England’s One Day Summer

It already seems a lifetime ago that the Cricket Season ended. I wrote about England’s One Day players a while ago and never got around to publishing the article. So the below thoughts were largely written in late September.

As we have been saying all summer, things were different in the Summer of 2020. We make allowances for that but I think England will be slightly disappointed when it comes to One Day Cricket.

Yes, England were in a ‘bubble’ for weeks. And yes, because players could not move between bubbles easily, England fielded second string One Day teams for much of the summer. Eoin Morgan has also spoken about the decision that was taken to give priority to mental health of the team – especially when in a bubble. This is absolutely right, and vital.

A further challenge is the one of not knowing what to plan for. England knew when World Cups would be, and planned to get another run from most of the World Cup winning players. Now it is likely the team will change greatly before the next round of world cups. And who knows when the team will next play?

But England lost a game to Ireland and lost a series to Australia. For me, this has to be considered a failure.

Ireland are allowed to play well and Australia are a good team. The ‘bubble’ slightly worked against England for the Australia One Day Series – as players were jaded by the bubble environment. Whereas Australia were just getting going by the time of the One Day Series.

I thought I would look at a few of the key players. The alliteration seemed like fun…for a while….

Absent Alex Alex Hales messed up and obviously played no games this year for England. His decision to only play one day cricket looks a poor one. But I am not sure England can continue to overlook Hales. In the lead up to 2019, one thing that worked for England was having options at the top. When Jason Roy had a poor run of form, Jonny Bairstow came in. Roy actually only got back in because of the Bristol incident.

In the World Cup, Hales would have been a far more effective replacement for Roy than James Vince. Eoin Morgan needs to move on now – he is perhaps getting a bit carried away with himself in his continued rejection of Hales. Hales is too good not to even get a look in. And I want Hales to keep Roy and Bairstow honest. Competition for places is actually a good thing.

Amazing Adil or Ropey Rashid? Adil Rashid is 32. He is a spinner, but clearly still struggling with the impact of a shoulder injury. At times this summer he looked like the bowler that has had such an impact on England’s One Day Cricket over the last 5 years. But at times, particularly against Australia, he looked devoid of ideas and went around the park. England have to assess how well they can manage Rashid and if they can get him through to 2023.

(Potentially) Brilliant Banton How do England get Banton in? We have not yet seen the best of Tom Banton, but he played one good innings against Pakistan. England may need to be ruthless as I think he has to be in the squad for the T20 World Cups.

It reminds me a bit of the England test match team in 2004 when Andrew Strauss came on the scene. England knew they had to get Strauss in so some good experienced players would have to make way. It may be the case here that some good players have to make way for Banton.

Busy Buttler. Brilliant Buttler. Jos Buttler is an incredible cricketer. Not everyone agrees about his place in the Test Match Team (though for me he is guaranteed a place). In the One Day arena, he is another level. I do not think I would use him as a T20 opener, but if that is England’s plan, they need to commit to that and stick to it. But they also need to look after him – I think the final few games against Australia were a bit too much for Buttler after playing in all the test matches. He is not going to play every game so maybe he could rotate with Banton in T20. But for the World Cups – he will be huge. Future England Captain?

Competitive Currans I love the attitude of the Curran brothers. I think they will be regular England players, though perhaps not playing every game. Tom Curran could be the answer to the Liam Plunkett role. Sam gives the left arm option – but I would pick David Willy ahead of Sam Curran.

NB – The ongoing IPL perhaps has changed this! Sam Curran seems to have performed well.

Just Jofra I do not know why, but Jofra Archer bowls better in One Day cricket. It is often said that Eoin Morgan lets the bowlers do what they want. I am not so sure. Perhaps he does not micro manage, but I suspect he is very clear about roles and responsibilities. That clarity of role made it easy to decide who would bowl the super over in the World Cup Final. Perhaps it is easier for Archer to bowl at his best for 10 overs. Perhaps he has more One Day experience. But I think for whatever reason, Morgan knows how to manage Archer. Joe Root needs to have a chat with Morgan.

Lost Liam Something odd has gone on with Liam Plunkett. The way he has been unceremoniously dropped is very strange. Looking back to that World Cup win, they seemed to be pushing Plunkett out – but they found they needed him more than they needed Moeen Ali. Plunkett was amazing for England in the middle of the innings. They really missed him against Australia.

Missing Mo Speaking of Moeen Ali, something has gone really wrong. Everytime he comes to the crease, you have no idea what might happen. In some ways this is a good thing, and Moeen did play one amazing T20 innings this summer. But at times you need to play to the situation. He gets out playing loose shots too often. Have England messed him around? Perhaps. Give him a clear role going forward and see what happens. Or move on.

Mighty Malan Again, Eoin Morgan has some issue with Dawid Malan – his comments in New Zealand about Malan not taking that extra run was just weird. I am not sure what he was driving at with that – because normally a T20 hundred guarantees your place in the team.

In 2006, Duncan Fletcher played an unfit Ashley Giles in the Ashes. In the grand scheme, it probably made no difference. But Giles dropped the Adelaide Test Match when he let Ricky Ponting off the hook. I always felt that Fletcher was clinging onto the team he had built for 2005 – and that caused some team selection mistakes. Monty Panesar should have played (though he probably would have dropped the same catch!).

I hope that Eoin Morgan will not make Fletcher’s error. The team he built for 2019 will never play again. Malan is now one of England’s best T20 players.

More Morgan I mean, I have been a bit critical of Eoin Morgan in this article. But he is still a fantastic captain. His batting also is remarkable. He does not seem to need practice. He seems to be hitting the ball harder than ever, and the reverse sweeps are back too. When you consider the impact he has had and his style of play even in the bad days of English One Day Cricket, he is the best One Day player England have had.

