Despite, not because

England would not have won the Ashes had Kevin Pietersen not been sacked without explanation. Alastair Cook is the greatest captain in test history. Paul Downton is a national hero of rare prescience and foresight.

I need exaggerate only a little to make the point. History is being re-written. Scores are being settled. A sickly river of errant and retaliatory bilge is slithering its way through the media crickosphere.

Why does it matter? At the risk of coming over all Ed Smith, allow me to quote George Orwell:

He who controls the past controls the future. He who controls the present controls the past.

Newspapers write contemporary history. They set the agenda and become the accepted version of events. The press influence people whose opinions affect cricket followers – from the wider public, to politicians, sponsors, and sports administrators.

Who is the head of UK Sport more likely to read? Mike Selvey, or Being Outside Cricket?

The hacks have power, but some of them are distorting reality to serve a bizarre agenda.

Let’s get one thing straight. England did not win the Ashes because a masterplan came gloriously to fruition. England’s triumph over Australia did not reveal the decision-making of February 2014 to be an act of visionary, methodical genius.

England won despite what happened, not because of it.

Let’s remember the precise sequence of events. First, Peter Moores was hired with a mandate to re-build the England side. He was chosen even though he was the only candidate who’d already failed in the role, and to almost universal opposition. He promised more of the same micro-managing, data-driven, strait-jacket approach which by then had already been discredited under Andy Flower.

How did he get on? Moores took England backwards, not forwards: losing to Sri Lanka, crashing out of the World Cup at the group stage, and drawing with West Indies, a record only offset by the series win over a woeful India.

It was meant to have been Peter Moores who masterminded England’s Ashes campaign. At the last minute the ECB had no choice but bow to the inevitable, prompting a panicked sacking and replacement process. In dismissing Moores, Andrew Strauss managed to avoid doing the really stupid thing – not sacking him – but it was hardly act of remarkably prescient cricketing genius.

And what of the new materials around whom the side was re fabricated? Sam Robson and Gary Ballance have both since been dropped, as have Chris Jordan and Liam Plunkett. Chris Woakes, for reasons both of form and injury, has also fallen off the radar. Jos Buttler has yet to make a century and has scored only 79 runs at 13 in this Ashes series.

The ECB’s stated plan, eighteen months ago, was to build the New England around Alastair Cook. Since then he has scored two centuries in seventeen tests, the output of a supporting actor, not the lead. In the 2015 Ashes so far, Cook has made 223 runs in seven innings, at 31.85. In terms of England averages for the series, he stands sixth.

Has Cook’s captaincy improved England’s form? He’s now more prepared to try quirky tactics – if England are on top. He will declare, nine down, shortly before lunch – if England are already leading by more than 300. As Unhappy Hippy remarked on Twitter, “Cook’s captaincy capably managed matches we should win”.

If Cook has changed his approach, he waited until at least a year after the tour of Australia to do it. If Cook is made of the right stuff, why has he progressed at barely a glacial pace? In nearly three years at the helm, Cook has now led England captain in 37 tests. Only five men have ever captained England on more occasions.

Would England not have beaten Australia without Cook’s captaincy? What did he do in this series which turned sessions in England’s favour? Was this a case of his intrinsic virtues carrying the day, as they were inevitably destined to? Or an extension of the Collingwood Principle – that if anyone captains long enough, refusing to resign, they will eventually enjoy a series when things go their way?

The jury remains out on the most important dimension of Cook’s captaincy. He has always been prepared to rotate the bowlers – any idiot can do that – and try an offbeat field placing. Cook’s real weakness is his impotence in the face of adversity. When the batsmen are on top – as Australia’s were at Lord’s, or when England lose control in the field – as they did last year against Sri Lanka at Headingley and India – Cook retreats into his shell instead of taking the game by the scruff of the neck. These situations are the true test of a captain’s mettle, and Cook invariably fails – shrugging his shoulders at slip and ceding control to Anderson and Broad.

By retaining Cook as captain, were the ECB sagacious and far-sighted, or did they just get lucky? When they reaffirmed him, time and again, after each disappointing result, what were the qualities they saw in him which have now become evident this summer? And how did they influence the result?

Have England been better off without Kevin Pietersen? His replacements – in this series, Ballance and Bairstow (it is telling that a change was needed) – have scored 177 runs in six innings. Would Pietersen have scored fewer?

It is impossible to say with any confidence whether his absence helped foster a better team spirit, and if so, whether this atmosphere contributed significantly to England’s Ashes victory. Any assertion on this front is pure guesswork.

But no evidence has ever been presented that, when he played for England, Pietersen’s involvement proved detrimental to the team’s output. He was a member of England sides which won four Ashes series, beat India away, became world number one, and won the World T20. There is also ample testimony from younger players about Pietersen’s provision to them of support, advice, and help in the nets.

So if you return to England’s 2014 masterplan, and trace the narrative threads through to their victory at Trent Bridge, what do you end up with?

