• About
  • Published Work

Smell the Leather…

~ The official blog of Nick Campion

Smell the Leather…

Category Archives: 2014 Posts

Post from earlier in 2014

Smiles better

09 Tuesday Sep 2014

Posted by nc in 2014 Posts

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

cricket, england, joe root

First Posted 22nd August 2014

He reaches his hundred, takes off his helmet and the smile spreads across Joe Root’s rootface, the sort of smile that makes you feel warm inside. It’s the kind of smile you might see on a young child who’s just finished their nativity play, remembered all their lines, not dropped Jesus and then seen his proud Mum and Dad in the front row. It’s a smile that simply won’t stay on the inside.

After a long old summer, finally the England cricket team appear to be enjoying themselves again.

For those of us who have only ever dreamt of playing for our country, of creaming a cover drive to the boundary at Lords, of uprooting off stump with an away-swinger at Trent Bridge, seeing the players smile is more important than it might first appear.

It’s not that we don’t recognise the hard work, rare talent and total dedication that’s needed. Nor do we ignore the constant pressure on the players, 300 days a year away from families, and the almost insurmountable physical and mental challenges of today’s draining schedule. Sure, it’s hard work being a professional cricketer. Despite all this, though, there’s a phrase that keeps ringing through my head: ‘But, you’re playing cricket for England!’

So to see the ingénue young faces of Root, Jordan, Buttler – even the rejuvenated Cook – smiling again, smiling broadly and unguardedly from the sheer pleasure of playing cricket for England and playing well strikes a chord with us as cricketers and supporters. This is precisely how it should be – not all frowns, snarls and weary resignation.

Beyond the irrepressible youngsters, there are the semi-smilers. Gary Ballance is tempted to, and does, crack a smile occasionally but he’s clearly wary, having let down his guard once and paid disproportionately for it. Moeen is just too serene to beam. Chris Woakes and Liam Plunkett would like to but don’t feel comfortable enough in the side yet to let it all out. Ian Bell is busy trying, unconvincingly, to play the part of gnarled, senior pro.  Jimmy is…well, Jimmy.

Stuart Broad, on the other hand, seems to be cheering up all the time. Maybe it’s the chronic injuries that have precipitated this change in outlook. Although he must be fed up with them a lot of the time, the injuries must also have given him the perspective that comes from realising your career is finite.  He might succumb to a career-finishing injury at any time so, dammit, he’s going to enjoy it while it lasts. Wickets these days are usually greeted with a delighted smile rather than a cynical, world-weary send-off or the ‘This is just what I do’ face that smacks of an over-deliberate display of disinterest.

Winning helps, of course, and so does rotation. The schedules these days are increasingly acknowledged as absurd and it pays to keep players fresh, to take them out of the arena, to make them miss playing. They perhaps remember again what it is to be excited and desperate to play rather than exhausted and desperate for a break.

We all started playing cricket – including the England players – because we love it. And we still do. All we want is to see the best players in the land loving it too. So, keep up the good work lads, keep enjoying your cricket and keep showing us what a pleasure it is to play for England.

Advertisement

Time to accept the game’s moral imperfections

09 Tuesday Sep 2014

Posted by nc in 2014 Posts

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Senanayake

3 June 2014: Senanayake mankads Buttler. Cue hands on hips from the English, deliberately over-the-top congratulations from team-mates for Senanayake and a familiar outpouring of opinion and vitriol from everyone else. Was it ever thus. Cricket’s rich history of the law v the spirit goes way back and takes in WG Grace, Bodyline, Trevor Chappell’s underarm and of course the original Mankad from Vinoo.

Common sense says Buttler was right to be given out – it was within the Laws, he’d been warned in that game and had been trying it on in previous games. He was arguably gaining an unfair advantage. But… but it still doesn’t feel right, it still feels a bit, I don’t know…off.

As many people have pointed out, was it any worse than Root punching it to the keeper but still waiting for the review? We’re in the same territory as we stumbled into last year with the Broad affair. Why is not walking for a thick edge worse than not walking for a thin one?

There’s no logic of course, somehow some things just feel worse.

Many people have called for Law changes to fix the mankad situation. This won’t work – tinkering with the laws solves nothing but simply shifts the goalposts – and often inadvertently creates a new set of goalposts.

Personally I’ve always found in difficult not to walk in the amateur cricket I’ve played. I can think of only a couple of occasions where I didn’t – once was in an under-17 match (yes, it was a while ago and clearly still resonates) where I was batting well for once and was our last realistic chance to win, and once in a senior league game where there was already bad blood between the sides after an opposition player refused to walk for a blatant edge, and we’d vowed to walk for nothing. Neither occasion sat comfortably with me.

Of course, my way is arguably the most lily-livered approach of all – a pragmatic and fickle approach based on no principle at all. I admire those that walk whatever the situation and I understand those that never walk. Until no-one is given out wrongly, this is the approach that makes the most sense. Indeed if we could get over the morally-baseless yuck factor of seeing an obvious edge missed or a batsman being mankaded, then this approach, if adopted by all, would actually solve all problems. We would no longer need to scratch our heads over why we expect people to walk for edges but not run outs or stumpings, which can be equally obvious.

But of course, this won’t happen. Each person has a moral compass and each compass reads slightly differently, with doing the right thing being an irresistible attraction to some while doing the best for themselves and the team being the magnet for others. Who is to say which is right, without recourse to broader moral imperatives that resonate in disciplines far beyond the field of play?

The spirit of cricket is an unfathomably nebulous expression that is impossible to nail down. Everyone’s definition is different. The interpretations of spirit of cricket can be so wide as to render it irrelevant, an empty husk to be blown on the winds of outraged huffing and puffing of fans and the media. It quickly becomes no more than a crutch to support personal preference and prejudice, and a specious validation of a fabled game that never existed.

Partisan supporters will always seize on moments such as this to hunker down even further into their entrenched positions. Their world is black and white, and that is how they like it.

In the absence of a universally accepted moral code, the yuck factor is all we are left with – and everyone’s yuck is different. Until we recognise that, accept it and get on with playing in an imperfect game full of imperfect people where occasional conflict is unavoidable then these arguments will continue to go round and round. There is no solution. Let’s just get on with it, shall we?

Read Nick's All Out Cricket work online

  • County Crickets Academy Rewards
  • Recreational Habits pt 1
  • Recreational Habits pt 2
  • Recreational Habits pt 3
  • Recreational Habits pt 4
  • The Power of Pain

Latest Posts

  • The Edge – a review August 11, 2020
  • ‘In adversity, I made my dream come true’ August 7, 2019
  • Manufacturing a cricketing spectacle June 10, 2019
  • On supporting Pakistan June 7, 2019
  • An implicit language April 11, 2019

Follow me on Twitter. Warning: my twitter account contains all sorts of nonsense, not just cricket

My Tweets

Blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • Smell the Leather...
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Smell the Leather...
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...