Chris Rogers, even the English are behind you

By Layth Yousif / Roar Guru

You don’t need a Pom who lived in Australia for 18 months to tell you that Australian cricketers are tough characters.

But as a Middlesex member who regularly watches the team, I can say that Chris Rogers certainly is.

As you all know, he is a bloke who has scored a double-century against his own country, and who made his Test debut the match after the maelstrom around the Harbhajan Singh and Andrew Symonds racism dispute.

That aforementiond innings of 209 came from only 219 balls for Leicestershire against an attack containing Brett Lee, Jason Gillespie and Stuart MacGill in the momentous summer of 2005.

It occurred only a few days before that gripping first Ashes morning at Lords, and gave him the kudos of featuring in the highest opening stand against Australia in England in nearly a century.

Not much ruffles him.

It can even be argued that a sledge from Matthew Hayden in a Pura Cup game in 1999 added to Rogers’ motivation in winning a baggy green.

With Chris batting in only his fifth first-class match he stroked an early boundary, then looked in the direction of his teammates in the pavilion. Unfortunately at that moment they happened to be less than animated.

Hayden then shouted that the opening bat couldn’t have had any respect from his teammates if no-one clapped.

The jibe may have stung but it also steeled him to ultimately becoming the 399th man to wear the famed baggy green, when he debuted in 2008 against India at the WACA.

Reflecting the teak toughness of the era Rogers was told “Don’t stuff up” prior to his disappointing display. He fell for 4 and 15, both times against man-of-the-match Irfan Pathan.

But, as you guys were ruling the world at the time with 16 wins on the trot up to his debut, Australia had players to burn, and to his disappointment he was discarded.

In an interview shortly after the game that saw the famous run ended by one of India’s finest wins, he said: “I do remember the pure elation of being picked and the soul-crushing disappointment of failure and losing. What happened in the middle still feels like it passed in the blink of an eye”.

It was to be his only Test – so far at least. When he lost his Australian contract at the end of that summer he was told to get more runs.

He did.

Duly scoring over 5000 first-class runs between 2008 and now, his actions were crowned by being recalled to the Australian Test squad for the forthcoming Ashes.

Incidentally as I have tickets to four out of the five forthcoming Ashes Tests including Lords, and having seen us being crushed in the flesh by one of your best ever vintages on the 2002/03 tour, I am withholding my opinion on your squad until I see them play in English conditions.

Having suffered in too many ways for too long at the hands of Australian cricket I would never dream of underestimating an Aussie Ashes team.

My first glimpse should be at Taunton late June (taking my eight-year-old son to our ICC group clash at Edgbaston doesn’t count, unless you view it as a pre Ashes marker similar to the 20/20 blitz down at Southampton in 2005).

Rogers has certainly proved that hard work pays off.

In Middlesex’s impressive return to Division One of the County Championship last season he hit 1,086 runs (ave 40.22). His three centuries and a score of 98 in a summer of appalling weather saw his efforts lift us to a notable third place.

An important 138 on the final day dashed Lancashire’s hopes in late May, on a pitch where 13 wickets had fallen the day before.

Against the eventual Champions Warwickshire, the week after the Olympics, he hit an important 109 at their Test match ground.

On that note, I have to say it is such a shame we won’t see any Ashes cricket played at Edgbaston this summer. Even with the ground being England’s bearpit, and memories of 2005 still fresh, money talks – as horsetrading and higher bids from other venues put paid to their hopes.

I am reminded of a visit to Lords in the summer of 2011 when Rogers scored a fluent 145 against promotion rivals Northamptonshire. They included an impish if ageing Chaminda Vaas, who took eight wickets in the game.

Rogers did not get out to him in either innings.

Chris is a pro with great experience of English conditions who has never let anyone down in the County game. He is still well-regarded at Derbyshire where he scored runs in a struggling side.

He was even given their captaincy during a fruitful 2008 summer. In 2006 he accumulated 1352 runs for Northamptonshire including a career-best 319 versus Gloucestershire.

Hayden, not for the first time, got his sledging wrong. Rogers is popular, down to earth, and even Middlesex supremo ‘Grumpy Gus’ Frasier is pleased for him, although that may be more to do with the fact that Chris may only miss four county matches during the Ashes.

That fact could be crucial in the Championship, as my beloved Middlesex have made a flying start with two wins out of two.

With the first Ashes Test at Trent Bridge only two months away, it has been instructive to see Rogers hit two 50s in an early victory away to strongly fancied Nottinghamshire. He also outscored a certain EJM Cowan who is currently playing for Notts.

Recalling an opener with a solitary cap who has faced only 27 balls in Test cricket to be in contention to play in the unforgiving intensity of an Ashes series may not be the way I remember Australian selectors doing business.

Yet as ‘Buck’ told Cricinfo after his only Test, “I prayed I would get at least one more chance to sing the winning song and prove to myself I belonged in Test cricket.”

As an England fan who has sat with the Barmy Army in Oz, I want nothing more than to see Buck failing in his ambition to sing the Southern Cross, in your next ten Tests at any rate.

But as a Middlesex follower and cricket lover, in salute of one of the county game’s unsung heroes, I wish you luck Chris. I really do.

The Crowd Says:

2013-05-05T09:33:27+00:00

Dan Jimenez

Guest


I think the IPL has reached saturation point, I find it hard to sit through an entire game but do love the fact that: Kohli, De Villiers and Gayle are in the same batting line up. Is the Doug Walters stand still at the SCG?

