Tour of duty

Selectors face issues over wicketkeeping role and balance of side

By Rob Lancaster   Last updated: 13th August 2008

England The Brit Oval

Pietersen: New man at the helm, new faces under his leadership?

A win at The Brit Oval may have been a timely boost for England, as well as a perfect start for the new captain, but the series against South Africa has posed more questions than answers.

With a two-Test tour of India coming up and the Ashes series looming large on the horizon, the selectors face some tough decisions in the near future.

They would have hoped that the home series with the Proteas would have been the next step on their quest to reclaim the miniature urn, a chance for Michael Vaughan to mold a side capable of beating Australia.

Instead the longstanding captain has gone and there has been a constant flip-flopping in the team makeup, going from six batsman and four frontline bowlers to a five-man attack favoured in the past because of the presence of Andrew Flintoff.

Long-term plans

Now the panel, led by national selector Geoff Miller, must decide exactly what way they want to go, not just for a trip to the sub-continent but also for the tour to the West Indies next year and then the small matter of the Australia series next summer on home soil.

While reading too much into the performance would be foolish, England's win in the fourth Test has perhaps given a clearer indication of the way to go in the future.

A battery of four frontline seamers would certainly suit the attacking instincts of skipper Kevin Pietersen and prior to his debut in charge, the batsman spoke strongly about the need to take 20 wickets.

Yet after cashing in on a flat track at Lord's, England's top order succumbed cheaply in the first innings of the next two Tests, leaving them always fighting against a tide that eventually drowned them in defeat.

If the five-man attack is seen as the best policy going forward, England's top five must deliver - and not just the pretty 60's they've been guilty of in recent times.

Alastair Cook - who is one of the biggest offenders when it comes to getting in only to then get out - and Andrew Strauss have flattered to deceive as an opening pairing but both are likely to continue.

Ian Bell will also get a further chance to make the number three spot his own - it is high time his style is backed up with substance - while ever the fighter, Paul Collingwood has battled back from the abyss to keep his place.

The biggest question is over who bats at six, mainly because of the fresh uncertainty surrounding the wicketkeeper. Tim Ambrose has done nothing wrong with the gloves but has never built on his century against the Kiwis, meaning once again the knives are out for the current resident of the poisoned chalice.

With his struggles in Sri Lanka now a distant memory, Matt Prior seems the strongest candidate to come in because most importantly he is the best batsman.

But if England want to stick with the fit-again Flintoff back in his familiar role and feel confident in Stuart Broad's batting abilities, James Foster may get the call for his 'keeping abilities alone, especially standing up to the stumps in India.

Spin options

Of course Broad may find he misses out due to the need to play a second spinner - Graeme Swann and Adil Rashid are the two frontrunners to work in tandem with Monty Panesar, who has stagnated a little in recent times.

England also have decisions to make in the seam department. Ryan Sidebottom has faded after being so potent last winter, allowing James Anderson to take over as the new number one.

It is Steve Harmison who presents the biggest conundrum because no one quite knows which 'Harmy' will turn up - the fast bowling menace seen at The Brit Oval last week or the forlorn figure that was so below-par in the first Test against New Zealand before he was unceremoniously dumped along with Matthew Hoggard (remember him?).

Whatever they decide, England's selectors know that they cannot afford mistakes at such a crucial time. The pressure is on as the Ashes get ever closer.

Comments

Ryan Bachoo says...

It has happened before and it's happened in this series and i'm quite sure it will happen again. It's one thing when you lack talent and have limits towards your teams performance but when one sees the talent on show and the standard available to the English selection panel no excuses will be good enough to justify Englands' poor display of cricket against South Africa in Test matches three and four. It's quite simple to say now that the series is over and looking back and analyzing that surely the root of the problem laid in selection where England's selectors were " afraid " of making the wrong decisions at the crucial times. We all make mistakes and those cowardly errors made by the English selection panel couldn't come at a better time. A certain out of form Paul Collingwood should have always been replaced by young performing talent Owais Shah or Ravi Bopara! It's a forgivable error though, cause a year from now mistakes can cost England the Ashes Ern. While this is probably the best England team one has seen since the splitting of the 2005 winning squad it all adds up to nothing if the batsmen go out there and don't score runs and the bowlers don't put the ball in the right areas and the fielders don't hold there catches. It's precisely what happend against South Africa, the batsmen lacked the consistency and patience to stay at the wicket and build an inning. The Ashes is obviously going to be a very challenging series unless England decides to throw caution to the wind like this one and we should all embrace the Test series against India to come. This Test series England has failed miserably especially the batsmen and it's something they have to look at because against India, they need to start getting in those 400+ innings as putting pressure on other teams by batting them out of the game should be number priority. The road to the Ashes begun against South Africa and the worst of the starts were had!

