Ashes Buzz

The top ten Ashes sledges

Many books have been written on the history of the Ashes, but none quite like Stiff Upper Lips and Baggy Green Caps by Simon Briggs

Tim de Lisle
Tim de Lisle
25-Feb-2013




Simon Briggs' book almost convinces you sledging is acceptable © Quercus
Many books have been written on the history of the Ashes, but none quite like Stiff Upper Lips and Baggy Green Caps by Simon Briggs. It’s the story of a great contest – to see who can come up with the best insults, put-downs and ripostes. What goes on the field, stays on the field, the players like to say, but thankfully this rule is often broken. Briggs's book is so full of good lines, it almost convinces you that sledging is acceptable.
But which side does it better? I suspected it was Australia, but Simon has immersed himself in 124 years of sledging, so let’s ask him. “Well,” he replied, “WG [Grace] was an early leader. I tend to think that England were the villains in first 30 years, as they thought they had a God-given right to beat the colonials and would use any methods. Then it was Warwick Armstrong giving it back to them.
“In the modern era, the Aussies definitely lead. Ian Chappell’s mob upped the ante, and then you have Allan Border, Merv Hughes and Steve Waugh. Some of it comes from grade cricket being much rougher than English clubs, and some of it comes from just being better. Verbal aggression and on-field dominance are a bit chicken-and-egg, it’s hard to do one without the other. You can’t sledge from a crap position, partly because you don’t have the close fielders.”
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Tresco: not such a big loss after all

Marcus Trescothick has flown home again

Tim de Lisle
Tim de Lisle
25-Feb-2013
Marcus Trescothick has flown home again. To flee one tour may be considered a misfortune; to do it twice looks like naivety, not so much from Trescothick, but on the part of the England management. When they picked him for the Ashes at the same time as saying he was unfit for the Champions Trophy, they were treating a mental illness as if it were a physical one. Stress doesn’t work like that.
Trescothick’s timing could be better, but it could also be worse – he could have hung around right up to, or even into, the first Test. As it is, England have a ready-made replacement at the top of the order in Alastair Cook, who should make more runs as an opener, protected to some extent from Shane Warne, than he would have done at number three. And they have a ready-made replacement for Cook in Paul Collingwood, who didn’t deserve to lose his place in the middle order. For the team, this isn't a great blow. They coped with it last time and on this year's form, Trescothick shouldn’t have been in the side anyway. He will be a bigger loss at first slip than at the top of the order. He did great work in the last Ashes in getting England off to rapid starts, but Andrew Strauss, currently playing with a new freedom, has it in him to take up that mantle.
The only problem is that Ian Bell has to move up from six, where he flourished against Pakistan, to three. England would be more comfortable if they had followed the advice of certain bloggers and brought Owais Shah, Mark Butcher or Mark Ramprakash, instead of a sixth seam bowler.
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England place their trust in rust

England’s winter began, in India, with two bad days followed by a good one

Tim de Lisle
Tim de Lisle
25-Feb-2013
England’s winter began, in India, with two bad days followed by a good one. They have now repeated the pattern in Australia, with Kevin Pietersen the star once again. At this rate, they will go 2-0 down in the Test series, before pulling one back in Perth through a blazing Pietersen hundred.
On Friday, after the little debacle against the Prime Minister’s XI, I wrote that England needed at least six players – ideally Flintoff, Trescothick, Pietersen, Hoggard, Harmison and one of the keepers – to do well against New South Wales. Today, two thirds of those wishes came true. Pietersen and Flintoff made runs – together, for once – and Hoggard and Harmison polished off the NSW lower order the way international new-ball bowlers are supposed to. That’s as many pieces slotting into the jigsaw as a touring team are entitled to hope for in one day.
Trescothick remains a big worry. If England had to name their Brisbane team now, they would surely be better giving him more time to find his touch and sticking with all three of Cook, Bell and Collingwood. Trescothick is being picked at the moment on past glories, not for anything he has done in the past year.
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Don't do it, Duncan

Tim de Lisle
Tim de Lisle
25-Feb-2013
Duncan Fletcher said yesterday that England have got to play five bowlers in the first Test, because Andrew Flintoff isn’t fit enough yet to be one of four. Which makes sense. He also dropped a heavy hint that Ashley Giles would be one of the five, and Monty Panesar wouldn’t. Which makes no sense at all.
Fletcher explained that he wanted control. Well, Panesar offers more than Giles does. He goes for about 2.6 runs an over in Tests, while Giles, over the past two years, has gone for 3.3. It’s a perfect illustration of how attack is the best form of defence. Despite being possibly Test cricket’s most defensive slow bowler, Giles is actually less good at defending than Monty, who prefers to attack.
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The Aussies sell a piece of their soul

On the field, things are going swimmingly for Australia

Tim de Lisle
Tim de Lisle
25-Feb-2013
On the field, things are going swimmingly for Australia. They are winning, Glenn McGrath is taking out top-order batsmen again, Mitchell Johnson is coming along nicely: the pieces are slotting into the Ashes jigsaw, better than England’s. Off the field, though, the Aussies have just done something strange and sad.
They have struck a deal with a sponsor, Commonwealth Bank, which includes naming rights not just to their annual one-day triangular tournament for the next three years, but also to the national team. As Cricket Australia explained in a press release today, “The one-day competition will be known as the ‘Commonwealth Bank Series’, and the Australian team known as the ‘Commonwealth Bank one-day international team’.”
You can sell a lot of things in sport without losing much – boundary hoardings, canopies on drinks buggies, ad space on bats – but there are some things you cannot sell, and the name of the team is one of them. Fans won’t see the Australian team as the Commonwealth Bank one-day international team. It’s a hideous mouthful, and they already have one of those in the shape of the meat pies they chomp on as the twilight descends.
But more importantly, this is a national team. It’s not supposed to be for sale. If you are an Australian fan working for a rival bank, how are you supposed to feel about this? A national team is for everyone. It doesn’t line up with one company against another, any more than it should favour one state over another. Part of its job is to transcend petty rivalries, and replace them with bigger ones, like a loathing of the Poms.
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