And why regard this Ashes series as the ‘end of history’? It is an arbitrary choice, which insults England’s other opponents. Why not draw the line at the West Indies tour in April, and take final conclusions from that result? Or extend the story to include the upcoming visits to UAE and South Africa. If England fare badly overseas this winter, where does that leave the narrative?

In beating Australia, England bowled extremely well, and batted well enough. Joe Root’s runs and Stuart Broad’s wickets were by far the most important individual contributions. Of the other players who materially affected the outcome, only Moeen Ali was an addition to the team since the Difficult Winter. You could add Mark Wood, at a push. Steve Finn, Ben Stokes, and Jonny Bairstow, all pre-date Paul Downton’s Brave New World.

England benefited greatly both from Australia’s appalling batting, and home advantage. All but one of the last eight Ashes series have been won by the hosts.

Another factor was England’s fresher and more liberated approach – their cricketers seemingly encouraged to play their natural games, on instinct, without hindrance from laptops and hypotheses. This cultural change is probably attributable to the influence of Paul Farbrace, acting coach during the New Zealand series, and Trevor Bayliss. Yet it had not been the advance plan for either man to take charge of the team. Had Peter Moores remained in post, as the ECB had intended, what would have happened?

None of this devalues the performance of the England players who scored the runs and took the wickets which beat Australia. Quite the opposite. They defied expectations. They outplayed their rivals. They won the Ashes. To those players – and to a minor extent their new coaches – is the credit due. To lay it at anyone else’s door is to denigrate their achievement.

Try telling that to what Mike Selvey might call the “vocal minority” of professional cricket writers hellbent on distorting reality to settle scores. Some are motivated by the redemption of their friends. What was regarded ‘below the line’ as the legitimate holding to account of people in power, they saw as the vulgar abuse of “good men”.

More acutely, for some, this their opportunity for revenge on what Ed Smith calls ‘the mob’. We had the temerity to challenge their judgment. We had the impudence to suggest that people who had neither played three test matches, nor once sat next to Kevin Pietersen on a plane, but had spent their whole lives following England, might still be able to form a valid opinion on cricket.

In both cases, we neglected to respect our elders and betters. And this is payback time. In yet another journalistic first for the English cricket media, this is a cue for an attack on their own readers.

If some in the press are exploiting the Ashes result to vindicate their actions, this is small fry compared to what the ECB will do, and what their supporters will say. In theory, everything the board has done, and everything the board will go on to do, can be justified by what happened this summer. The reclamation of the urn proves the soundness of their rationale, the goodness of their governance, and the righteousness of their moral code.

As Dave Ticker put it, on Twitter:

Persecute, bully and betray England’s highest ever run-scorer? We won the Ashes. Extort spectators and test-hosting counties? We won the Ashes. Lock cricket behind a TV paywall? We won the Ashes. Hand the Sky windfall to the counties and bill Sport England for the grass-roots funding? We won the Ashes. Ruin the World Cup? We won the Ashes. Turn international cricket into a protection racket for the Big Three? We won the Ashes.

Dare not question our judgement. We know what’s best for you. Please move along.

97 comments

  • Fine article Maxie. Heads roll after ashes defeats,just the way it’s always been I spose

  • Plunkett lost his place due to fitness, and as yet can’t get back because of the success of the replacements.

    • Not because I’m an Aussie but Bayliss deserves credit. The whole we want traditional English wickets didn’t come from Cooke. He knew the Australian batsmen had neither the technique or experience to deal with green seaming pitches. Doesn’t take a genius just a bloke who has been around. English batsmen are ordinary as well and you can therefore predict the result in two years time.. Just saying

  • I have read (but not commented) on this blog for over two years.

    I’m sorry to say that I now only mainly read articles written by James, and not those written by Maxie, and this article exemplifies why.

    The KP issue is now in the past, whatever the rights and wrongs of it. Regardless of whether he should have been picked this summer (about which reasonable people can disagree in good faith), there is now 0% chance of him ever playing for England again and I see no reason to analyse the historic situation any further.

    The conduct of the ECB (on which both you and James make very good points, which which I largely agree) and of Giles Clarke / Paul Downton (who were both horrific) should not be conflated and should not taint the efforts of the players representing England.

    The fact that Alastair Cook was not sacked and dropped in 2014 (I believe he should have been), should not taint an assessment of his qualities as captain this series – in fact, his development as a captain in particular should attract praise, grudging or otherwise. There is no fair attempt to give credit or constructively criticise here.

    I read plenty of cricket newspaper writers, and am perfectly capable of forming my own view on what is and isn’t rubbish. For example, I nearly spat my cornflakes over the Ed Smith article – but I enjoyed reading Mike Atherton’s review of Death of a Gentleman, which while largely supportive pointed out some flaws. There is a spectrum of views, just as there should be, and no doubt some journalists are overreliant on ECB sources – but not everyone holding a contradictory view is “distorting reality to settle scores”.