Posted 18:33 28th August 2008

Graham English says...

Will this Ashes first mindset ever change in English cricket? We currently have some of the most talented cricketers in the world, Sidebottom 6th in bowler Test rankings Pietersen 8 in Batsmen rankings , yet this team has been building since the injury spree of late 2005. Can England simply rely on their test form to patch over the cracks of the ODI team? The form that comes from the shorter form has to spill into the test team, so KP has a job to do in this ODI series to beat the Springboks and move into the winter with some confidence.

Posted 12:52 24th August 2008

Praveer Seevaparsaid says...

Why does everytime England play a series against any team other than Australia, the only series they talk about is the Ashes.The exact same thing happened in the series with other teams leading into the last Ashes series & they got whipped 5-0.England to prosper, need to look at each series they play individually & forget about future Ashes series. Until this happens, I really cannot see England beating any team away from home excl. Zimbabwe & will never beat anyone at home other than New Zealand & West Indies.

Posted 12:44 13th August 2008

Charlie Hill says...

We are saved! NOT. We finally beat a S.A team who looked more like it was on the plane home then trying to win a test match. We are now at number 5 in the world rankings and look like a number 5 team. I will not pass judgement on Pietersen as a captain after one game as this would be totally unfair BUT he needs to kick some serious butt. He needs to tell our fairy middle order that making big runs when the game is already won or the series is lost is not good enough. Upfront Cook has done no harm to his reputation but Strauss needs to get somewhere back to where he was when he first started, we can not afford to be 30-2 with Pietersen in against a new ball with the quality of Australia. Flintoff is not the answer at number 6, he is a 7 or 8 and the wicket keeping position is a joke - Ambrose I am sorry you are not good enough with either gloves or bat to warrant a place at this time. The bowling is just about ok, but it is to samey without the raw pace of a harmison or Jones reverse swing in the later overs. And someone sit down with Monty and teach him the guile of a true spinner- he is not effective enough when the pitch is not doing anything. Finally hope they stick with Broad, he really looks good and is certainly the future for our next all rounder.

Posted 11:57 13th August 2008

Al Preston says...

Hoorah! Everything in the garden is rosy again. Freddie's back to feature in two defeats. Harmy's back to blast out 4 wickets in the last match (is he in for his batting). Ambrose has held a catch that he had to work for (his batting is better than valium). The openers actually put in a bit of overtime (not too much though). The middle order tried to give it away, AGAIN. I really think we will make the Aussies grovel next year. Whoops! Is that de-javu I ask myself? This England set up is one big joke from top to bottom, if you're not English, that is! If you are, it's an embarrassment!

Posted 11:18 13th August 2008

John Kelly says...

It is a good start for Pietersen, even if South Africa weren't fully focused, he made the right bowling changes when needed and was enthusiastic. I believe it is a new era for England, Pietersen is a completely different captain to Vaughan. I believe we lost that series mainly due to our batting, but also changing the side halfway through, you cannot do that in the middle of a series against an excellent South Africa team. Now it comes down to selection, so many people waiting in the wings, will be very interesting.

Posted 18:12 12th August 2008

Ian G says...

Typical England winning a match when the series is lost and the pressure is off - is it really worth celebrating? Once again the team selection, and the batting in particular have cost us dear, how we keep picking hopelessy out of form players is beyond me. If i got picked I'd get a 50 eventually too if i was given as many chances. The series was as good as lost by the time Collingwood found his touch, but at least he produced under pressure which is more than be said of Bell, Strauss and Ambrose, while Cook just needs the ball pitched up and going across him in order for him to gift away his wicket. The likes of Shah and Bopara must wonder what they have to do in order to get a gig with this team, they score runs and still aren't picked even though the players selected never produce anything of note. Its laughable that people are talking about beating the Aussies after one empty victory, they would find it hysterically funny i'd imagine. I mean what is there to be afraid of? If Pietersen fails with the bat, we lose...simple!

Posted 15:33 12th August 2008

Tom Rowley says...

People are saying its a good start for Pietersen, but really lets be honest South Africa didnt care what the result was. The truth of the matter is england lost because once again the timid middle order, ie Bell, Collingwood, were not good enough.

Posted 13:25 12th August 2008

Page 1 of 1

Add Comment*

All fields are required

Are you a Sky Sports subscriber?

Character Count : 0/1950

Please tick here if you wish to receive emails relating to Sky Sports.com or any other companies, services or products related to Sky Sports.com

Please send me the weekly Sky Sportszine - exclusive content, features and competitions to my inbox every Friday.

*All fields required, your email address will be kept private