Test cricket: Quality over meat-headed bash and barge

By Peter Zitterschlager / Roar Guru

My first love in cricket was Graham Yallop. I shrink with embarrassment revealing that, of course, but what the hey?

I was a sensitive and artistic kid, he had a sumptuous cover drive, one thing inevitably led to another. The planets were aligned.

My infatuation with Graham Yallop took me on an emotional rollercoaster ride during the early 80s. Graham Yallop was really only a fringe player, so I was forever agonising over his selection.

Time and again, he was found out at Test level and banished back to Shield cricket. Every time this happened, I took it hard. It was as though artistry had been conquered; as though sumptuousness had no place among the brutal forces at the international level.

For a starry-eyed 13-year-old boy, it was downright depressing.

Fortunately, Australia was at a low ebb during this era, so Yallop was recycled more times than cardboard.

Just as I’d thought a limp capitulation to Bob Willis had sealed his fate, a tour to the sub-continent would follow and he would be back in favour. Here, against the wiliness and wizardry of spinners and away from the intimidatory methods of fast bowlers, he revelled.

On these turning wickets, Yallop’s dancing feet nullified the spin and he made numerable big scores. Every time he did, all was right in my world. Every time he did, I walked with a spring in my step.

I did so even though I’d only ever see grainy highlights of these innings on the news.

My love of sumptuous batting peaked at a new high upon Mark Waugh’s arrival. No player I’ve seen before or since has had his artistry. His on-side play was pure poetry, and in watching him, you couldn’t help but think that humans were genetically engineered to be cricketers, such was his symmetry.

A brief Mark Waugh innings left you unsated and hungering for more. It was like having a triple fudge sundae taken from you after one bite. In the cases where he lazily chipped an innocuous delivery down mid-on’s throat, it was like dropping your double-cone gelati into kitty litter.

In keeping with my sensitivity to textbook batting, my favourite form of the game is naturally enough Test cricket. It is here where orthodox batting thrives – where V.V.S. Laxman, Ian Bell and co. can wait for the right ball to play aesthetically.

The short form games, however, ask these players to compromise their art. Instead of waiting for the right ball, batsmen are under pressure to score constantly. Batsmen here have to throw out the manual and hit across the line.

They have to slog into cow corner and flat bat down the ground. Disconcertingly, the short forms pervert the finest traditions of batting.

Picture this classic tableau: three slips and a gully, a ring of infielders and a fine leg. It is, of course, a Test team on the attack. A fast bowler then releases the ball and a counter attacking batsmen plays an elegant stroke that pierces the field.

The ball stops just short of the pickets and the crisscrossing batsmen complete three runs before a fielder’s sizzling throw slaps into the keeper’s gloves. An appreciative audience of connoisseurs then applauds politely. It is all very civilised and cultured and idyllic.

Now picture a typical tableau in T20. No slips, a ring of outfielders and a team looking helplessly on the defence.

The bowler releases and a beefy batsman slogs across the line. The struck ball, more muscled then timed, fizzles towards cow corner where it is cut off by an outfielder.

The ball is then thrown to the keeper after the batsmen have ambled from crease to crease to complete a run. A drunken, festival audience expecting the pyrotechnics of another six hardly notice the stanza and look on blankly.

It is all dumbed down and lowest common denominator and it is brutish. Now I ask you, where of the two are you more likely to the find the exquisite?

Textbook shots, when played by the finest batsmen are of endless wonder. I never tire of their nuance and charm. I also love how they are part of cricket’s etiquette. If the ball is pitched up, you play off the front foot.

If it is short, you play off the back. There is an appropriate shot for every ball. There is an order. “Akram pitches it short and Laxman rocks back and cuts sweetly. What a gorgeous shot! Now back to Kerry’s ramblings.”

The game has evolved the off drive, the on drive and the straight drive. It has developed the cut, the hook and the sweep.

Then there’s also the pull, the loft and the defensive prod. And what about the non shots: the shouldered arms, the duck and the leave. They are all part of cricket’s rich heritage and so long as the game is played over five days and bowlers bowl at different lengths and on different sides of the wicket, they have their place. That I’m sure is immutable.

Lastly, but tellingly, orthodoxy also brings out the more refined elements in our language.

Cover drives are glorious and hook shots are commanding; late cuts are elegant and clips of the hip nifty. And then there’s batting described as sumptuous.

Sumptuous is reserved for the highest echelon of artistry. Mark Waugh on drives were sumptuous and Graham Yallop’s offside play was sumptuous.