Rusty Root, Rusty Roy Jason Roy is not like Morgan. He gets rusty – like during the Champions Trophy. This summer he was injured and it took time to get going. At the end of the summer, he clicked for Surrey. England have to accept that Roy is a player who has times out of form. But when in form he makes up for it.

Joe Root is a bit of a worry. All summer, something did not quite look right when batting. He normally looks so natural at the crease. This year, he looked out of sync with bat in hand. He needs to step away and rediscover his touch. At his best, he scores runs so naturally. He is also vital for England at number 3 in the 50 over game. For me, he should leave the T20 format now – though he was crucial in 2016. He just needs some time away. Hopefully linking up with Peter Moores for The Hundred will help – though I would sooner he left that for the youngsters.

Simply Stokes Against Australia, the absence of Stokes was shown. England could not quite get the batting order right, and with Ali failing to contribute looked light on batting. Stokes of course delivers the over all package, even if he lost the ability to field in 2020. But we all know that his biggest impact is with the bat. Those consistent scores around 70 (against South Africa, Sri Lanka, India and in the Final come to mind) in the World Cup last year were vital.

Against Australia we were not looking at massive 400+ totals. Those scores around 280 seem to bring the best out of Ben.

Wonderful Woakes It felt like Chris Woakes came of age in the summer of 2020. We will remember his batting in the first Pakistan test match at Old Trafford. But all summer he bowled well. Along with Archer, he looked consistently a cut above the rest. He needs to be looked after as England will need him in all forms of the game – though not every time.

The Lock-down Test Matches: What did we learn about England

It already seems weeks ago since we had test match cricket. It seems like it will be ages until we have more, though perhaps someone somewhere in the world will make something happen in the last quarter of the year. But I find it interesting to consider what we have learned in the test match summer of 2020.

Well firstly, we have learned that cricket in England just has to do something about the weather. Sadly, even the ICC cannot change the weather, but it can get a lot more agile about how it handles the weather and bad light. Actually, cricket might just have to be played with a red ball under floodlights if we cannot get the pink ball right. However, the scenes of floodlit stadiums with players going off for bad light is a failure. I do not often agree with Michael Vaughan but on this point I do: if cricket had to pay Sky Sports back for percentage of time lost to bad light, an answer would be found. Sorry to make it commercial, but this needs sorting.

The series against Pakistan sadly fell away to a poor ending. I feel that England should have pushed for a victory at the end and if they had taken a few more catches then they might have won the series 2-0. However, I think we can attribute that partly to the impact of the bio-secure bubble. I think it was actually harder for those not playing, including players like Jack Leach, but also the coaches and media. But I think everyone was running out of steam by the end. I do not think we can blame the players for that. Instead, I think we congratulate all the players involved for making the best of it. Actually we saw some good cricket. However it is sad that it fell away after that brilliant test match at Old Trafford.

Having mentioned catching though, I think we have to talk about this. England are simply terrible at slip catching. I remember hearing that Stuart Broad had had 100 catches dropped off his bowling, and that was a couple of years ago. It was mentioned during the Pakistan series that England have dropped a greater percentage of catches of anyone other than Bangladesh since the start of 2018. I look back at England sides of the past, and slip catching was one of the few things we were quite good at. Sir Ian Botham sticks out of course, along with Paul Collingwood, but we have had a lot of decent slippers. However, since the breakup of the 2011 team (the Strauss, Swann, Collingwood cordon) England have been pretty poor at slip catching. Mike Atherton and Nasser Hussain suggested they were standing too close together at The Rose Bowl. Hussain suggested England need to have fingers pointing up more often. Graham Gooch talks about concentration. In his autobiography, Alistair Cook, mentioned that cold weather leads to poor technique. Joe Root has turned into a good first slip, but back in 2015 he was ropy. I am not sure what the answer is…but in India and Australia you just have to catch them.

What about batting? I think we have surely learned by now that you need specialist batsmen in test matches. Experiments with the likes of Jason Roy now must be consigned to the bin. That being said, I agree with comments I heard by Ian Chappell where he said that England have not got to the end of the challenge of the opening batsmen. Dominic Sibley has earned a long run in the team, while Rory Burns is not so safe after a poor Pakistan series, but should probably get more games – but I worry about both in Australia. Chappell also said that Crawley should stay at 3, and with this I am not so sure – I would not be surprised to see him open. Ollie Pope is going to be a good player too for England, though he did not have a stellar series. Jos Buttler had a wonderful summer, but seems to need to bat at 6 to get the best out of himself.

With mention of Buttler, we automatically bring wicket keeping into the discussion. Buttler seems to attract a lot of criticism, but for once I agree with Shane Warne. Buttler is first name on the sheet in any England team I pick. However, perhaps not as wicket keeper. I would play a keeper at 7, with Butter at 6. Personally I would be very tempted to pick Jonny Bairstow. Bairstow was messed up by England. Michael Vaughan kept saying Bairstow could be a number 5 but he does not have the technique for this. But he has a proven record at 7. However, for India I would give Ben Foakes an extended run. England do mess up wicket keepers (shades of Jack Russell and Alec Stewart) but Foakes also was poorly treated by the selectors. He needs a long run. For me, we have learned that Buttler is not a test class keeper but he is a test class number 6.

Buttler and Crawley – the biggest lesson of the summer is that these two can bat! Picture from the BBC.

Back to the top 5 – having put Buttler in at 6. It becomes a direct shootout between Pope and Burns when Ben Stokes comes back in. Personally, I would go Sibley, Crawley, Root, Stokes, Pope, Buttler. Burns misses out, and Root bats where he should – at 3. Root is no longer good enough to pick his position and have the team adapt around him.

