Ashes Scout: Former great's plan to save English cricket, whitewash hero's 'brave' choice for Head replacement

By Tim Miller / Editor

Atherton backs in new skipper in ‘reboot’ of English cricket

Former great Michael Atherton has urged his beloved England to instill Ben Stokes as captain, as part of a detailed plan to ‘reboot’ the currently floundering Test team.

Writing in The Times, Atherton has called for a drastic shake-up to both England Cricket’s personnel and its list of priorities, in a savage response to the team’s unassailable 3-0 series deficit in the ongoing Ashes.

“The administrators [have] taken their eye off the red-ball, first-class game,” Atherton wrote.

“This gruesome Ashes series — the worst I have covered as a journalist — has come at a bad time, the sport having gone through a gruelling 12 months, with division and rancour seemingly everywhere.

“Changes are afoot within the game’s governing body and debate rages over the structure of the professional game. Below that water line, the weeds become more tangled, and the question of whether the game is attracting talent from a broad enough base is a chapter, rather than a column, in itself.”

Chief among Atherton’s recommended remedies is the replacement of Joe Root as captain, whose leadership has come under fire this series despite being the leading run-scorer on either side.

“Root has been a good England captain, and has always carried himself superbly and is an incredible ambassador for the sport, but having done the job for five years and having had three cracks at the Ashes, including two awful campaigns in Australia, it is time for someone else to have a go,” Atherton opined.

“For all the discussion around systemic change, this could have been a much closer series had Root got things right on the field.

“These errors have made a good Australian side look much better than they are.”

Atherton’s top choice for the new skipper is Ben Stokes, who stood in for Root during the Adelaide Test when he was recovering from a blow to the groin before play, and captained England in a Test against the West Indies in 2020 with Root unavailable.

According to Atherton, Stokes’ waning powers with the ball, and his questionable place in England’s T20I team moving forward, relieves the pressure on him enough to allow him to lead.

“His [Stokes’] bowling is starting to wind down, and, as he may not get into England’s best T20 side now, he can be given a breather during those matches,” Atherton wrote.

Ben Stokes walks off the field with Joe Root at stumps on day four of the second Ashes Test. (Photo by Daniel Kalisz/Getty Images)

Atherton also believes there is ‘no way’ coach Chris Silverwood can survive the series. He has called for England to look abroad for his replacement, the better to bring fresh ideas into the nation’s cricket program; while also splitting the role between red- and white-ball cricket.

“Splitting the job… should allow England to choose from a greater talent pool, and should allow for coaches, in a very condensed and busy schedule, to rest and recharge in between engagements and plan more effectively for them,” Atherton wrote.

“Names? There are many, no doubt, with good credentials: Gary Kirsten, Andy Flower (again), Andrew McDonald, Greg Shipperd, Graham Ford, Jason Gillespie, Mahela Jayawardene, Paul Collingwood, Stephen Fleming, and Justin Langer may become available soon.

“The list could go on and on, but a pair of proven coaches with broad-based experience would be sought.

“A tip? The best coaches often come with a teaching link somewhere in their background. To listen to Eddie Jones, England rugby union head coach, recently in a newspaper interview, and having interviewed him in the winter, was to witness curiosity, sparkle, energy and drive. All sadly lacking right now.”

Atherton also urged England to take a leaf out of Australia’s book, and use their rivals’ Kookaburra ball at lower levels. Australia have used the English Duke ball across occasional Sheffield Shield rounds in recent years.

“There is no doubt that specific attention must be given to winning in Australia. Lions Tests there are vital,” Atherton wrote.

“If there is a push to use the Kookaburra ball in England, then it should be limited to the North v South, Best v Rest, Lions games that should be used as a bridge between the county and Test game.”

Australia urged to think outside the box for Head replacement

Australia’s having already wrapped up the Ashes with two Tests to spare should encourage selectors to be ‘brave’ in picking Travis Head’s replacement for the New Year’s Test, according to former Test wicketkeeper Brad Haddin.

Head’s unavailability for Sydney after testing positive to COVID-19 will force the Aussies to make at least one change for the match, with backup batter Usman Khawaja appearing the frontrunner.

However, while Haddin admits the Queenslander is the ‘obvious’ choice to step in, he has urged selectors to get creative and try some new combinations, with the urn off the table.

Top of his list is all-rounder Mitchell Marsh, who has been added to the Test squad as a precautionary measure, alongside Nic Maddinson and Josh Inglis, in case more COVID cases emerge.

