The last test of the
series would have been predictable in other recent visits to India, the home
team winning by an innings in the end with only Crawley, root and Bashir coming
out with much credit. But before the
match started I was hopeful of BB England closing the gap in the series. Well in the end England did lose the series
4-1 but even this eternal optimist can no longer claim we are the best Test
team in the world. To be fair we didn’t
do any worse than any of the other teams that visit India and we probably
worried them more than most, to go down by this margin isn’t a disgrace. But when it counted Stokes’ England were not
clinical enough and amongst all the brilliant BB cricket this problem has
reared up often over the last twelve months.
When England (or anyone) last won in India our spinners; Swann and
Panesar, were better than the home team’s and we had a batting line up full of proven
test class players. This time around our
inexperienced spinners done really bloody well but were not as good as Ashwin
and Jadeja, not that we could reasonably expect them to be. Also the Indian batsmen scored seven
centuries to England’s three, and for once Stokes had a poor series, enough
said.
For the first year
of the Stokes/McCullum tenure England consistently fielded the best possible XI
but from the start of the 2023 English summer this has not been the case. We’ve got to wait until July for another
England test match by which time we have to expect Harry Brook will be back in
contention which means realistically either Foakes or Bairstow will have to
make way. Obviously coming from the
Wicky’s union I would pick Foakes every time because he keeps with the
effortless excellence we would normally associate with batsmen like Gower or Lara. Fair play to mad Johnny for reaching 100 caps
but compare him to all of the other sixteen Englishmen to have reached this
milestone and he isn’t in the same class.
Maybe the selectors will decide to take a punt on a new face entirely
which might be the best course of action.
With the retirement
of the great Stuart Broad and the great Jimmy Anderson surely winding down, (despite
looking fresh in taking his 700th test wicket this week) there are
opportunities in the pace bowling line up.
Chris Woakes will surely be in the mix this summer as will Mark Wood but
these two are in their mid thirties so in the final stages of their
careers? For a while Ollie Robinson
looked like he was going to be an automatic choice but his fitness appears
suspect. There are a few around the
fringes like Potts and Tongue but what would we give to have Jofra Archer fit
and in rhythm? The biggest plus from the
Indian tour however is the spin bowling options, all of a sudden we have a
handful that can step up in test cricket.
Still on the subject
of sport I watched some brilliant rugby this weekend, (obviously Union, not the
headbutting competition practiced by convict colonies and northerners) in
particular the England-Ireland match which meant the six nations will go down
to the final weekend. But although we
call it the six nations I’m not sure this is entirely accurate. Ireland’s two tries were scored by a New
Zealander and in the Italy – Scotland match tries were scored by South Africans
and an Australian. I suppose this trend
started in cricket and England have been as guilty as anyone but for some
reason I think it devalues international rugby.
Tonight all the
worlds’ media obsessed will be tuned into the Oscars beamed around the world
from Hollywood. For anyone who has been
in isolation for their whole lives this is an award ceremony for people who are
really good at playing ‘pretend’. To
complicate things further these famous pretenders pretend they like each other
and everyone pretends the results aren’t fixed.
Or as we say round these parts, it’s a load of old bollocks.