So what have we discovered about the bowlers? Nothing at all about the fast bowlers. We already knew that however much Stuart Broad and Jimmy Anderson might struggle in Australia, they are still the best pace bowlers we have ever had. Jofra Archer could do with more wickets, but an average of 31 is fine and will improve. Chris Woakes is getting better but still has questions to answer away from home. Sam Curran has to be a 4th bowler, but we have Stokes. So I would pick Anderson or Woakes (not both in any England team), and Curran only plays for now when Stokes is not fit to bowl. That is harsh, but we are talking about international sport here. Broad plays constantly, but Archer rotes with Mark Wood – if Wood can keep fit. Oly Stone and Ollie Robinson fit in around this where possible, along with the Overtons.

We keep hearing about England’s pace attack – but the old timers are still the best of the bunch. Picture from the BBC.

Sadly, nothing was learned about the spinners. Dom Bess might make it one day, he has the character. Leach must go ahead in the order now though. I would keep Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid in the one day team now, though Ali might force his way back. An away series against India will be a good training ground – even in the UAE. Most desperately, England need control. Graeme Swann provided control and aggression, and when England lost that control England fell apart. Ashley Giles gave Vaughan control in 2005. Bess must focus on control, and not dropping one short every over. I think Bess is one for the future though – I like his aggression.

Joe Root has done enough as captain to go to Australia as captain next year. But he can no longer pick and choose where to bat. Picture from the BBC.

So finally, what about Joe Root? Well he is turning into a good captain. I think he needs a bit more steel in his management of Archer. Perhaps he needs a chat with Eoin Morgan? But he is now settled as Captain until next year’s Ashes. If he can attack, he is a better captain. I think he needs to be more patient in defence – both as a captain and a batsman. However, he has now won enough games that we will have to sacrifice some of his runs. But if he could just get a tad more consistent it would help. In 2010/1, Andrew Strauss did not have an amazing tour with the bat in the way Cook did, but he did enough (1 hundred, 1 fifty). As Atherton will tell you, captaining in the Ashes when you cannot buy a run is hard. Root could do with just making enough in Australia next year to keep the media quiet. It will still be a struggle, but Root is the most likely man to pull it off.

Brilliant come back but questions remain

Stunning victory for England thanks to Buttler and Woakes but still more questions than answers. A missed chance for Pakistan. Time for Jimmy to say goodbye.

England 219 (Pope 62, Yasir 4/66) and 277/7 (Woakes 84, Buttler 75, Yasir 4/99) beat Pakistan 326 (Masood 156, Broad 3/54) and 169 (Yasir 33, Broad 3/37) by 3 wickets

Buttler and ‘The Brummie Botham’ – heros at Old Trafford. Picture from Magzter

I was not able to watch all of the first test match, but the bits I saw on days 1-3 did little to encourage me to watch it. I saw the players leave the field for bad light, in natural light that was perfectly adequate when spinners were bowling and the floodlights were on. This madness of bad light needs to be addressed. I saw Joe Root bowling himself before lunch on day 2. I saw a scrappy England with multiple mistakes in the field, including from the beleaguered Jos Buttler. I saw Jofra Archer not bowling at full tilt, James Anderson looking ‘past it’ and Dominic Bess dropping one short every over. It had all the signs of another first game in a series for England. Yes, England won, but it still looked like they were undercooked when the came started.

All that being said, Pakistan looked a good team, well drilled and well supported. When I say well supported, I refer to the backroom staff. However, we know that Old Trafford would have been absolutely ‘buzzing’ in normal conditions with the green and white flags everywhere. Once again, the players were able to raise above the empty stadium and play some good cricket. Shan Masood was solid at the top and made the difference between a 250 score and the eventual 326. Another 50 would have been enough. Yasir Shah evoked memories of Shane Warne in 2005 with runs and 8 wickets. Yet like Warne in 2005 (only in 2005!) Yasir was on the loosing side.

It all changed on the 3rd innings. Michael Holding observed the importance of first innings runs and batting a team out of the game and getting a big score. Masood needed a partner in crime, in the way that Dominic Sibley and Ben Stokes were able to work together in the 2nd test match of the summer against West Indies. With a low 300s score, you always need to find a few runs second time round. We know that test matches can be turned in the 3rd innings (remember Adelaide 2006 with a shudder – and Warne in his more habitual role as a winner). The Asad Shafiq run out was probably a key moment – and the carelessness moved from England to Pakistan.

A target of 277 at Old Trafford ought to have been enough. This pitch was not as good as some that we have seen in Manchester over the years, but the pitches always give bowlers a chance. At 117/5, the bowlers were taking the chance. But we finally saw why Buttler is in the team, and formed a perfect partnership with Woakes. Buttler had a bad game with the gloves, but has been showing more and more consistency with the bat this summer, and really just needs that second century. Woakes has looked unsure which end of the bat to hold though, despite possessing a Lords century. I think the situation gave Woakes some freedom with the bat, and once he was ‘in’ he showed a real ‘Woakes quality’ of calmness. It was a brilliant effort from 2 people who are really well liked in the team – and the game.

Sadly, as Root’s captainly was inept in the first innings, Azhar Ali did make some mistakes in the last dig. Woakes should have been peppered with bouncers when he arrived, and the field should have been much more aggressive. Often ex-players demand ultra-aggressive fields (Holding and Sir Ian Botham would probably be unhappy with less than 9 slips). A ball scoots through extra cover for 4 and people say ‘the bowler does not need to worry about that’. The reality is that setting an aggressive field is a risk when playing with a sub-300 target. But we knew a draw was impossible and once the target was below 50, the field needed to be in. Ali though is a young captain. It cannot be easy being a captain when your country’s prime minister is one of the best all rounders of all time! I hope he gets some time to learn. Misbah-ul-Haq pointed to inexperience as being a factor in the loss – but experience cannot just be picked up in the supermarket.