“You’d then have two-allrounders, two fast bowlers and two spinners,” Haddin said on Fox Cricket of picking Marsh and adding to his 32 Tests.

Marsh scored two centuries in just three Tests on England’s last tour of Australia in 2017-18, including a ton on the SCG itself. However, a Test average of just 25.20 would make him a seriously risky choice to replace the red-hot Head at number five in the batting order, especially with Cameron Green and Alex Carey yet to truly find their feet at numbers six and seven.

However, Haddin believes the move would finally allow Australia to hand leg-spinner Mitchell Swepson a Test debut, ahead of three subcontinental tours in 2022 where he will almost certainly be needed.

The regained form of Nathan Lyon this series would enable Swepson to make a pressure-free entry into Test cricket, rather than being thrown right into the firing line against Pakistan, Sri Lanka or India later this year.

“Nathan Lyon can take all the pressure overs,” Haddin said.

“Swepson can come in and knock the tail over and (do) what a leg-spinner is needed to do.”

Mitchell Swepson (Photo by Michael Dodge/Getty Images)

According to fellow leg-spinner turned popular commentator, Kerry O’Keeffe, seeing what Swepson is capable of at the highest level is a must.

“We’ve got to find out about Mitch Swepson,” O’Keeffe said.

“He’s been on the pine for how many years? We’ve got to know whether he’s the number two because there’s new challengers, like Matt Kuhnemann – left-arm orthodox.

“We’re going to the subcontinent. Who do you take? Do you take the ‘wristy’ who needs bounce, or the left-arm ‘ortho’ who’s precise, like Steve O’Keefe, who has success there?”

Ashes mauling could ‘kick-start’ England young guns: batting coach

England batting coach and former player Graham Thorpe believes their humbling series loss to Australia could be the start of something special for their embattled crop of batters.

Sports opinion delivered daily 

   

Derided as one of the worst ever English teams to tour Australia, the visitors’ batting woes plumbed new depths in Melbourne, where they were bowled out in the second innings for 68 to lose by an innings, despite their bowlers restricting the hosts to 267.

Thorpe, who takes the reins as senior coach in Sydney with Chris Silverwood forced to isolate in Melbourne after being named a close contact, believes the embarrassment could serve as a ‘wake-up call’ to batters about the work rate required to stand up at the highest level.

“We are trying to still educate some of the younger guys into… the rhythm of Test match batting, playing situations in the game, doing it for long periods of time,” Thorpe said.

“Some of them haven’t been able to do it yet. Some people’s journeys are in different places.

“With some players it’s a wake-up call and could actually kick-start their careers because they’ve started training in a very, very different way. They don’t waste time fluffing, hitting half-volleys.

“They’ve come up against some very good bowling attacks, who have been able to have a little watch of them and see where some of their Achilles heels are – and they’re having to face that reality.”

Thorpe pointed to the careers of Steve Smith and David Warner, who he worked with a decade ago as part of NSW’s coaching set-up, as proof of how much evolution and learning is required on an individual level to succeed in Test cricket.

“People like Davey and Steve, seeing them when they were younger, they were not cut out the way they are now and and some of our players need to understand that,” he said.

“Players have to work out where they want to get to and the hard work needed.”

The Crowd Says:

2022-01-02T04:37:40+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Ha ha, I know!

2022-01-02T03:01:11+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


Not quite where you got the view that there was an expectation of Boland-like debuts, Sheek. It's simply a discussion around technique and observations.

2022-01-02T02:32:15+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


You guys are kidding, right? Carey is playing his first series & just 3 tests in. I think he's performed exceptionally well. It's only in movies & fantasy games that heroes come out blazing straight away. Same with Green. He has completed 7 tests & is only 22 years old. I think Green will eventually become a colossus. But no, you guys expect every debut to be like Scott Boland. That's very rare & Boland may not get a 2nd test too soon. Slow & steady wins the race.

2022-01-02T02:28:08+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Thanks James, I accept this. Grudgingly!

2022-01-02T00:38:11+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Sheek one other thing with Starc - if the gap is small between tests 4 and 5, and they know from past experience that it will be hard for Starc to be firing on all cylinders in both - you could consider prioritising the 5th test for him. His record with the pink ball is exceptional.

2022-01-02T00:34:46+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Hey Hadds - what’s the point of a 6th bowler, esp when 2 are spinners abs can throw down a lot of overs? This idea (Marsh to 5) is about as good as his commentary.

