Tuesday 28 July 2015

Where do England go from here?

England were crushed by Australia in the third ODI losing by 89 runs, and thereby lost the ODI series 2-1 and went 4-2 behind in the Ashes Series. It was not just that they were badly beaten, but that they were poor in the field, with the ball and with the bat. They looked like a team with no confidence. The skipper and the management have to remedy that before the Test.

They have a couple of weeks to try and get their heads together before that four day Test at Canterbury worth a crucial four points for a win or two each for the draw. This will be followed after another two week gap by the three T20s each worth two points. If the Aussies win the Test they will need to win just one of the T20s to take the Ashes.

So what will England do for the next two weeks? I understand they have some longer format warm-up games planned against boys' teams, but I am not really sure how much they get out of these "jumpers for goalpost" games (as fellow blogger Syd Egan calls them). They have nowhere near the same intensity as an Ashes' match and the opposition do not reflect the type of bowling and batting that they face in the real thing. Trying to find that sort of opposition is a conundrum. I would suggest that a game or games against one of the better county set-ups might prove more fruitful. This is one of the problems created by having this void between the 18 contracted players and the rest. This is the void the ECB hope the WCSL will fill, but that is not going to be up and running properly for at least two years. By then the T20 World Cup and the 50 over World Cup will have been and gone.

There is a round of county T20 games this Sunday and I think I would let the batsmen (at least) go and play in these games and try and get a few runs under their belts, just to try and get the feel of hitting the ball cleanly. I appreciate that it is not the same type of cricket that they will be required to play in the Test Match, but the England batsmen are not in a good place at the moment. It might also help them work on rotating the strike from decent length and line bowling, which is what the Aussies have been chucking down, and what England have been failing to play properly. In the first ODI the Aussies bowled too short and England capitalised. In the second they adjusted and bowled much tighter lines and lengths and England played across the line and got out. In the third England played straighter but could not score. In the Test playing straight will again be key, as will patience. Against India last year 12 of the 20 England wickets to fall to India were lbw as England played across the line and were bowled out for 92 and 202 and lost by six wickets.

I understand the Test squad is being selected today. It will not be easy. The ECB keep banging on about how strong the squad is and the fact that England have strength in depth. It looks like smoke and mirrors to me, particularly on the batting front. It was highlighted in the World Cup in Mumbai in 2013 when England failed to make the final; reiterated in the T20 World Cup final when England lost badly to Australia; in the Test last year and confirmed again in New Zealand in February. The only upside during that time was the Ashes in Australia which England won based around some good bowling in the Test Match (which was worth six points at the time). England actually lost both the ODI and T20 series, but one win in each was enough to retain the Ashes. As Mike Selvey, former Middlesex and England bowler, tweeted yesterday about the England team "The hard truth is they have plateaued in white ball cricket for several years while others have caught up".

The reality is that there are no batsmen in the England squad that the Aussies will fear. England have relied on Charlotte Edwards and Sarah Taylor for much longer than is seemly, and during that time Taylor's performances have been sporadic. Overall she averages just over 40 in ODIs. Against Australia she averages just over 34, and this is about the score you expect her to make in most of her innings. In 70 of her 91 ODI innings she has failed to get beyond 50. 39 of those times she has scored between 20-49.

The problem England have is that they have not produced another reliable batsmen in the mould of Claire Taylor or Arran Brindle. Amy Jones and Georgia Elwiss have been introduced in this series with little success. Waiting in the wings are Tammy Beaumont and Danielle Wyatt. They have already played 23 and 33 ODIs each respectively. Beaumont averages 17.25 and Wyatt 16.43. They are not exciting replacements.

So who will England pick for the Test? Again I doubt they will look outside the contracted 18 players, but steady bat Fran Wilson and left-arm spinner Jodie Dibble deserve to feature in their thoughts. If they select 14 again I think it will be:-
Edwards, Beaumont, Brunt, Cross, Elwiss, Greenway, Grundy, Gunn, Hazell, Knight, Sciver, Shrubsole, Taylor, and Winfield
Whether that is a 14 that will trouble the Aussies? I have to say I have my doubts.