As ever, it is hard to weigh up England as a team. Yes it was a great win, but if they had played better on days 1 to 3 they would have won the game easily. It is a frustration that we have to endure really bad sessions before we see the brilliance. That means England lose far too many games. However, it is a relief to see some fight. If England cannot avoid defeat in Brisbane next year, it does not need to mean 5-0 or 4-0 as in recent times. Even the captains of the 90s and early noughties (Michael Atherton, Alec Stewart and Nasser Hussain) won one game in away Ashes series, and in 2010/11, England had to fight back from a terrible situation in Brisbane. We need to see more of that ‘fight’ from England – and Buttler has the potential to be a fighter, along with the likes of Sibley and Pope.

The question is what do England do next? The Ben Stokes conundrum goes away now as Stokes has to miss the next 2 games for family reasons. We all wish Stokes and family all the best. Given that Stokes did bowl last week, it seems that England played 5 bowlers to make sure that Stokes did not injure himself further by ‘demanding to bowl’ – in the way that Andrew Flintoff did sometimes. Stokes deserves a little bit of ‘slack’ here though given his unstinting commitment. Dan Lawrence has also left the ‘bubble’ following a bereavement which means we can be fairly certain what top 6 England will put out, with Zak Crawley coming back in at 3 with Root moving down.

I said before the series that you need a longer batting line up against Pakistan and I still maintain that England picked the wrong team for this game. Woakes is realistically a number 8 more than a number 7, and Bess at 9 and Archer at 10 starts to look better. Therefore I would bring Ben Foakes into the team to bat at 7 and keep wicket, taking the gloves away from Buttler, while asking him to nail down a spot at number 6 which is where he has the best record in test matches. With Buttler, it seems that clarity of role is essential, and he understands the role at 6. At 7, he is not sure whether to ‘stick or twist’ – particularly when batting with the tail. Additionally, England will need perfect wicket keeping in India this winter. Looking back, I wonder if Buttler at 6 and Bairstow at 7 was the test match answer all along – but many, including Michael Vaughan, talked Bairstow up as a number 5. At 20/3, his technique let him down, but Bairstow the number 7 created some mayhem. Again – clarity of role. Now though, Foakes is ahead in the line surely? An extra batsman would also make it easier for England to pick Jack Leach over Bess – despite previous heroics, Bess’ batting is superior to Leach. I would keep Bess for now though.

We are back to 1 spot and 2 bowlers again. It pains me to say it, but I would leave out James Anderson. I have always felt that Woakes and Anderson in the same team does not quite work as they both fill the same space in a bowling attack, albeit Anderson with more skill. Woakes has put on a bit of pace now, but I still think that 5 full time bowlers creates confusion unless 1 of the 5 is an allrounder. Personally, I think it is time for Anderson to move aside now. When Graham Gooch retired, he left it too late and in Australia in 1995 was a shadow of his former self. Anderson can go on his own terms, out while still performing well, allowing Broad to follow in a couple of years and allowing England to move forward smoothly. Sir Alastair Cook showed us how to retire back in 2018 – Jimmy should learn from Chef.

Having said all of that, I predict England will simply bring in Crawley for Stokes and Anderson will play on.

Expected England team for Southampton (what I think will happen): Sibley, Burns, Crawley, Root(c), Pope, Buttler(v/c, w/k), Woakes, Bess, Archer, Broad, Anderson

My team for Southampton (what I would do): Sibley, Burns, Crawley, Root(c), Pope, Buttler(v/c), Foakes(w/k), Woakes, Bess, Archer, Broad

England v West Indies: what did we learn?

England 369 (Pope 91, Roach 4/72) and 226/2 (Burns 90, Holder 1/24) beat West Indies 197 (Holder 46, Broad 6/31) and 129 (Hope 31, Woakes 5/50) by 269 runs and win series 2-1

This series in 2020 was totally different to any international cricket we have seen before, certainly for an England team. What can we learn from it?

Thanks West Indies. Picture from LatestLY
  1. West Indies are a ‘cracking’ bunch of blokes. For them to come to England has been amazing, but in every interview I have seen they showed courtesy, respect, humour…and just came over as really good people. We really appreciate that they have come. Cricket has a responsibility to make every effort to make sure the West Indies get cricket ‘at home’ this year. And by the way, that also applies to Pakistan who England face next week.
  2. England loose far too many games for the talent they have. England ought to have won the series 3-0. Too often, England have a terrible session somewhere that gives away a game. Often it is the first game in a series, as it was in the winter against South Africa, but against India in 2018 it was the 3rd test match and at home against South Africa in 2017 it was the second game. It is a bad habit, and against good sides including Pakistan and Australia, losing the first game in the series ended up being the difference between a drawn series and a won series. England have to address this.
  3. West Indies are close to making a transition into a really good team. However, they rely too much on Shannon Gabriel and Kemar Roach. Perhaps Alzarri Joseph and Gabriel should have been rotated in this series as I think Joseph will develop and Gabriel never looked fit. With those bowlers, West Indies can be a handful if the batsman can score 300 in the first innings. The problem is that they cannot consistently do it – they only did it once in this series.
  4. England’s new opening pair of Dominic Sibley and Rory Burns looks like it may provide the answer England have needed. One does wonder why Burns was not picked sooner to open with Alastair Cook, as he has been performing for Surrey for years. Burns needed a big score and the only reason he did not get a century in the final game was because he was trying to score quickly. Sibley has been ‘feast or famine’, and that is because once he gets ‘in’ he makes it count, unlike Joe Denly who makes painful 30s and does not go on.
  5. West Indies love playing England. Jermaine Blackwood averages 55 batting against England and 24 against everyone else. Roston Chase gets more wickets against England than anyone else. West Indies have always loved beating England! England must stop under estimating them.
  6. James Anderson and Stuart Broad are both brilliant bowlers, and at test match level remain well ahead of the rest of the pack. Don’t get me wrong, Jofra Archer, Chris Woakes and Mark Wood are fine bowlers and Archer will develop into one of England’s best. But right now, Broad and Anderson are in another league and the pair can be considered in the same terms as Botham and Willis, Akram and Younis, Walsh and Ambrose….take your pick from the greats.
  7. At Old Trafford you win the toss and bat first. If you pick an extra spinner you bat first.. If in doubt, ask former Australian greats Mark Taylor, Steve Waugh and Shane Warne about the 1997 Ashes test match when Taylor batted first in terrible conditions and won by 268 runs. Mind you, with Warne in the team, you bat first too. Just ask Ricky Ponting.
  8. Joe Root is growing into the job. It has taken a while, but in South Africa and at Old Trafford, it felt like Root’s team. He played magnificently in the second innings of the last test match – I know he scored a double century in New Zealand but this innings was close to Root at his best. I was critical of the Headingley declaration in 2017 which, in my view, threw away a game that England did not need to win. Here, England did need to win but he got all his declarations exactly right. He is at his best when he can be aggressive.
  9. Balancing team selection for the short and long term is tricky – particularly in lockdown. England got it wrong at Southampton by leaving out Broad. West Indies got it wrong at Old Trafford by not resting Gabriel and then played a spinner and bowled first. The lesson is surely that you pick your best team at the start of a series, but if in doubt that someone is fit, rest them.
  10. Both teams deserve a pat on the back for professionalism. Playing in front of an empty stadium was surely odd, but the cricket was a good standard and was compelling viewing. We want the crowd back – but the teams showed that good cricket can be put on behind closed doors. I suspect the doors will have to be closed for a while yet after today’s announcements.
The old firm. Picture from the BBC