2022-01-01T23:21:02+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Well it’s always fine to say team A would have had performed better if they done x, y or z. Australia may have been better off rotating last year but whether it would have made enough difference is debatable and India definitely deserved to win. (for me, our batting was a bigger problem against a weak Indian attack in Brisbane.). But English commentators keep saying they have all these systemic problems that are hampering their Test cricket when they aren’t really in a different position to Australia, India or NZ. Just maybe they don’t have the quality of players and Australia has played very well.

2022-01-01T23:08:52+00:00

The Late News

Roar Rookie


Well he obviously didn't do any home work before the series! Like well pitched up swinging deliveries!

2022-01-01T16:31:16+00:00

Tim Carter

Roar Pro


Unfortunately for them, I think he's an Englishman.

2022-01-01T16:16:11+00:00

Sedz

Guest


Not just England, every team supporters has this habit of excuses. I have come across several comments here had Aussies rotated their bowlers last summer it could have been a victory against India.

2022-01-01T15:57:31+00:00

Sedz

Guest


Thankfully Australia don’t have Haddin as coach or selector. He seems to be living under the rock for ages. Why on earth do u want to bring Mitch Marsh again? He may score runs against Poms now but he will be a sitting duck against India. Bring some better test players who can handle spin.

2022-01-01T13:23:26+00:00

Insult_2_Injury

Roar Rookie


Certainly makes sense to me. Maybe not to an attack that has had success bowling shorter at Warner. Did it fail this time, yep!

2022-01-01T11:07:17+00:00

The Late News

Roar Rookie


England have a batting coach?

2022-01-01T08:58:44+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


Kirsten apparantly is a very hands off coach whose main strength is managing the team environment...Making sure all the pussycats are purring and happy :stoked: Runs a cricket academy in Capetown and a regular client is Dawid Malan who admitted when he felt he was struggling with an aspect of his game he would hop on a plane to visit Gary ..So far this series he has been England’s best batsman ..That won’t be lost on the powers that be when choosing a new coach ..

2022-01-01T08:30:56+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


I’m not sure what Atherton got so wrong on the field that made such a huge difference in the series. Maybe field placings for Leach in Brisbane? Getting his bowlers to pitch a bit fuller - but do 168-game players really have to be told? Batting first in Brisbane- but Pat ‘the Postman Always Delivers” Cummins was going to do the same thing and he’s perfect, right? A lot of the reasons that England are given for lack of success are starting to sound like excuses, given a lot of them are the same for most teams around the world (lack of attention to red ball cricket, lack of tour warmup matches etc). Changing from Dukes to Kookaburra balls might make a bit of difference for success in Australia, but I have to ask the question- the biggest problem in Australia this series has been the ball moving away and edging behind - and you get more of that with the Dukes ball in England than anywhere else.

2022-01-01T08:30:43+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


I thought Green's drop was discussed a bit on here. Was mostly in the context of comments made that Green had to work on his fielding because of it, which is a bit silly as fielders will at times get themselves into the wrong position to effect the catch. Or it just comes on to them too quick. Green *should* have taken that catch, but given his other efforts, doesn't seem like a systemic issue re his ability in that position. I think a single England drop wouldn't garner attention, but if there's a few of them - some easy, some hard - it perhaps starts to point towards a skill error possibly relating to issues with skills practice. I think Carey is doing ok, but also think it's a worthwhile exercise to monitor those misses. His role in the team after all is primarily as a fielder.

2022-01-01T08:22:17+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


I think it was 2. Only the Buttler one in Adelaide was a bad-ish one. Interesting that no one paid any attention to Green’s drop in 2nd innings Melbourne. A difficult one, but gettable for a good gully fielder like him, and if an Englishman had dropped it it would have been just another nail in the coffin of their dreadfulness. Shows there is a lot of good will towards him (especially since he has in some ways looked the least competent of all 15 top 6 bats in the series) - but that’s a good thing.

2022-01-01T08:20:34+00:00

Steele

Guest


Can’t players improve though? If we were in the 90s I would understand your point of view, as we had so much batting depth. Nowadays barely any fringe players average 40.

2022-01-01T08:16:40+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


It’s not a lack of fight that makes you edge one to slip.

2022-01-01T08:16:01+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Good idea, though really coaches shouldn’t be that important. Test teams got by without them for 120 odd years.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar