innings.

5 (5) – Graeme Swann – Was somewhat of a plaything for McCullum during the ODI series, and if his elbow was going to fail, he couldn’t have picked a better time for it to happen. Panesar was never going to take enough wickets to push him out of the side, and he remains one of the world’s best spinners. His slip catching is also crucial to England.

4 (1) – Alistair Cook – I’ll start with his batting, where Cook played more loose shots than in the previous 24 months, but he got a ton when it really mattered, and there doesn’t appear to be a technical weakness at the moment for bowlers to work him on.

As for his captaincy, he was completely outshone but the inventive and energetic McCullum. The abiding memory of this series should be Cook, silent, shoulders shrugged at fine leg as Monty desperately looked to him for inspiration, before he turned to Prior. I have nothing against quiet captains, mainly because Steve Waugh, one of the finest captains of our era, barely said a word. But whereas Waugh always projected an image of defiant control, Cook’s body language was one of passive acceptance, particularly during Peter Fulton’s assault in the final Test.

Cook is a young captain, and has time to learn and improve. He’s been touring for six months, always as captain, but the sight of him passing every tactical decision through Prior was troubling for England and gold-dust for Australia, who having suffered a miserable tour of India, will have spotted a potential area of weakness in England.

3 (2) – James Anderson – Not his greatest series against a side he has always had great success against, but bowled so superbly in India that he’s got a huge amount of credit in bank. His skill in bowling reverse swing with the ball hidden in his left hand until right before delivery showed a bowler of the highest skill, although he would like to know the secrets of how Southee and Boult got the ball to hoop in the final Test where he could barely make it move.

2 (4) – Kevin Pietersen – Injured for the entire tour even when he played, and clearly struggling. But it was his absence from the ODI series that most hurt England, where the lack of a dominant player hurt England. The highlight of this summer may well be the first time him and James Pattinson face-off for the first time.

1 (3) – Matt Prior – In his autobiography, Justin Langer talks of the 1995 Australia tour of the West Indies, who hadn’t lost a series for 15 years. 1-0 up entering the 3rd Test, the Aussies were reduced to 18-3 with Curtly Ambrose bowling fire on a pitch best described as jagged. Vice-captain Waugh came to the crease, and in an innings of sheer defiance, made an unbeaten 63 that got the Australians to 128. They lost the Test, but Waugh’s bravery in the face of Ambrose inspired the Australians to win the final Test, in which Waugh got 200, and with it the series. It marked the end of West Indian dominance and the start of Australia’s.

Langer said, from that innings onwards, despite the fact that Mark Taylor was captain for another three years, that Waugh was the leader. He was the example that was followed, the player the team looked to. I was reminded of that story twice in the final Test, where firstly Matt Prior led the riot act in the England team huddle before New Zealand’s 2nd innings, and then when he scored a simply magnificent hundred to save the final Test. Whereas Cook’s reputation as a leader fell this series, Prior’s has soared after his performances, and it was noticeable the respect from his teammates for his efforts in the series.

No comments: