Cricket 2014
Alistair Cook Faces the Moment Of ODI Truth
November 23rd 2014
After a full two months without cricket, England, without Stuart Broad and Jimmy Anderson are on the road again. The 7-match series against Sri Lanka will be a good litmus test as Sri Lanka were absolutely awful as stand-in stuntmen for the West Indies in India. If England lose badly, it will be no good blaming the schedule, the lack of practice team absences or the fact that Sri Lanka’s chefs cannot find the right ingredients for the England diet guide’s recipes.
The absence
of Broad and Anderson allows Steve Finn to come back and lead the attack. In a
low-key series, he will have far less pressure on him that if he were playing
in England. Chris Jordan, Chris Woakes and Harry Gurney all have their reasons
to want to make a statement. England fans tend to be hyper-critical and
unforgiving. Players are compared unfavourably with their equivalents in other
sides and the idea of backing the XI that is picked is anathema to most: most
fans are happy to see their side lose if it is a step in the right direction of
getting their pet hate player dropped.
Right now, the
knives are out for Cook, Bell and Jordan. The fact that all three have, in the
not too distant past, done good, sometimes great things for their team is
conveniently forgotten.
Cook probably
has the most difficult task and one that has just been made even harder. There
was a big outcry when Alex Hales was dropped for Moeen Ali for the first
England warm-up game. The fact that Hales’ innings against India (40 from 63
balls, 42 from 55 balls, 6 from 7 balls & 4 from 9 balls) speak of an
increasing paralysis as the Indians worked him out after a quick start in the
first match, was ignored by most fans. The sad fact is that having scored 32
from his first 31 balls in ODIs, his next 103 balls produced just 60 runs and
his total freeze after a decent start – just 8 runs from his last 32 balls – probably
lost England that first match. What Cook was not betting on was that Moeen
would continue his golden form, hitting a 50 from 21 balls and making a golden
case to continue opening in ODIs. If Hales, who will surely play at least three
of the ODIs as an opener, starts to work out how to work international bowling,
with its greater accuracy and smaller margins for error, the pressure for a
Hales-Moeen opening partnership will become intense. It doesn’t take a PhD in
Astrophysics to work out that in that case, with hitters of the class of
Bopara, Taylor, Morgan, Buttler and Root available, at least one of Cook and
Bell and possibly both will be surplus to requirements when England work out
their best side.
There is a feeling
that Alistair Cook has earned a stay of execution as captain, but that his role
in the ODI set-up will become untenable if England have a poor winter. Cook
argues, not unreasonably, that the only time that England have reached #1 in
the ICC ODI rankings was with him as captain, but he is smart enough to know
that ODIs evolve rapidly and that England’s current set-up is outdated. There
is also a feeling that an opportunity was missed by not giving the captaincy to
Eoin Morgan or James Taylor for this series. Probably the natural captain of
the ODI side post-World Cup is James Taylor: it will be interesting to see how
many opportunities Alistair Cook is willing to give him to state a case to take
over as ODI captain.
However, the
hooks are also out for Chris Jordan. Memories are short. England fan memories
are shorter still. During the nightmare tour of Australia, one of the few
positive points was the fire that Chris Jordan showed with the new ball in the
ODI series – despite modest seeming statistics, mainly caused by taking some
punishment at the death, he was one of the few success stories of the winter
and certainly should have been in the Test side ahead of Tremlett and Rankin.
Last summer though he has been in and out of the side. He has lost form, rhythm
and confidence as a result. And, to make things worse, players and analysts have
got on his case, advising his to change his run-up, to change his action. Chris
Jordan’s great asset has been his natural talent and ability. England history
is littered with bowlers who were coached out of their natural actions and lost
all form and confidence as a result (Bob Willis, Norman Cowans, James Anderson
and Steve Finn have been just a few of the high-profile casualties).
In
Australia, Chris Jordan ran in, let the ball go at 90+mph and just got on with
it. He went for a few runs, but also put in some hostile spells, quickly
establishing himself as the new ball bowler. Right now, Jordan is struggling.
He is spraying the ball. He is expensive. He needs to get back to doing what he
does well: just run in and let the ball go and knock over top-order batsmen.
Nothing saves runs as well as getting the opposition 2 or 3 down inside the
initial powerplay overs.
In the one warm-up
game that England were able to play – albeit winning on D/L after a shortened
Sri Lanka A innings – Moeen Ali and Chris Woakes (another who is turning to a
pet hate of the fans) were superb, aggregating 17-1-49-3 between them. Chris
Jordan went for 48 though, from just 5 overs. He is running out of time to turn
things around and, just as important, to convince the fans.
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