For England, we would like to have learned a couple more things, and they will hope to work out a few more things in the remaining test matches this summer. Joe Denly again has not done enough to justify his place. Zak Crawley has done better but has not quite done enough to ensure selection, however he should be restored to the number 3 slot and get a sustained run in that position now. Whether Ben Stokes bowls or not, England cannot get away with just 6 batsman against Pakistan so Jos Buttler will go back to 7 – and I am not sure it suits him at 7 – his record at 6 is better. However, at 6 he had a chance to cement his place, but did not quite take it. He will keep his place, but needs a hundred.

As for the bowlers? We knew England had strong options, but it would be good to see match changing performances from Woakes, Archer and Wood. Archer was close at Southampton and Woakes followed on from Broad’s magic and Wood was not at his best. Team selection does not get any easier in a biosecure bubble.

Day 1: England edge day 1 but Ruth Strauss dominates

Day 1: England 258/4 – Pope 91*, Burns 57, Buttler 56*, Roach 2/56

The most important thing about this test match is the focus on The Ruth Strauss Foundation – #RedforRuth. Sir Andrew Strauss spoke perfectly about the challenges he has faced in recent years and the work of the foundation. I would ask anyone reading this to take a look at the Foundation or watch the video. It was Ian Bishop on commentary who said that he could not begin to imagine what Strauss has been through. I would not try to do it justice either – other than to say that Strauss and his family deserve so much love and respect.

If you can make a donation or contribute via the auction then please do.

The cricket seems secondary, but it was a good day of cricket. By the end of the day England were moving ahead but the first two sessions were tight. Both sides made interesting selections at the start of the day.

West Indies selection of Rahkeem Cornwall made some sense initially, but combined with bowling first seems surprising. However, the toss was tricky given the (unusual?) Manchester weather today and the forecast. I suspect Joe Root will be happy to have not had to make the choice. Undoubtedly, questions will be asked about Cornwall’s build, but at the end of day all that will matter will be his performances. Cornwall bowled ok and is clearly a sharp slip catcher – highlighted by the catch taken to dismiss Rory Burns. I think questions also have to be asked about the fitness of Shannon Gabriel. Gabriel seems to keep bowling, but I am not sure it is acceptable for him to be on and off the field so much. However, when he does bowl, it is generally quick. West Indies best bowler has has been Kemar Roach, who has deserved more luck in the series.

England always had a tricky call to make when it became clear that Ben Stokes was not fully fit. The problem with players like Stokes is that they want to do everything – so England had to pick a bowling attack that could cope without Stokes, but also ensure Stokes does not feel forced to bowl when not fit. This was sometimes a problem when managing Andrew Flintoff. In the end, the option England took was to drop a batsman. It is not the choice I would have made, and Zak Crawley can feel very unlucky. However, in the end I quite like the selection in the context of the must win game that might well be rain shortened. Going in with Jos Buttler batting at 6 carries some risk, but it is also an aggressive move – and this England team are best when playing positive cricket. I also would not play Chris Woakes and James Anderson in the same team too often and would have selected Sam Curran. However, Woakes is the stronger batting option at number 7.

Once play started, England lost Dominic Sibley early thanks to some clever bowling by Roach. Root was starting to find some form when he needlessly ran himself out. It was a fine piece of fielding by Roston Chase, but runs like that are not sensible on day 1. Stokes was undone by a slight lack of footwork and some swing. Burns batted well but played a poor shot on 57 and missed the chance to cement his place in the team with a century. Burns has a rather Root-like tendency to fall between 50 and 100 and a definite problem with Chase who keeps getting him out. However, he does look like a good option at the top of the order though I fear for his technique in Australia. With Crawley around and Dan Lawrence, Burns’ place is not yet certain.

From then on England were in control. Ollie Pope was lucky to escape a top edged pull and also should have been run out early on. Pope has all the makings of a class player for England in all formats, though in test cricket might need to tighten up when driving through the off side. He played well and deserves a 100 tomorrow. After his performance in South Africa, Pope was assured of his spot. The same cannot be said of Jos Buttler, though 40 in the last game would have got him a few more games. Today he played extremely well and looked just the player that England keep looking for when selecting him. He looked every inch a test match player. If Buttler could get up to three figures, England will have enough runs and he will be sure of a place for a while.

