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March 29, 2011Posted by Michael Jeh on 03/29/2011 in Michael Jeh
Can Australia's golden era ever be matched?
Young players in Australia lack the enthusiasm to match the Asian giants
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Ricky Ponting's retirement as captain marks the end of a golden era in Australian cricket, the likes of which I do not believe we will ever see again. His greatness as a batsman still has some years to run if the Australian selectors are prepared to dispense with tradition and still pick the best batsman in the country even though he is no longer captain. Kim Hughes was the last captain I can think of who resigned the captaincy and returned to the ranks in 1984 but his tenure was short-lived at the hands of a mighty West Indian bowling attack. I can't see Ponting suffering that same fate - he is too good a player for that and there aren't any bowling attacks capable of dismantling him in that fashion.
It will be interesting to watch Ponting assimilate back into the nucleus of the team and see if the relief of the burden of captaincy, and the accompanying media spotlight, relaxes or frustrates him. I suspect his sheer class as a batsman will win the day. Watching the way he celebrated his century in Ahmedabad last week suggested a man with yet unfinished business and a steely determination to keep proving people wrong. I predicted his century on my radio program a few days before the match but to be honest, it was hardly a brave prediction. His record in big matches, coupled with his skill and mental strength pointed to the very real possibility that he would play an innings of some significance very soon. And so it proved.
The end of the Ponting era and the end of the World Cup also heralds the end of the cricket season in Australia. From grown men to little boys, the kits are being packed up and cricket disappears from the everyday landscape for at least five months. That's one reason why I think Australia will struggle to repeat a period of success that started with the latter part of the Border era and finished today with Ponting. Unlike the Asian countries for whom cricket has no real natural predator, Australia has a strong football culture (AFL, rugby codes, soccer) and it's cricket infrastructure is never going to be able to compete with the sheer numbers of people for whom cricket is much more than another sport.
My own cricket season came to a premature end halfway through a grand final, courtesy of split webbing and eleven stitches in my bowling hand. The Under-8s team that I coach also finished up last Saturday. Many of the young lads in that team are unlikely to continue in the sport, not for any other reason than a lack of genuine passion for the game. My son is one of the exceptions; despite not showing any great natural ability (at least I know he's my son!!!), his love for the game is quite unlike any of his mates. He mourned the end of the season whilst a few of his mates breathed a sigh of relief. He went straight to the backyard to start practising again for next season whilst his mates probably kicked footballs against the fence. I just can't see this happening in the Colombo of my youth where there was never even a suggestion that cricket needed an 'off season'. It wasn't necessarily structured games of organised cricket but backyard/laneway battles that raged all evening until darkness descended and we reluctantly straggled home, swatting mosquitoes with imaginary pull shots.
Australia's strength at the top level will always be strong. There's too much money in the system for that not to happen amongst the top cricketers in the country. It's lower down the ladder where our lack of depth will be exposed. Perhaps no one outside the country will ever see this because all they see is a national team that will always be competitive. Looking at the way junior cricket is played (and coached), I fear for the long-term future of of the lower rungs of cricket.
Despite my pessimism in this narrow sense, I can still see blue sky. Through sheer chance, I came across an unassuming chap called Cameron Tradell who runs a coaching business called Sweetsport. I watched him coach my 7-year-old son, listened to the way he simplified everything down to the most basic level and then saw some amazing results within the hour! It humbled me that there are coaches who come to the game with no great reputations as elite players themselves but still manage to cut through to young kids. His coaching techniques were so simple as to almost be "why didn't I think of that?" but the truth is that I've never heard anybody else quite communicate with young children like he did.