    You should feel free to write what you like, it’s your blog. Just as, because I don’t view the England cricket team as “the ECB XI” but as a bunch of (mainly) exciting cricketers who are thrilled to be playing for their country, I will feel free not to read.

      • Progeted new side that I’m getting from home. Not my team,just remember a lot of these guys just won a series against India a playing for Aus a. Regeneration is in progress,Aus cricket does not sleep
        Voges being close to 36 is against him. Siddle, Ahmed the other 2 as well.
        Projected test side they think is
        Burns
        Warner
        Smith
        Khwaja
        Maxwell
        M.Marsh
        Nevill
        Johnson
        Starc
        Lyon
        Hazelwood

        • Regardless of surface, england would surely fancy their chances once the top 3 are out. OK 2 years out but that’s not much of an engine room.

          • No offence Neill but England don’t like the chin music,so don’t say any surface! Besides Australia have a wealth of young guns coming through,especially in odi. Is it such a leap to think that these guys can’t adapt to test cricket? Maxwell and m marsh have unlimited potential if they get their heads rights! Steve Waugh was once flaky also! I get this is an English blog and you don’t know or care about what is coming through in Aus cricket at the moment. Have a look at the Aus A results in India and see how Australia is building! Stoinis,agar,coulter-Nile,cummins,pattinson,Burns,Abbott just to name a few. Be warned,there is a massive storm on the horizon!

            • True, we don’t. We’ve a very tough tour of South Africa coming up where our batsmen will face plenty of short stuff, so better learn quick.
              And South Africa at home in 2017 too, so we will definitely be prepared.
              Whether we can handle of course is another matter.

              I wonder how the Australian side will look after they’ve lost in New Zealand?

              • Luckily the first tour is in Australia or we would be spanked,I give you that. I don’t mind being beaten if the future looks bright. I am old enough to remember how dire Australia were in the 80s so I’m not a spoilt brat like a lot of younger Aussie fans. The limited overs stuff and the money involved has affected our young guns more than most because they are more talented than most. They no longer learn how to play on English pitches because most do not play on English pitches(county,even club) I hate this because frankly I couldn’t give a rats about odi and t20 and the like. Money turns heads so I think Australia might struggle in pommy ashes series for the foreseeable unfortunately

        • I doubt Johnson will still be playing next Ashes, more likely not I feel. If Johnson’s not got his pace up I don’t think he’s half the bowler and I think that is going to end him in the next 18 months. Nor do I think Maxwell has it either Bancroft or someone else might be playing as opener and Burns further down.

          Voges won’t be I think but who knows, he may turn into Chris Rogers and play until the next ashes.

          Australia have bucket loads of talent but so much is focused on the white ball money quite understandably. Who will be able to make the transition to test batsman like Warner?

          Of Course Bell, Butler, Lyth might not be there for England Cook and Anderson is possible also, although odds on they will be.

      • Don’t know why you bother reading it then. I gave up reading most of the mainstream media long ago, because I feel the same way about that.

    • Penguin,

      Thanks for reading. I’m sorry you feel that way about what I write. I do try to make my pieces interesting even for those who disagree with my analysis.

      However, I invite you to read my post again. My premise is this: England won the Ashes despite the ECB’s strategy, not because of it. Do you disagree?

      With Cook, I offered little in the way of overt criticism. I find unconvincing the claims that his captaincy has developed. The questions I asked were: Would England not have beaten Australia without Cook’s captaincy? And what did he do in this series which turned sessions in England’s favour? What would be your answers to these questions?

      On Pietersen, if you think the issue is dead, tell that to the mainstream media, who still talk about him. Ed Smith rushed into print to say the Ashes result vindicated Pietersen’s sacking. That’s the kind of thing I am responding to in this post.

      But digressing, the fact he’ll never play test cricket again is irrelevant. Unresolved injustices never go away. If someone is executed for a crime they didn’t commit, you don’t abandon your campaign for a pardon, even though it won’t bring them back to life.

      You said:

      “The conduct of the ECB should not be conflated and should not taint the efforts of the players representing England”.

      I completely agree. My whole point is that the victory should be attributed to the players, not the ECB. As I said in the post.

      • Maxie.

        The KP issue is unresolved for you (and a number of fans) – However it isn’t unresolved with the people who run the game in this country. We all know there wasn’t one specific incident that caused a gross misconduct that warranted a sacking, but rather his employers drew up a charge sheet from many years of incidents.
        Whether we agree or not (I don’t) – that was the outcome. A management committee looked at all the pros & cons and decided a parting of the ways was the best for both sides and released KP from his contract.

        • And either you think that the character taint on the management group in behaving that way is one example among many, and has shown up in other decisions they have made – that it matters in terms of what happens going forward – and that it degrades the integrity of the whole enterprise – or you don’t.

          • “It degrades the integrity of the whole enterprise”.

            It certainly does, and in those few words, you drill down into the heart of the matter.

            • Stop screaming for attention, Neil. It’s unbecoming.