With Buttler, England really do have a conundrum. People have considered that Buttler is suited to the Adam Gilchrist role. When one looks at Gilchrist’s record, it is incredible that he so often made runs at 7 with no recognised allrounders to follow. Buttler though has played better at 6 than 7. I think Buttler needs to understand his role. In that World Cup Final batting with Stokes, his role was clear. At number 7 in test matches, I think Buttler has struggled to know how to play. At 6, Buttler knows he can play a proper innings. I think batting with a proactive player like Pope helps too. When both Buttler and Jonny Bairstow have played in the same team, England tended to put Buttler at 7 and Bairstow at 5. However, I wonder now if this was the wrong way around. Bairstow was much more successful at 7 and Buttler has played well at 6. However, if Buttler is going to keep wicket, it is hard to find a way for him to bat regularly at 6 – unless Root bats at 3. Why such small differences of position seem to impact England batsman so much is a mystery. However, England need to look at how they have handled Crawley who soon will have batted in every spot in the top 6. Clarity of role is clearly something England players need.

Day 2 will almost certainly be rain curtailed at some point, but will be crucial. If England can push up to 350 they will have a strong position. However, with such a long tail England could fall short of 300 if West Indies bowl well tomorrow. Experience tells us that in England, test matches where the first innings score is around 300 are generally exciting games. Lets hope that is the case in this game.

Archer’s Cummings moment

Day 1: England 207/3 – Sibley 86*, Stokes 59*, Chase 2/53

Jofra Archer provided today’s talking point, without being in the team. He was removed from the team at the eleventh hour after he chose to disregard the rules and return to his home in Brighton before heading to Manchester. Google tells me that the Ageas Bowl to Old Trafford is 227 miles (I have done Southampton to Stockport many times and it is quite a nice drive traffic pending). Inject Brighton into the mix and it goes to 320 miles and adds the M25 to the collection of motorways needed. I question the acceptability of this behaviour in normal circumstances, let alone now. It plays into a bizarre narrative of political figures, such as Dominic Cummings amongst other senior political figures globally who have considered themselves above the rules. Carlos Brathwaite spoke of his disappointment on Test Match Special, but said that Archer’s transgression was relatively minor. I do not agree and, as Ashley Giles outlined in interview, the consequences of these actions could have been the end of the cricket season. Brathwaite also played down the role of Archer as a role model. Again, I have to disagree. These players are watched by millions of people of all ages. Like with the politicians, the rules have to be seen to apply to all – even to England’s best bowler.

I wrote last night that cricket in a bio-secure bubble has been shown it can work. Today we were reminded that one foolish action, and Archer’s action was foolish, can bring it all crashing down. Covid-19 is like that. A single mistake can result in an infection. Fortunately for the ECB, the season goes on. One wonders why the players are driving around in cars and not travelling by coach. Failing that, one wonders why nobody noticed that not all the players arrived at Old Trafford at the same time. After the Stokes incident in 2017, I wondered if the players should be more tightly controlled. However, I believe that personal accountability is key to life, both on and off the cricket field. My feeling is that in the public eye you need to be more careful, not less. Players are responsible for their own actions and Archer will now suffer the consequences. I will not criticise the ECB for allowing personal accountability, but perhaps the education on these issues needs to be clearer. And I suspect a coach is now being procured for the next journey to Southampton. As for Archer, he cannot automatically return for the third test match, and nor should youngsters like Sam Curran or Ollie Robinson sit behind Archer in the queue. Archer will have to earn his place in the team again – and he will undoubtedly do so.

A final note on the subject. Brathwaite was not happy with the way Archer was vilified for his actions. Unfortunately, with the image that Archer cultivates, he will have to accept the criticism alongside the adulation. However, now we move on. Archer will have to endure missing the remainder of the series against West Indies. Giles made it clear that an employment disciplinary process will invoke. Other than that, no sanction is needed. A mistake was made, a foolish one. But we all make mistakes. What matters the most is what we learn from them.

Eventually we were able to focus on the action, and England have had a good day, despite working extremely hard to turn Roston Chase into Shane Warne. Burns and Crawley both perished to Chase, but really both should not have done so. Burns missed a straight ball and Crawley pushed the ball into Jason Holder’s waiting hands. Joe Root looked ‘rusty’ and played a poor shot. Mike Atherton said on commentary that as a ‘glass half empty’ opener, he would have been expecting that trap – the wide ball to drive at. But after so many months away from the game, and bot even being able to play in the intersquad game, I think we can cut Root some slack. He could do with a century or two this summer though.

I was surprised to hear some criticism of Dominic Sibley by Ebony Rainford-Brent though. He clearly needs to improve some aspects of his game (who doesn’t?) but you cannot argue with his record so far at the highest level. As Nasser Hussain pointed out, also on Sky, he needs to find a way to deal with spin. Without Stokes’ proactive approach to the spin, perhaps Sibley would have ground himself into a mess. For me though, the only time Sibley got into trouble was when he felt under pressure to score, and some of this pressure came from Stokes, who was frustrated. However, once Stokes settled down, they formed a strong partnership. It is a reminder that 2 people can work together in totally different ways and be effective. Sibley needs to ensure he does not get totally stuck, but other than that change nothing. His approach of ‘grinding the bowlers down’ will make him popular with the middle order, not to mention the bowlers. We have been crying out for a Geoffrey Boycott / Atherton / Alastair Cook opener for years and we must not criticise him in the way that Nick Compton was criticised for slow scoring. Indeed, Sibley is the first England opener since Cook to score 50s in consecutive games.

It was not such a good day for West Indies, though again they never lost control. One hopes that they will be able to get Shannon Gabriel through the game. Playing him was a risk, but an understandable one. However, it will increase the other bowlers workload. Chase bowled accurately and Holder could easily have had a few wickets. Sky made a great deal of the fact that Kemar Roach not taken a wicket for ages, but while maintaining an economy rate of 1.85 he does not need to worry – his time will come. He is part of an overall attack, and by bowling so tightly, makes a great contribution.