There are other coaches like Cameron around the country who volunteer their time and wisdom in hidden corners, often unnoticed and unheralded. The system will probably never discover them because they fly under the radar without blowing their own trumpets and without attracting the attention of the cricket administrators who often miss these talented coaches. Parents like me who have played a decent level of cricket tend to dominate junior coaching roles without anyone ever questioning whether I can translate my own cricketing knowledge into a language that youngsters can understand. In one hour, Cameron made more progress than I was able to achieve in three years. It served as a humble reminder that the best talent, players or coaches, are often found by accident, in environments that have a love of cricket that transcends politics, parents and over-administration.
Junior cricket, at my son's club anyway, is predominantly played in the V between midwicket and fine-leg. dominated by strong boys who can play the 'hoik' to every ball. Most bowlers at this age can barely get the ball to the other end without a few wides each over. A far cry indeed from the Azar Maidan in Mumbai where I recently watched a group of very young lads with impeccable batting techniques facing a bowler who bowled doosras on request! These Indian kids were probably not deemed "elite" and will probably never grace our tv screens but their rudimentary skills suggested that something (or somebody) has got to these youngsters at an early age and set them up with a framework that they can extend as their bodies grow stronger. Cameron Tradell was one of the few coaches who was able to get the message across to my son (and friend) that playing straight was a long-term goal that would outlast the temporary glory of scoring cheap runs exclusively through square leg. Try telling a seven year old that technique is more important than runs - this was the first time playing straight made sense because of the use of a unique bat that rewarded the boys for hitting the ball with a full face. It absolutely pinged off the sweet spot when they hit straight down the ground and all of a sudden, the hoik was yesterday's shot!
Ponting himself was a junior prodigy, brought up on a classical technique and clearly coached by someone who knew how to coach a kid properly. We are reminded today that soon he will no longer stride out to bat for Australia at number three, arguably our greatest ever in that crucial position. I don't think we'll ever see the likes of Ponting again in this country unless our junior cricket system can encourage kids who can bat for long periods and play straight. Not unless we can find ways to encourage coaches who can see the big picture and can find ways to communicate those simple techniques to young minds who cannot easily understand why a single to mid-on is less preferable to a boundary through square leg. That's the difference I see at the grassroots level between the Asian countries and Australia at a very young age.
Perhaps it has always been thus....perhaps we'll look back on the Ponting era and wonder if we'll ever see another batsman of his quality. Yes, Sachin Tendulkar is another special batsman but somehow, I expect those cricket-crazy countries, distracted by little else, to produce another Little Master again. I showed my son some footage from that maidan in India and his jaw dropped. And then he picked up his rugby ball and walked out the back door. Cricket season finished - time to move on. Et tu Ponting.
"soon he will no longer stride out to bat for Australia at number three, arguably our greatest ever in that crucial position"
Umm hello, Bradman?
Fox - your articles are getting better and better. It would be interesting to see whether kids cricket should be contrived even more to encourage better technique. For example, the boundary between mid-wicket and fine leg could be counted as 2 not 4, and conversely, the straight boundary as 8 not 4.
interesting observation there michael. the thing is its always been this way in australia. just look at shane warne he used to play reserves for st kilda before making a name for himself in cricket. and he is definatly not the only one to do so. the younger marsh brother has just chosen to play cricket over a promissing afl career, and there are countless others that have done so in the past and many that will in the future. aussies just love sport! winter for footy, summer for cricket. footy has an advantage in that there are far more oppertunities to make a name for your self. but cricket can boast it is the only sport which the whole nation follows as footy divides the country in that rugbys played in the north, afl in the south. in under 10's cricket kids should just be having fun, not worrying about not being able to bowl a toe crushing yorker. if they enjoy playing they will take it much more seriously as they get older. nothing to be concerned about!