              You keep misrepresenting my blog and the people who comment on it. That’s out of the Nash Playbook. Stop it. I actually thought you were better than that.

              • Hi Dmitri, unusal for you to respond to me.

                I’m not screaming for attention (That would be the person writing daily blogs stating how miserable he is)

                I’m responding to direct criticism, I think that’s a perfectly reasonable thing to do.

                I think I’ve referenced your blog once this summer, and I’ve explained my reasons over there.

    • “The KP issue is now in the past, whatever the rights and wrongs of it. Regardless of whether he should have been picked this summer (about which reasonable people can disagree in good faith), there is now 0% chance of him ever playing for England again and I see no reason to analyse the historic situation any further.”

      This article isn’t arguing for Kevin Pietersen to have been included in the England team, it’s not even about Kevin Pietersen. It is a response to the many articles which have appeared since the Ashes win which have explicitly credited the 2015 Ashes win to the actions post Ashes 2013/14, as if it were a glorious masterplan and Paul Downton were right all along.

      You go on to agree that that’s clearly bollocks.

      “There is a spectrum of views, just as there should be, and no doubt some journalists are overreliant on ECB sources – but not everyone holding a contradictory view is “distorting reality to settle scores”.”

      No, not everyone. Straw man. Specific people in specific articles.

      ” I will feel free not to read.”

      Do you also nudge people who aren’t paying attention to you to tell them you’re ignoring them?

    • I think it is fine that you don’t want to analyse the KP situation further…and I think it is fine that others wish to do so. When going to anything written which I may want to read, I check the title and, if I continue to be interested, skim a little first…maybe read a couple of sentences…I’m sure you do something similar. Anyone may write anything they wish to, and we are not forced to read it. You can skip articles about KP. I can skip anything saying or implying KP must not be mentioned again.

      I’m not comfortable putting an OK stamp on a player becoming the scapegoat for a disastrous Ashes in which no-one scored well (and in which in fact this player scored the highest.)

      I’m not comfortable putting an OK stamp on a policy of making a player, whoever the player, unavailable for selection under any circumstance.

      I’m not comfortable putting an OK stamp on letting a player give up a great deal of money plus precious time, time that goes faster as a player gets older, to play county cricket with the well-publicized expectation that if they score runs they will have a chance at playing for England, and have that not be true.

      Won’t go on…point being that no-one has to discuss this if they don’t wish to, just as I don’t have to discuss how to mow grass (makes me sneeze) but we all have a right and a privilege to read and write what we will.

      Now a step up would be if we could respect what each other has to say without necessarily agreeing with what is said or being interested in the topic.

      Maxie discusses a great deal more than KP but in this comment I’m addressing the KP issue which seems to inflame many: the issue, that is, of whether KP should be any more discussed…

      I’ll make my stand. Anything can be discussed. If I’m not interested I’ll move on to the next thing. If I don’t agree I’ll state my disagreement or move onto the next thing. But even writers I respect and enjoy reading will lose none of my respect or my readership in general if they sometimes write about things I am not interested in or take positions on issues with which I do not agree.

      All of the above aside, I appreciate and applaud Maxie for having the courage to keep talking about what happened with KP…things which must not be overlooked lest terrible precedents be set. It is principle at stake. KP will be ok; it is we who lose without having had him available for selection. We lost the choice to have him or not have him play…. Or even to have him in reserve. Or play another form of cricket. Our loss, but now we are expected to be happy about it or we are disloyal to England! And a lot of people are falling for this! And talking about falling for it is disloyalty! And…

      Personally, I think Bayliss might have been happy to have a go at working with KP. I read something somewhere that gave me that impression.

      Whatever the case, thank you, Maxie. For not sweeping the ECB crap under the rug, putting fingers in your ears, and singing something syrupy about Our Beloved Cookie.

      • I want to add that I don’t see Maxie as not letting go of the KP issues. It’s others who are doing that, and I do mean mainly the press. Wholeheartedly agree that we did not lose the Ashes because KP was sacked and the way he was sacked. In spite of ECB’s egregious contact. In spite of, not because of, we won.

        As for Cook, I think there are complex questions which raising a shrine to him (and to be fair to him, I don’t think he’s asking for one) is not going to answer.

      • Good comments. I had a quick look at the batting this and the previous Ashes (2015 after 4 matches, so still runs to be scored). The England top order bar Root is not really too great in comparisson (e.g. Lyth vs Carberry…)

        Ashes 2015 (after 4 matches): Ave / Runs / Highest
        Root (4) 73.8/ 443 / 134
        Bairstow (2) 39.5 /79 / 74
        Ali (4) 38 / 228 / 77
        Wood (3) 36.5 / 73 / 32*
        Bell (4) 32 / 192 / 65*
        Cook (4) 31.85 / 223 / 96
        Stokes (4) 31.0 / 186 / 87
        Ballance (2) 24.5 / 98 / 61
        Butler (4) 13.16 / 79 / 27
        Lyth (4) 12.28 / 86 / 37