England now have to take the opportunity. They should get 400 here, but anything less than 300 is a total failure.

Finally, another complaint about the amount of time taken to get the game started. For an hour we saw a rain free ground with no cricket happening. Then the players came out for an hour before going back into lunch. It meant that by 2PM we had only seen an hour of play. Yes conditions have to be safe, but test match cricket has to deal better with rain delays. Either play could have started at 12, or if that was really not safe (unlikely) then lunch should have been taken at 11:45 to allow play to start at 12. Tea could be taken early or an extra break slotted into the session (2 twenty minute breaks as opposed to a 40 minute and a 20 minute break). We have to get flexible, or else test match cricket will die.

England must pick the best team for each game and take every chance

England v West Indies 2nd test match: 11:00 on 16th July at Old Trafford

The return of test match cricket was a success. The bio-secure environment worked and can be copied elsewhere. It was not perfect, and the total silence that greeted runs and wickets took some getting used to. The silence reminded me of silence at Lords in 1981 when Sir Ian Botham returned to the Pavilion. At Southampton, both teams deserve a great deal of credit for being competitive from ball one – despite the silence and limited preparation. We now know that test matches behind closed doors can work, and that is a huge relief to all of us in need of cricket to watch.

It can work – Southampton did a great job. Picture from Twitter

In the first test match we saw a good game with an exciting last day, and established that ‘this can work’. However, England made some poor decisions and missed chances. West Indies were workmanlike, consistent and well led. Only Shai Hope and John Campbell failed to make a significant contribution. West Indies played a style of cricket that took advantage of England’s mistakes. West Indies showed that they can be a high quality team and deserved to win, but England were to some degree responsible for their own downfall. At 1-0 down with 2 to go, England cannot afford to underestimate the opposition or make mistakes. The catches must be taken, but perhaps even more crucially, some of the 20+ scores need to become centuries – and Joe Root needs to take a lead on this and set the example.

It starts with selection though. After the first test match, Mike Selvey tweeted that England should focus on the opposition in front of them, not the opposition they face in 18 months time (he went on to make some good clarifications in later tweets). The requirement to build a team for the Ashes is clear, but if that results in confused decision making that undervalues the immediate opposition, it will do more harm than good. West Indies are a dangerous team to underestimate, and the decision to rest Jimmy Anderson and Stuart Broad in 2012 at Edgebaston led to a second string attack being punished by, of all people, Tino Best in a memorable 95. Selvey is right – England must pick the best team for today. That does not mean we ignore the future, nor does it mean that England cannot pick different teams for different games. It does mean that England have a clarity of selection, and flexibility to make changes.

Crawley looks every inch a test match player. Picture from Wisden

Today England have announced 13 players for the second test match starting, and it is an interesting squad. I had expected that England would persist with Joe Denly at the expense of Zak Crawley. This would have been the wrong decision so I was pleased to see England announce that Crawley will bat at number 3. After the performances of both Denly and Crawley at Southampton, only one decision was sensible. One could argue that if England are dropping Denly they should also drop Jos Buttler, but I think it is reasonable for Buttler to be given until the end of the series. However, Buttler cannot be allowed to play as he is doing for the rest of the summer. With Buttler, it seems that confidence is more of an issue than perhaps he would like to admit, and England must be careful not to damage Buttler’s one day game in pursuit of the test match Buttler.

The bowling raises an eyebrow. England have ‘rested’ both Anderson and Mark Wood. One assumes that Broad and Chris Woakes will play, though Sam Curran will never be far away. One wonders if the decision about which bowlers would play in which games was made before the series started, because it does seem some odd decisions are being made – resting two bowlers at once creates a totally different attack. Whilst Anderson and Wood need to be looked after, it is Jofra Archer that needs to be looked after the most, as he bowled the most overs of the 3 at Southampton and is most likely to impact an Ashes tour (Anderson should not go to Australia and Wood’s impact is not as consistent as Archer’s). Ironically, Old Trafford would usually be the place for Wood to succeed – and is of course Anderson’s home ground. Broad ought to have played at Southampton (instead of Wood), and perhaps England needed to make a late change to the plan when conditions changed.

England must look after Archer. Picture from Wisden

Talking about flexibility, England need to make sure they are flexible when the coin is tossed. Ben Stokes defended his decision to bat first, arguing that events of the last day justified it. However, the reason England lost the game is because they conceded a 100 run lead on first innings. When it was dark and damp on day 1 after a long rain delay, it was the time to bowl – whatever the preconceived plan was.

For West Indies, it will be a case of ‘more of the same’ and I am sure Hope and Campbell will keep places, though a full time spiner would be useful at Old Trafford, bringing Rahkeem Cornwall into the picture. The question will be if Shannon Gabriel can get through the series – and if he does, England will struggle to win 2 games.

My team:

Burns, Sibley, Crawley, Root (c), Stokes (v/c), Pope, Buttler (w/c), Woakes, Bess, Archer, Broad

Old Trafford – the Home of Cricket! Venue for the next test match.

Day 4: A missed opportunity for England

Day 4: England 284/8 – Archer 5, Wood 1, Gabriel 3/62

For England, Day 4 must be considered a missed opportunity. Whilst West Indies again bowled well, the top order scores of 42, 50, 29, 76 and 46 show a failure to capitalise. Someone in the top 5 needed a century, as it was always likely that wickets would fall in a hurry once a breakthrough came. Burns and Denly contrived to gift their wickets, Crawley was a slightly soft dismissal and Sibley appeared to lose concentration. Twice. For Stokes, it is too scores in the forties and 2 below par dismissals – but credit to the bowlers for putting the ball in the right place often.