MD
28/VII/15

4 comments:

  1. On the positive side I think England have had a better temperament for Test Cricket.

    But having been told that it's all about the England talent pathway and academy there needs to be root and branch review of how talented young players are nurtured, challenged and retained.

    If the WSL with franchises is supposed to bridge the he gap someone will have to think how counties will be motivated to provide the talent.

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  2. Good and thorough article Martin.

    At the serious risk of being flippant about a serious matter, one can almost imagine the Test squad selection meeting:-

    Item 1. Select captain. Action: Pick Edwards
    Item 2. Select Vice-captain. Action: Pick Knight
    Item 3: Select Keeper. Action. Pick Taylor
    Item 4. Select All Rounders. Action. Select Brunt and then write the names Elwiss, Gunn and Sciver on a set of 3 playing cards, shuffle and randomly pick 2
    Item 5. Select Batsmen. Action. Write the names Beaumont, Greenway, Jones, Winfield, and Wyatt on a set of 5 playing cards, shuffle and randomly pick 3.
    Item 6. Select Medium/Fast Bowlers. Action. Pick Shrubsole and Cross
    Item 7. Select Spinners. Action. Write the names Grundy, Marsh and Hazell on a set of 3 playing cards, shuffle and randomly pick 2.
    Result : a 5 minute selection meeting and a squad of 13. Done.

    What about the 14th player – can’t think why you need a squad of 14 for a one off match but if required:- Write names of 4 players not selected from above process plus Farrant on a set of 5 playing cards, shuffle and randomly pick 1.

    Perhaps Clare Connor can wade into the debate and explain how Item 5 represents the much vaulted strength in depth that we so regularly hear about from the ECB (given they’ve all been dropped at least once, some more than once, over the last year or so)!

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  3. Spot on Martin. It was very disappointing yesterday. There appears to be no ability to consistently hit the ball and no depth to the batting whatsoever.

    I think Elwiss looks like an exciting player, at least she wants to get on with things. It's her fielding I'm most disappointed with. And we are lacking a punch with the opening bowlers. Just being miserly is not enough against Australia, we must take wickets as well, at least in 50 over games.

    I'm not too hopeful for the Test either. In my view the spectre of an innings defeat is not that unrealistic. We failed to make a combined score of 300 against India last year, and I think it's fair to say the Australian attack is better than India's! Australia could get that in one innings if Lanning and Perry fire again. One thing thing that may stop this disaster is hopefully Canterbury will be a decent pitch, and they won't mis-read it again, like the one at Wormsley, seeing as Edwards should be familiar with it.

    I think Heather Knight is capable of fulfilling a holding role down the order a-la Brindle but we would still be missing another stabilising player. Think Fran Wilson. I also don't see how they can ignore the talents of Danni Wyatt now.

    I was expecting to be 4-2 down by now, but it's been the manner of the defeats that has been so galling. If we had (only) been losing by say 20-30 runs I wouldn't be so uptight about it.

    Having said that at least Australia are showing just how great they are. Maybe they'll get some more media interest down under, they certainly deserve it.

    The only good thing about losing so badly, if it goes on over the course of the series is that it should trigger one of those so called "root and branch reviews" to shake things up a bit.

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  4. yes, as the Clanger says 'strength in depth' appears to be Clare Connor's way of saying 'we have lot of players who are of a similar standard, none of whom will trouble the Aussies that much'. Personally I dislike hearing her commentate on TV as you only get the inside track, which comes across as 'corporate rubbish'. Strauss left the Sky commentary team when he took his ECB role, so why do they persist with Connor? As for what might be the least worst option when picking the 3 batting positions , is it to pick Greenway and Winfield, plus all of Gunn, Sciver and Elwiss? Some will say that Beaumont and Wilson got runs against the Aussies for the EWA, but both are previous international failures, and perhaps the main reason they scored those runs is that the Aussies had just arrived? Indeed I'm starting to think the only reason we won the first ODI is that they had next to no warm up cricket?

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