        Ashes 2013/2014 (5 matches): Ave / Runs / Highest
        Stokes (4) 34.87 /279 / 120
        KP (5) 29.40 /294 / 71
        Carbs (5) 28.10 / 281 / 60
        Root (4) 27.42 / 192 / 87
        Bell (5) 26.11 / 235 / 72*
        Cook (5) 24.6 / 246 / 72

      • Well said, Lydia. KP was treated appallingly. It is pitiful that the likes of Ed Smith are arguing that we won the Ashes because of the ECB decision to end the test career of a man with over 8000 test runs at an average of 47.28. Rather, as many have said already, the England players response to the more relaxed new Bayliss-Farbrace coaching regime, seemingly so different from the Moores-Flower obsession with analysis and data, vindicates all the concerns KP had about the Moores-Flower regime. Had KP still been in the team, I think he would have scored some runs and we would have probably won even more easily than we did in the end.

    • Another perfect example of why James’ articles lamenting the inability to let things go is so undermined. Penguin articulates it all very well above. This issue is in the past, and Cook’s performance as captain in this series is in no way affected by what happened 18 months ago.

    • Spot on Penguin. Regrettably the article is the same stuff rebranded as a new blog article. There are far greater injustices in cricket than whether KP was ‘sacked’ fairly or unfairly.

      I was bitterly disappointed when Gatting and Gooch trotted back into the England team post rebel tours, Gower being unselected. I am certain there would have been similar outbursts if social media had existed at the time.

      Its all history. Time to move on and focus far more on why grassroots cricket is in decline, why the big 3 are stitching up cricket across the globe, why attendances at test matches are dwindling and why cricket is increasingly (TV wise certainly) open to a select few rather than all. Far more important issues than the selection or non-selection of a divisive (in terms of support for and against) character like KP.

  • For what it’s worth I think Cook has done a good job in this series and you are a little harsh on him above, however… The rest is spot on. This result is as much by accident as design.
    You haven’t mentioned that the BBC web commentary crashed because of listeners…
    People care. Not being able to watch it is a massive deal.

  • A very fair and balanced article, Maxie, giving credit to Cook where appropriate and making the very salient points that his batting record against Australia is strangely poor, that he captains fairly well when England’s bowlers are on top but otherwise he has not developed since Old Trafford and the Oval in 2013 when only the weather saved England from defeat, and that there are serious problems in the English batting that have only been staved off by great performances from Root and the number 8! Positions 4-7, if you exclude Root, have contributed 433 runs at 18. Root alone has scored 443 runs!

    Thankfully Anderson was able to bowl well in helpful conditions at Edgbaston after very disappointing performances in the first 2 matches, Finn seems to have recovered his mojo and Broad has turned it up for the Aussues – as he often seems to. If I have done the search properly, australia have scored 2084 runs against England’s 1930.

  • I think the simple point is this: the World T20, the Sri Lanka defeats, the World Cup debacle and the draw in the Windies (which led to the sackings of Moores and Downton) were the product of the ECB’s reaction to the Ashes whitewash ie scapegoating Pietersen etc.

    The Ashes victory is the result of everything since: the retention of Farbrace, the appointment of Bayliss, and belated decision to embrace a new positive style of cricket (guided behind the scenes by Strauss) and finally move on from Flower’s stale methodology. It came at the last minute, but it worked. Thank heavens.

    The ECB were slow to act, because they were slow to realise that those who criticised the team last year were right, but at least they acted in the end! We must give them credit for this.

    The journos you’ve mentioned Maxie are obviously spouting erroneous revisionist crap, but we must give some credit where it’s due. Had the ECB stayed on the same course, and retained Moores and Downton, I don’t believe we would’ve won the Ashes for one minute.

    We’ll never get a straight answer about KP – it’s like expecting Tony Blair to come out and say the Iraq War was wrong – so I think have to accept that now. Painful though it is.

    Other that that I agree with the general thrust of your argument mate. Especially the bits about our batting failures and the assumption that KP’s removal miraculously improved the dressing room spirit. Of course, he left that dressing room almost 20 months ago, and there have been plenty of defeats during that time. Not to mention that’s he’s still mates with half that dressing room and all the young players in 2013 only ever praised him in public.

    I think the KP issue is old and tired now, but I don’t begrudge anyone responding (briefly) to the absolute horseshit thats been written over the last few days by the usual suspects.

    • Of course, one of the first to urge that Moores go…and that a different style of cricket be adopted, or, at the very least, permitted! (more positive, aggressive when appropriate, let players do things their own best way) was He Who Shall Not Be Named.

      Did Strauss really guide for more positive cricket behind the scenes? I am not in a position to know. That would actually be good news.

      I’m not looking for an answer about KP or an apology…both deserved, but won’t happen. My concern is about how ECB will continue treat players and fans. As a fan, was slapped in the face, and just can’t bow and say “since we won the Ashes, thank you, m’lords.”