Indeed, sumptuousness found its true calling when describing cricket. But only Test cricket. Sumptuous has no place in the short form games. Here, big hits are incredible and smashed balls are awesome. In this landscape, cricket is described by illiterates – ones who’d be better served following snowboarding.

I guess I sound snobbish about crude stroke-play, but I’m not. It’s just that I don’t want textbook players batting that way. In fact, I quite enjoy batsmen hitting across the line.

Indeed, at Test level it is exhilarating. The players who hit across the line in Test cricket do so knowing that they will be severely criticised if dismissed cheaply. They are daredevils on a trapeze wire with no net.

There is a perspective. Most tellingly, they are usually bowling all-rounders. Think Ian Botham, Kapil Dev and Wasim Akram. Because they are primarily picked as bowlers, bowling all-rounders are liberated to bat cavalierly.

When it doesn’t pay off, they can always redeem themselves with the ball. I think this creates a lovely contrast. The all-rounder at Test level is a swashbuckler, a carefree type that takes risks and lives dangerously.

He is a different breed to the specialist batsmen, who is more workaday and conservative. Only Test cricket creates this differentiation – in short form cricket, everyone bats like a millionaire. Short form cricket lacks Test cricket’s many shades.

Sadly, Test cricket has become moribund in many parts of the world. We Australians get it, as do the English, but almost everywhere else they don’t. It staggers me that countries with deep cricketing roots such as India, West Indies and New Zealand cannot see the trees from the forest.

They now prefer a dumbed down version of the game to the genuine article. Or to put it more in keeping with my article, they now prefer pyrotechnics over artistry.

Hopefully, good taste will prevail and this will one day be remedied.

The Crowd Says:

2014-10-31T12:21:36+00:00

Luke Reynolds

Roar Rookie


Great stuff Peter. Dean Jones was my hero and as a boy/teenager rode a very comparable emotional rollercoaster with him as you did with Yallop. For mine VVS Laxman was the most sumptuous of all batsmen. Could happily sit and watch him for hours. Yet I can also watch Shivnarine Chanderpaul bat for hours. All part of the beauty of Test cricket. Very happy to report that there is almost a full house at Abu Dhabi for Day 2 of the 2nd Test that I'm watching right now. A wonderful sight after the empty Stadium at Dubai.

2014-10-26T10:26:30+00:00

Blake Standfield

Roar Guru


Great read.

2014-10-25T09:45:35+00:00

Tom from Perth

Roar Rookie


Clarke v Morkel recently was great.

2014-10-25T09:39:36+00:00

Trev

Guest


Just about any Australian vs Harbhajan Singh were entertaining little battles too, probably most recently Siddle vs KP were great battles. Ponting batting on after Roach struck his elbow. Graeme Smith coming out to bat for a draw at the SCG with a broken hand, Dean Jones 200 in India.

2014-10-25T08:02:41+00:00

Professor Rosseforp

Guest


In terms of elegance and class, my all-time favourite batsman was Colin Cowdrey. Of portly appearance by the standards of his time, he was a player who appeared to have all the time in the world, and was tremendous playing the ball off his legs with minimal effort, usually just behind square. Then, when he appeared to be incapable of playing a shot forward of the wicket, he would gently lean his body into a cover drive -- never with a huge flourish. Likewise, his straight drives were of the "stand-to-attention" technique, with minimal apparent force. Even when he adopted the technique of allowing himself to be hit by the West Indian pacemen, he was immaculate in his timing and positioning! Like many gifted batsmen, his slip fielding was anticipatory, lethal, and effortless, and he rarely had to resort to rolling around or diving -- he was just there, placing one hand down in the path of the ball -- and if you were lucky, he might pop it in his pocket before the batsman knew what had happened. In Australia, Norm O'Neill was the closest to this type of player, but was also capable of savaging an attack with an array of aggressive strokes forward of the wicket, somewhat in the manner of a refined Doug Walters.

2014-10-25T07:53:32+00:00

Professor Rosseforp

Guest


Agreed that Mark Waugh was great to watch whether batting, fielding or bowling. I was always disappointed that he didn't have a chance to become captain, when they were looking for someone younger than Steve Waugh.

2014-10-25T06:35:11+00:00

Armchair Expert

Guest


You must be thinking of Yallop's last test match JGK when he scored 2 and 1, his test average against WI was 38, which was higher than most other batsmen against them in that era.

2014-10-25T06:01:05+00:00

Armchair Expert

Guest


Yallop would of been in the top few batsmen in the world after that 83/84 Pakistan series, he was never the same after "doing" his knee diving into the MCG boundary fence shortly after.

