Paper Round
March 18, 2010

Where have England's heroes gone?

Posted on 18/03/2010

Martin Johnson was adamant Jonny Wilkinson’s England career is not over after he dropped the iconic fly-half for the weekend’s Six Nations climax in France, but the Telegraph’s Kevin Garside has taken the news rather badly. Having returned to his home and switched on the laptop whilst watching Lionel Messi dance around Stuttgart on Thursday night, Garside wonders where England’s heroes have gone...

No more Jonny. Another staple of British sport stood down by the ultimate arbiter; time. An antechamber of sporting heroes on the way out is filling. Wilkinson, ironically dropped not injured, joins that other blond bomber David Beckham and Michael Owen in the ancient clearing house at the end of careers.

All three hope to prolong their playing days but not where it matters, at the heart of the action, and by extension in our hearts. We are in a bad trot. Last year Freddie Flintoff left us, that one-man theatre who commanded the English cricketing stage like none since Sir Ian Botham.
Watching England labour to victory against Bangladesh, a team beaten by an innings 33 times in Tests, showed how much we miss him. The fall of Kevin Pietersen, a convenient Englishman at best, on 99 shone a symbolic light across the landscape. We are a run short of heroes to love, of players to get us out of bed in the morning with a song in our throats.

In our three most important sports; football, rugby and cricket, we are thus diminished. Praise be to the higher authority responsible for the gargantuan talent of Wayne Rooney. Where would we be without Manchester United's blue-eyed zephyr? With him England are in the queue to win the World Cup in South Africa. Were he to come to any harm, I'm relocating to the moon for a month.

Lower down the sporting canon, boxing said goodbye last year to Joe Calzaghe, a super middleweight world champion for 10 years. A farewell party is about to be held for Ricky Hatton, the pied piper of Hyde, who persuaded his disciples to follow him to Las Vegas in unprecedented numbers.

Amir Khan and David Haye maintain English excellence in the sweet science but only after dark on pay-per-view broadcasts, denying themselves and us, the universal connection made by Jonny and Becks. These two gave us certainty. Somehow we felt all was well with the world when they addressed a ball.

When Tiger Woods breaks cover at Augusta next month, world numbers four, five and six, Lee Westwood, Paul Casey and Ian Poulter, all Englishman, will be chasing him up the drive. Ulsterman Rory McIlroy is arguably the greatest young talent in golf.

Andy Murray doffs his cap to only two men in tennis, and Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal are two of the greatest to have played the game.

As important and uplifting as these contributors are, they do not set the sporting agenda. For that we need a hero with a ball in hand or at his feet. Wilkinson's demise is both heartbreak and opportunity. Danny Cipriani might have been the man to fill the void but he found love and Melbourne.

Is England's new full-back Ben Foden the boy to ease Jonny into retirement? Someone has to keep Rooney company. He can't do it alone.

Meanwhile, Duncan Fletcher produces a superbly crafted argument in the Guardian for why it would be foolish to cast Bangladesh to the Test cricket scrapheap. The key is an improvement in their fast bowling says Fletcher...


If some of the pundits had their way it would be a long time before England toured Bangladesh again. There have been plenty of suggestions that Bangladesh, beaten by 181 runs, should be demoted from Test cricket, either down to a second tier of nations or out of the cycle altogether. It is a viewpoint that I would question.

Poor as Bangladesh were in patches, England still needed to play proper cricket to beat them. We saw in this match that Bangladesh are improving as a side. If you plotted a graph of their progress since they came into Test cricket, the line would be curving steadily upwards. Junaid Siddique's 106 in the second innings made him the fifth Bangladeshi batsman to score a Test century since January 1. That is as many centuries in the last two and a half months as the team managed in the previous four years.

It has been 10 years since Bangladesh made their Test debut. In that time they have played 65 matches and won three of them. Critics have short memories. That record is in line with the trend for emerging Test nations. In their first 10 years of Test cricket, between 1982 and 1992, Sri Lanka played 37 Tests, and won two. In New Zealand's first decade they played 14 times without winning once (and took 45 matches to do so). No doubt there were people who wanted to kick those teams out of Test cricket then, too.

Where Bangladesh's record does differ is in the number of draws they have secured, only six, as opposed to Sri Lanka's 16. Sri Lanka were lucky in that they went on to discover Muttiah Muralitharan and were able to build a bowling attack around him. In the absence of such a star spinner, Bangladesh's big difficulty is fast bowling. There are two sides to the problem – their batsmen are not comfortable facing it, and their bowlers are not capable of delivering it. The first issue can be fixed, but the second is tougher to solve.

The weaknesses of their top order against fast bowling were clear in the first innings of this Test in Chittagong. Both Siddique and Imrul Kayes were bounced out. I know from my own playing days with Zimbabwe just how difficult it is as a batsman in a developing team to deal with the step up in pace that occurs when you play a top nation. It is a real shock to the system to come out of a net or a first class game where the bowling has been at 130kph to face a barrage in a Test match at 140kph.

Developing that bowling talent is a tough task. Even India have faltered because they do not have a consistent squad of pace bowlers who can really intimidate the opposition. Bangladesh face similar difficulties. Between the flat wickets and the heat and humidity of the conditions, not many young players are going to want to run up and bowl at 140kph for any period of time. One way forward would be to develop wickets that offer more encouragement for seam bowlers.

But the bedrock for future development is what is happening underneath Test cricket. I would want to visit and inspect Bangladesh's domestic set-up before passing judgment, but wherever you are in the world, strong first class cricket is absolutely crucial for Test success. You can't pluck players from a weak domestic league and expect them to make a quick transition to the top level. This also takes time. Bangladesh have had 10 years to work on their domestic structure. England have had more than 100, and still not got it right.


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