      But definitely agree–pleased and grateful that Farbrace and Bayliss got us to a winning place. Cook is the mystery…perhaps he, admittedly stubborn, at last became willing to try things suggested to him. If so he deserves credit for that.

      • Hi Lydia,

        JM here. Strauss said when he was appointed MD that England would look to play more positively. He was also lukewarm about Cook’s captaincy prospects longterm (presumably for this reason). I scoffed at the time because Strauss was such a conservative captain, and I saw him as too close to Flower. I really didn’t think anything would change. I was wrong. England are playing exactly the sort of cricket I wanted.

        • Thanks for this, James. I really did want to know. All I can remember was his saying something like “we need his leadership” re Cook, but I think that was when he declared the Trust Issue (lack of trust in KP.)

      • “My concern is about how ECB will continue treat players and fans”.

        As the advertising slogan for The Fly warned us…be afraid. Be very afraid.

    • Re improvement in dressing room spirit…I suspect the absence of Swann and Prior may have done far more for spirit than the absence of KP…

  • I should also say that I think you’re a tad harsh on Cook. You’re right that we wasn’t really tested as a captain, or pulled any rabbits out of hats that miraculously changed the outcome of games, but he did improve overall as a skipper.

    We don’t know how much of this was down to Bayliss, but a few of Cook’s funky fielding places worked well eg when Smith was caught at silly mid-on at Cardiff, and at short cover-point at Trent Bridge.

    I also think we has improved as a leader. I doubt he’ll ever be a natural, but you can tell that most of the players like him and look up to him. If he carries on as skipper now, then I really don’t have a problem with him doing so. If someone shows improvement they deserve a chance to build on this.

    • Cook has been made look innovative by Bayliss. You don’t become a proactive field setter overnight when you have spent your entire captaincy career relying on old fashioned defensive tactics. His players,especially bowlers preformed. He seems like a very nice bloke who can keep most of his teammates onside,unlike Clarke who is tactically overall a better captain but just a little to self centred. No disrespect to either man! I just don’t think either man will go down in the annals of ‘great’ captains’ for different reasons

      • Re Cook as captain…it is easy to captain when either your bowlers or your batters are on top…or both. Cook is a good strategic captain. However, matches tend to hinge on tactical moments – do I keep 4th slip in or move him to 3rd man etc.

        The ultimate test is defending a lead of less than 250 on a 4th or 5th day pitch…..Cook’s record gives no clear indications either way. Trent Bridge 2013 must have been squeaky but Anderson came through in the end. Luckily rain rescued him on 2 other occasions. Remember the Oval 1997….Atherton, not usually hailed as a great captain, pulled off a win thanks to 2 flaky bowlers, Caddick and Tufnell.

        And for avoidance of doubt, I don’t think Clarke is captaining well this series…no cowman to snatch Root’s get-out shot against Lyon, odd choice of bowlers second innings at Edgbaston. He seems unable to inspire Mitch J to hostility….

        • Clarkes captaincy in this series has been well below par. Overall I think he has been a decent captain considering the sometimes average arsenal at his disposal. I was flabbergasted at his decision to bat first at edgbaton. Overcast on a greentop,ridiculous decision. Much better Australian sides would not dare bat first on that surface! I re watched that 97 series recently on YouTube. Tuffers was brilliant that day! Australia collapsed plenty of times in that series but they had Steve Waugh to come to the rescue. Was a huge gough fan back in the day. The best English bowler to never win an ashes!

        • Trent Bridge 2013 Cook was feeding Hughes singles to get Agar on strike, as if he were the bunny when, in reality, Hughes would have been a far easier target. Cook didn’t seem to notice Agar could bat until he was on about 80.

          • in this series neither Cook not Clarke seems especially tactically aware. I think that Brearley, Chappell and Illingworth would have enjoyed this. Un ess you have overwhelming strikepower, such as Lillee and Alderman in England, then tactics play a role. Cook goes defensive too early.

    • I have questions about Cook…

      What was his role in the sacking of KP? (Yes, some of us do want to know the history, lest it be repeated.) Some random person BTL somewhere said they had mutual friends with Cook and knew that it was decided KP had no hope for a return when some things on Twitter made Cook’s wife Alice cry. To which I would say that it is too bad things got so heated from all directions…sorry that Alice cried and that Jessica also was affected…sad it all happened, but was Cook really given the deciding vote? He later came out saying it wasn’t his decision. If that is true, was he asked to remain the scapegoat for it for awhile? Did he just not bother to correct the impression that it was his decision until criticism got to be too much? Or was it at least partially his decision but it was decided he should say it wasn’t to get some of the pressure off of him?

      Why was Cook kept on so long while both batting and captaining poorly? It’s great that he worked hard and got his form back, but shouldn’t he first have been dropped and asked to go work on it and then return? He gets credit for his hard work and success (although I guess batting is again going to be secondary to captaining.) It’s just odd that he has always been considered indispensable even when not performing well. As for his recent improvement as a captain, hope it continues. He’s admitted to being stubborn so maybe the improvement means he is getting some useful coaching from Farbrace, Bayliss. If so, Cook deserves credit for putting stubbornness aside. But we don’t really know what has made him improve, if he has improved enough, or if the improvement will continue.