2014-10-25T04:06:10+00:00

Ashten

Guest


The people who claim a 3 & a 1/2 hour T20 game is for short attention spans are the same ones who shamelessly go & watch 2-3 hour games of AFL/NRL/Soccer etc. Geez give me a break !

2014-10-25T01:55:28+00:00

Peter Zitterschlager

Guest


We'll said Trev .. in test cricket you get a sustained searching examination of a players character ... and those one on ones ...Alan Donald v M Waugh in Sydney and Ishant Sharma v Ricky Ponting also spring to mind (well they're more like seared into my memory!) Simoc just doesn't get it, I guess. "Test cricket is for old men with nothing to do," he says. I venture it's more for people who have an attention span.

2014-10-25T00:58:22+00:00

Trev

Guest


One thing you won't get in t20 is the real genuine battle between bat and ball, I'm thinking of Clarke vs Morkel we saw early this year, Waugh vs Ambrose in the WIs, Langer vs Pakistan.

2014-10-24T17:24:19+00:00

Professor Rosseforp

Guest


No shame in enjoying Graham Yallop! A very good batsman who batted well against the best in the World. Not too many players consistently stood up to the West Indies pace quartets at their best, and many were broken by the experience. Brearley was one of the best captains to play international cricket, and was able to beat many better teams with limited resources, through a combination of intellect, experience and mentoring. Yallop, and many other Australian players of his era, was treated badly by the media, and by the other players who had left the Australian team to join WSC.

2014-10-24T10:46:17+00:00

Simoc

Guest


Test cricket is for old men with nothing to do. So they prattle on about sumptuous drives and past glories. The here and now of cricket is 20/20 . The players love it, and the crowds turn up to watch it . That is reality while oldies glorify in past greats that were nothing special at the time they were done. Old test rivalries Oz / England will survive and India/ Pakistan would draw a good crowd. But 5 day cricket is past its use by date and will survive for awhile to please the old timers. Sports fans the world over go to three hour maximum length contests between teams. Cricket has that point of difference but it will never be more popular in the future than it is now.

2014-10-24T06:45:23+00:00

bigbaz

Roar Guru


That is probably correct for the early Hughes but the clique got to him and certainly rung it out of him in the latter part of his career.

2014-10-24T06:24:37+00:00

Peter Zitterschlager

Guest


The 'Z-Scores' fame escapes me? Why is he/she famous (or is it infamous?)

2014-10-24T06:17:41+00:00

Peter

Guest


Are you the famous 'Z-score'?

2014-10-24T05:31:31+00:00

formeropenside

Guest


no, Kim Hughes was quite convinced of his own talent

2014-10-24T04:54:25+00:00

Peter Zitterschlager

Guest


Hi Cricket Fans If you're interested in more of my stuff, I have created a character called Viv Tufnell. Viv is the lousiest bottom-feeder you're gonna come across and you might get a chuckle or two from his exploits. Here's the link if you want to have a look-see: http://www.vivtufnell.com.au/

2014-10-24T04:43:39+00:00

Peter Zitterschlager

Guest


Hi folks Thanks for all the comments. Sheek, on Yallop being my hero, I know? Jaysus, I don't know what was goin on in my head. As best as I can get my head around it, I admired him for hangin tough with the establishment. I was very much anti Packer's circus, and rode every bump with the establishment over 77,78,79. Yallop was one of the few shining lights during all the wallopings we coped and you have to give him kudos for that. But also, he had a rare artistry. On top of his majestic off drives, he was also a hell of a cutter ... and as silky a player as there's been. Pity he couldn't put it all together all that often against extreme pace. I wanted this piece titled "Thank you Test cricket for sumptuous textbook batting,' coz that for me is the big difference between Test Cricket and the shorter forms. Test cricket is about artistry and the textbook, whereas the short forms are about making cricket fun (or dumbing it down for people who don't get Test cricket.) Glad to see so many people share my views!

2014-10-24T04:19:56+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Peter Z, Graeme Yallop was your boyhood hero? I'm speechless! As Bogey might have said if was talking cricket, "Of all the gin-cricketers in all the gin-places all over the world, & you had to pick Yallop." One of boyhood heroes was David Hookes (even though he was only one year older). You reckon you were frustrated? At least Yallop was more successful at test cricket. Hookesy was a dream to watch batting, but he couldn't handle spin, & that was his ultimate downfall. Oh, & nor was he patient! Test cricket will be dead in 20 years. Players coming through will have less & less idea & care less & less how to play test cricket. Thank God we have our memories of another time.

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