The West Indies key tactic has been about keeping control of the game. At no point did the scoring rate get remotely out of control. With the exception of Shannon Gabriel, all the West Indies bowlers had economy rates well under 3, and Gabriel took 3 wickets. For a while, England seemed to be picking things up when Crawley and Stokes were batting – but Crawley had the higher strike rate of the two which was still below 60. It means when that wicket came, England were still not far ahead. They went on to lose 5 late wickets cheaply late in the day. The West Indies discipline has kept them well ahead of the game and they should beat England comfortably.

What are England to do? Well, for now, they must focus on trying to get as near to a 200 lead as possible. The bowlers still have a chance – with bat and ball – to show they were the right selections. When England bowl, they must be ‘on the money’ from the first over, and will need to have West Indies 30/3 and shift the limpet-like Kraigg Brathwaite to have a chance of an unlikely victory. If Brathwaite digs in, as he often does against England, West Indies will cruise to any sub 250 target. Looking ahead to Old Trafford, it is a shame that none of the top 4 have really grabbed their position in this game, but it would seem extremely odd if Denly plays at Crawley’s expense to accommodate Joe Root.

One other talking point is the Gabriel no ball. Sir Ian Botham bowled famously few no balls, and he just kept back from the line. I think no balls should be minimised and therefore the penalty for no balls should be harsh. I also think that it would be easier to have a policy of ‘if in doubt, call it a no ball’, rather than the current policy which is the other way round. This would speed the game up as well. Of course, in the end, it made little difference to the day.

Day 2: Same old England

Time of writing: Day 3 – 12:20 – West Indies 108/2 – Brathwaite 50, Brooks 5, Bess 1/11

Day 2 was back to the same old England. At 35/1, England needed to be looking at 300. They barely made 200. West Indies bowled well, but the England batting looked weak and nobody scored a 50. We kept talking about how you cannot judge a pitch until both sides have batted and bowled on it – but West Indies closed just 1 wicket down and looked strong.

England seem to struggle with the pace of batting. Back in 2010, the likes of Jonathan Trott and Alistair Cook were happy to dig in and bat and bat. They did not score quickly, though Trott did not let bad balls go to often. When Burns and Denly were batting, it all looked ok but runs were not coming. Ben Stokes and Jos Buttler batted sensibly but Stokes played a poor shot and Buttler got a good ball. Dom Bess saved the day with the bat, and has just got a wicket. England need to find the balance of patience and aggression as they did in South Africa.

However, South Africa’s bowling in January is not up to the quality of what we are now seeing from West Indies. West Indies have a really good bowling attack in this game and have responded well to the empty grounds. In the face of it, it seems that Jason Holder should not be taking 6 wickets too often, but as part of a 4 man pace attack, he is extremely handy. It was a team bowling effort – even if the bowlers were shared between 2 bowlers only.

At the moment, Holder is well ahead in the battle with Ben Stokes – including in the context of DRS reviews. At the moment, Holder has made good decisions – including with regards to DRS. At the moment, Stokes made a poor decision to bat first – it made no sense in such murky conditions. At the moment England made a poor decision to drop Stuart Broad – this pitch looks perfect for Broad.

It can all change in a flash of course – and England really need it to. Jimmy Anderson, Jofra Archer and Mark Wood can show that England’s selection was good – and Bess already is well on his way to doing so.

One other talking point from this test match. The on field umpiring has not been good at all. Richard Illingworth and Richard Kettleborough want to be very grateful for the excellent third umpiring we have seen from Michael Gough – and thank goodness West Indies had not run out of reviews a la Tim Paine. We must remember that this lockdown situation is as hard for umpires as it is for players. These are proven good umpires and are absolutely full of integrity. However, any suggestion that we do not need neutral umpires has been dismissed already in these game. But I think the ICC need to reconsider if all 3 umpires need to be neutral.

Day 1: Anticlimax?

England 35/1 – Burns 20, Denly 14, Gabriel 1/19

Of course, it rained. Picture from MSN.

In many ways, the cricket was an anticlimax. But in a sense, it was reassuring to begin the season with delays due to rain and bad light. That was just so typical, especially after the dry June. Not being at the ground it is hard to know, but on television we saw the pictures of a covered pitch with no rain currently falling. Later, we saw the ridiculous spectacle of an early finish due to bad light – with flood lights. This has been going on for a few years now, but going off for bad light – with flood lights beaming – does not look good. If today had been a One Day fixture, we would have seen more overs. If Test Matches are to survive, the ICC just have to sort this out.

The cricket we did see was good, solid test match cricket. I really rate Shannon Gabriel as a bowler and he easily could have had more wickets then he did. The wicket he did get made Dom Sibley look slightly foolish, but was a result of the ball before when he beat the bat with a little bit of away movement. We cannot be critical of Sibley – sometimes openers do get out to good bowling, but he did make a misjudgement. Denly was fortunate, but he can resume his innings tomorrow – he needs a score, but hopefully he can also use up a lot of balls. Burns also needs to re-establish himself, but after an early LBW scare – saved by ‘Umpire’s Call’ – looked solid. Both batsman need to dig in tomorrow as the West Indies bowling attack is strong – their stats over the last 2 years show real consistency and the worst thing for England would be Stokes coming to the crease before England post 50.

Away from cricket and weather, the day will be memorable for the coverage. It is great to see Test Matches back on the BBC – just highlights of course, but the music evokes memories of those voices from yesteryear (Benaud and Laker mainly). The BBC have made a good (re)start. However, Sky chose to focus on #BlackLivesMatter. Hearing Michael Holding and Ebony Rainford-Brent talking about their experiences of racism was chilling. Both were emotional, both were strong, both were positive about the future. The players were united. Cricket owes it to them, and many others, to make sure that racism in cricket is stamped out.

Holding and Rainford-Brent were inspiring. Watch ‘Mikey’ speaking here
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