      Is it true that the players all like him and are comfortable with him? If so, that’s a big point in his favor. I’m not sure, but I don’t think Cook even came in for much interpersonal criticism even in KP’s book. However, a happy dressing room isn’t everything. Cook/Lyth isn’t working out, for example. Don’t know what the fix will be but can’t ignore the weakness in the opening batting. Could come back to bite us later.

      • “What was his role in the sacking of KP?”

        After the Melbourne test of 2013/14 the England team – now 4-0 down – decided to hold a players-only meeting for a full, and frank, cards-on-the-table, meeting to clear the air and thrash out what had gone so badly wrong. Andy Flower fully supported this meeting taking place, and that he wouldn’t take part in it.

        Either during the meeting itself on in a conversation associated with it, Pietersen told Matt Prior and Alastair Cook that England would be better off without Flower as coach.

        Flower later discovered this, hit the roof, and refused to speak to Pietersen for the rest of the tour. The incident seems to have led almost directly to Pietersen’s sacking.

        All of this is explicitly stated in the ECB’s due diligence dossier.

        Therefore, Cook must have confirmed to the ECB that it happened – and either he or Prior told Flower.

        In other words, Cook betrayed the confidence of the meeting by telling tales – and landing Pietersen in trouble.

        There is no way of painting this other than that Cook by one means or another deliberately used this information in an attempt to bolster his own position while injuring Pietersen – an injury which turned out to be fatal.

        So Cook had a pretty influential role in Pietersen’s sacking. By attending the sacking meeting, with Downton and One Test Whitaker, Cook emphatically endorsed it. Certainly, had Cook opposed the sacking, it wouldn’t have happened.

        “Why was Cook kept on so long while both batting and captaining poorly?”

        That, my friends, is the million dollar question.

  • It really is getting a bit boring & repetitive, this focus on KP – he is history. If I can borrow and amend the fine words of that good school cricketer, John Cleese:

    “This argument is no more. It has ceased to be. It’s expired and gone to meet its maker. This is a late argument. It’s a stiff. Bereft of life, it rests in peace. If you hadn’t nailed it to the perch, it would be pushing up the daisies. It’s rung down the curtain and joined the choir invisible. This is an ex-argument.”

    Move on now, nothing to see any more on the KP front….

    • But if somebody is executed for a crime they didn’t commit, you’d continue the good fight!

      • It’s certainly a novelty to be executed for a crime the nature of which has never been revealed. But hey ho move on as Giles Clarke instructed.

    • Although the post above is only fleetingly about Pietersen, my argument nonetheless remains that when an egregious injustice has been unresolved, one cannot simply accept it, and move on.

      Only in certain tiers of English cricket, with their snide culture of lazy prejudice and quarter-baked borrowed opinions, is this is a permissible approach to a problem.

      I say, you either continue to press for a resolution – or you estrange yourself from the perpetrator.

  • JM here. Someone suggested on here or on Outside Cricket (can’t remember who), that it would be a tactical masterstroke to recall KP for the World T20. This would mend a lot of fences etc. I quite like this idea. Eoin Morgan is captain of that team, and none of the players KP fell out with will be involved, so there’s no reason not to pick him. However, because the issues is the relationship between Pietersen and THE BOARD, which is all its ever been in my opinion, it won’t happen. In fact, if you listened carefully to Strauss’s interview when he became MD, he clearly says the issues of trust are between the board and KP. He didn’t really mention the players.

    This is why, for me, there’s nothing left to say about KP. It’s a classic situation where a government policy has backfired, everyone knows it has backfired and was handled badly, yet nobody actually comes out and says it was a hopeless policy because it’s too embarrassing. There will even be a few revisionist articles written by friendly journos a couple of years down the line that try to pretend it was a success (or not as bad as originally thought). I’ve read a few about Iraq. Of course, anyone with half a brain that swallows these propaganda pieces is an idiot, or just believing what he/she wants to believe.

    I don’t believe in banging my head against a brick wall when it comes to Pietersen, which is why I think it’s now best to target our discontent at other issues (cricket on FTA and the ICC stitch up). However, I don’t begrudge Maxie having his say about the recent revisionist articles. If you always loved KP emotions are bound to be high. However, if like me you were only ever lukewarm about Pietersen, and liked him just as much as any other England player in that excellent Strauss team, then you’re naturally more inclined to move on.

    • But now three of the last four articles on here have been, in some way, about how awful the ECB and mainstream media have been. You can see why people get jaded, it just begins to look a bit bitter. Maxie comparing the situation to somebody wrongfully executed hardly aids that either.

      • Hi Ralph – I hear what you’re saying – but the main thing I have always aspired to do here on TFT is attempt to hold cricketing authority to account. And as we’re dealing here with an English context, that invariably means the ECB, but also the media, because they have power too.