The best cricket article I have read in a L O N G time, Samir - and I have been reading some rather good ones of late for the world cup. Will share this with anyone who loves see the game getting a buy-in amongst people of single-digit age.
lately I have been concerned at the way limited overs cricket, epsecially the shortest version, is becoming a major cause of skewing the perspectives & incentives of kids growing up with it..I may be paranoid but I fear that across the world coaches / administrators/ first class teams / Test teams must fall in line and make first class / Test format attactive to nextgen to ward off some serious risk of extinction. The current crop we know (including the 18-20 year olds playing the game) grew up knowing the order of things correctly. Not so the 7-10 yr kids. They nee to be enticed back to the main format. Azad maidan is in Mumbai - that is one place in the whole world that will hold on to the tradition the longest. Problem is everywhere else.
Oooops - sorry to call you 'Samir', Michael. Maybe you didn't mind but I still need to apologise!
On "finding ways to communicate to young minds who cannot easily understand why a single to mid-on is less preferable to a boundary through square leg": In the last 2 months I have been occasionally throwing balls to kids in my apartment complex..& I almost felt you were doing it with me when I read those lines.
Out of five or six kids, only one plays straight..when I am there, and that only because he probably cares a little about getting my appreciation (which comes ONLY at the straight shots). The others play it once or twice after my 15th or 16th urge to play straight and then revert back to hoiks. When I come back after 5 or 6 days, they come back and proudly claim to me "Uncle I can bat better now' and proceed to play some better timed shots than before. ALL HOIKs, though.
It surely is difficult. Probably a big mind changing battle is wonOnce you get a kid to trust you on THAT & buy into playing the straight way. The key for a coach is to first make the kid look up to him.
I used to live in America, and from my observations, kids in India are a lot more focussed on the things that matter. While in America, I noticed that people have all the resources they need for success available at hand, but still they don't put it to good use. Here in India, kids don't have all those resources, but they still find ways to make it.
yeah, he's way better than any other plaeyr in the last 25 years when it comes to:a) rubbing palms after spitting copiously (and repeatedly)b) looking innocent as a baby and standing his ground after nicking to the keeperc) deeply respecting the umpire as long as he rules him not out' particularly after (b)d) scowling and gesticulating at the opposition's balcony while stomping off the grounde) setting shitty fields to spinners or giving them liberty to set their own shitty fieldsf) sending a man to sweeper cover for the 1st delivery of Days 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5g) selecting bowlers to dismiss nos. 10 & 11h) handing over the Ashes to English skippers .I'm sure there are probably a dozen other remarkable facets I missed will save it up for Jan 7, 2011! :)
Shanaka Amarasinghe Possessing the best disguised googly in Sri Lanka (because no one has ever really seen it), Shanaka is the finest legspinner to never have played top-level cricket. He is a popular cricket analyst and host of The Score, the No. 1-rated, if slightly infamous, sports show on radio in Sri Lanka. While in England playing rugby, he earned his LLM at King’s College and is a lawyer by training if not inclination. He is also an actor, a journalist, a writer, and thinks he is a comedian.
Mike Holmans, a database consultant by profession, has spent thirty summers (and a few winters) going to the cricket. Brought up in one and working in the other, his dearest wish is for a season to end with Yorkshire winning the county championship by beating runners-up Middlesex by one wicket with five minutes to go. If it’s also a summer when England win the Ashes, so much the better.
Michael Jeh Born in Colombo, educated at Oxford and now living in Brisbane, Michael Jeh (Fox) is a cricket lover with a global perspective on the game. An Oxford Blue who played first-class cricket, he is a Playing Member of the MCC and still plays grade cricket. Michael now works closely with elite athletes, and is passionate about youth intervention programmes. He still chases his boyhood dream of running a wildlife safari operation called Barefoot in Africa.
Saad Shafqat takes special pride that his cricket-watching life began during the three-month interval between Javed Miandad's debut Test in Lahore and Imran Khan's 12-wicket haul at Sydney. Although a practicing neurologist based in Karachi, cricket has never been far from his activities. He has co-authored Javed Miandad’s autobiography Cutting Edge and has been a contributor to Cricinfo since 2005. His regular column Reverse Swing appears fortnightly in Dawn, Pakistan’s leading English daily.