2013-05-05T08:56:34+00:00

Atawhai Drive

Roar Guru


Dan, I can forgive Lord's its pricing structure if it allows you to take your own wine into the ground. As you would no doubt know, once you have entered the SCG you have to buy rotgut plonk at high prices. Most uncivilised. The cost of EPL tickets is breathtaking, yet somehow the grounds continue to be filled. There must be a point of resistance but it hasn't been found yet.

2013-05-05T07:55:40+00:00

Dan Jimenez

Guest


Hi Atawhai, if you think that's bad have a look at going to see how much it costs to watch Premier League football. One of many reasons why I love Lord's ( Middlesex home ground) is that it is the last test ground in the world where a spectator can bring in a lovely bottle of wine and enjoy it at their own leisure. I always factor that in when buying tickets. Aussies are great at making sporting events accessible to all. Sporting tickets, petrol and public transport is all that seems cheap to us Poms when Down Under these days - just as well that when I'm there I seem to spend most of my time getting the bus to the cricket!

2013-05-04T23:14:49+00:00

Atawhai Drive

Roar Guru


Layth, I'm writing this on Sunday morning after reading about an opening stand of 259 by Rogers and Sam Robson. Not a bad effort after Surrey had made Middlesex follow on. I get Andy Bull's weekly email, The Spin, and was surprised recently to read that it cost 17 pounds to watch a day's play at Chelmsford, one of the Essex county team's home grounds. A day or two later, I got a tweet from Middlesex, illustrated by a pre-play shot of Lord's on what looked like a glorious spring morning in North London. I tweeted in reply, asking how much the daily admission prices were for the Middlesex-Surrey County Championship match. The reply came: 16 quid for adults, 8 quid for over-65s, and 5 quid for under-16s. To Australian eyes, that seems pretty steep. I can see a day's Sheffield Shield play at the Sydney Cricket Ground for just $5, on production of my codger card (NSW Seniors Card, available to anyone over 60). The going adult rate is $10, I think, and kids get in for $5. Why does it cost so much to watch Middlesex and other English counties play?

2013-05-04T08:45:29+00:00

Layth

Guest


As a Roar rookie I would just like to say thanks to everyone for taking the time to read my piece, you certainly are a knowledgeable lot. I look forward to writing more for you guys before and during the Ashes. Cheers. @laythy29 ps made it over to a sun baked Lords yesterday afternoon to see Chris unfortunately drag one on after a fluent start...

2013-05-03T23:32:02+00:00

Khawarmy Khawarmy

Roar Pro


The Khawarmy loves ya back Shankar! Our motto Peace and Love to Usman & All his supporters

2013-05-03T11:50:41+00:00

Shankar

Guest


Love the Khawaja army

2013-05-03T09:57:37+00:00

Matt B

Guest


Good article as an expat Pom it's good to read these sort of articles an English view on the Aussies and vise versa Always enjoyed the ashes here and at home, not sure this one will be as clear cut as some in the English media think As the India series are irrelevant in terms of the English conditions Will be interesting to see if Rogers experience from his middlesex days help it used be the norm for the touring side to have vast experience at county level..the ipl certainly has reduced that Bring it on and please give as an update on your ashes experiences over the summer/winter layth Matt

2013-05-03T09:27:16+00:00

George Pritchard

Guest


As a new reader to this site I look forward to reading more of the same - good to see well written, researched and non-partisan articles getting an audience.

2013-05-03T08:44:47+00:00

jim m

Guest


I share your reticence to write off the Australians, scars from '89 linger still. Great article.

2013-05-03T08:16:38+00:00

David G

Guest


As an Irishman who lived in Sydney for many years I understand the sentiment of wanting a team to lose but still want an individual to do well which chimes with the Aussie notion of a 'fair go'.

2013-05-03T07:03:29+00:00

Mark T

Guest


An excellent article which has got me very excited for the upcoming series. As an Aussie, I am used to going into Ashes series with a certain degree of confidence (albeit less so recently) but this year has got me stumped - pun intended. Our "horses for courses" approach to selection was necessary given that no-one besides Clarke, Siddle and Pattinson are carrying any sort of form at test level and the uniqueness of English conditions. Agree with the article - Chris Rogers is the ultimate horse for course selection so here's hoping he is more Black Caviar than Zippy Chippy. Bring on 10th July!

2013-05-03T05:13:57+00:00

Disco

Roar Guru


A tale of the big I am Haydos sledging? Well. I. Never.

2013-05-03T03:43:22+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Nice work Layth. Hope you have a great time watching the cricket with your boy.

2013-05-03T03:32:21+00:00

James

Guest


im just a fan of rogers for a number of reasons but mostly beause he was picked on form, he was picked because for the last year he has been a bloody good batsmen and so is given a place. this is something that australia seemed to have forgotten, you pick the 5 or 6 best batsmen not the 5 or 6 guys you picked last month.

2013-05-03T02:35:39+00:00

Atawhai Drive

Guest


Excellent piece, Layth.

2013-05-03T01:17:24+00:00

Elijah Weightman

Roar Guru


I hope Rogers does well. Great to finally see that his hard work and commitment has paid dividends. Great read as well Layth.

2013-05-03T01:08:35+00:00

Amith

Guest


Key thing here is that we have test batsman and not T20 players like we did in India, that will help us

2013-05-03T00:56:26+00:00

Stevo

Guest


Yes, good piece. We wait to see the compliment returned with an Australian article wishing an English player well. (I think we might be waiting a long time..)

2013-05-03T00:06:06+00:00

Ben Thrift

Roar Rookie


Wonderfully written Layth. Let's hope he gets his chance and makes some runs

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