        This was my approach long before the Pietersen affair. The political dimension of cricket interests me, and because it affects how our game is run, and what it is, and because the mainstream press don’t always pay it much attention, I genuinely think it’s worth analysis and discussion.

        James, of course, will have his own personal perspective.

        As for bitter – I certainly find it impossible to forgive or forget the ECB’s enormous wrongdoing – which has deeply soured the whole tone of English cricket and my personal connection with it – especially when they keep on doing the wrong.

    • James,

      The first thing to say is that we should endorse all that others say about you and Maxie writing whatever you want. It is your blog and you guys do all the work and we don’t have to read or follow. As it happens I don’t agree with all Maxie writes about the KP issue (or perhaps how often he does so!) but his pieces are always thought-provoking. When we judge the ECB and its motives and actions it would be wrong if, for quite a while, it was not through the lens of how they handled the Pietersen issue.

      Having said that, may I agree with what you and BAN X (below) have written? The issues of FTA coverage and the appalling behaviour of the ICC must continue to be hammered away at. These really are the issues now. The stitch up between the “Big Three” is about as corrosive an event as one can imagine for world cricket. How would we have felt if we were one of the also rans? We have seen the effects in scheduling here in the last 12 months. The Indians are not really interested in test cricket (certainly abroad) and got 4 Tests last summer. Yet the NZ series cried out for at least 3 of 4 and got 2 – as Jeremy Coney said “that’s not a tour it’s a visit”. I hope you two will feel you want to continue to fire volleys of increasing strength on these two issues.

      I am afraid I am less concerned about County cricket surviving in its current form and wanted to say something on that. It is vital, of course, to providing international cricketers but the standard is not as it was and if the economics are so bad then some may need to go/amalgamate. For my money the biggest problem is so few top current international players playing more than the odd game for counties – whether they be contracted to England or elsewhere.

      The standard has to be a lot lower than when the fast bowlers in the Championship might be Rice/Hadlee one week, Le Roux/Imran the next, Garner/Botham, Safraz/Bedi. Light relief might be having “only” Andy Roberts or Wayne Daniel or Thommo or Malcolm Marshall or Terry Alderman or Shane Warne or Mike Proctor (thinking about it some of these were great all-rounders and one then had to bowl to them). Bowling must have been as bad – Richards B and Greenidge, Sir Viv, Greg Chapple, Martin Crowe, Clive Lloyd, Haynes, Border, Zaheer, Sobers etc. etc.

      The argument was that these imports kept young English cricketers out of the game. They did – but surely those who survived and got to the top were all the better prepared? We have been fortunate to find one or two really good players in the past 18 months and to develop one or two more. Stokes and Root obviously. But we can’t find an opener and have a hole in the middle order. The jury has to be out on Buttler at test level (I much admire him and hope he can blossom) and we have no spin bowler worthy of the name and no-one in sight. I have been lucky enough to go to some part of all four Ashes tests so far (no ticket for the Oval – sob) but we are picking faute de mieux for at least three places and we should not be. I really like Moeen as a cricketer and he seems an admirable man but I could name a dozen off-spinners who played league cricket when I did (70s, 80s and part of the 90s) who were markedly better. So I guess my suggestion is that we don’t need to save County cricket as it is, we need to be a bit ruthless and improve it. We somehow need to be able to attract top players to play First Class cricket here (interesting to see Mitchell Marsh wants to play some county cricket). The one thing we have going for us is that our Season clashes less with other nations (although that seems to be blurring a bit). There must be a way of marketing this – perhaps “less is more”might be the way? Perhaps the theme for another article one day?

      • “The Indians are not really interested in test cricket (certainly abroad) and got 4 Tests last summer.”

        If only. They got 5. And it’ll be 5 again over there in 2016/17, and 5 again over here in 2018.

        Meanwhile, just the two Tests in New Zealand in early 2018, and no visit, tour or anything for them in this country until at least 2020.

        • That’s appalling. New Zealand play such an entertaining style of cricket, and they also play the game in a good spirit. They deserve a proper five match series in my view, or three matches at the very least. Their positive style of play definitely rubbed off on England this year.

      • Yes Mark definitely. We’ll visit this in the coming weeks for sure.

        I think two overseas players was fine in the days of one division. Maybe it’s still fine now? I think the problem is when we had overseas players plus all the kolpaks too. But the kolpak players aren’t around now, so it’s not an issue. In fact, the standard of county cricket has fallen a bit in recent seasons, so I’d probably be in favour of more quality overseas talent.

        You can tell more about a young player by watching him play the likes of Steyn or Morkel for an hour, than watching him plunder mediocre bowling all day.

      • Cricket is a series of interconnected circles.

        Youth cricket provides players for county cricket, and county cricket provides players for international cricket.

        Professional cricket (both county and international cricket) attract new spectators and fans and inspire people to become amateur cricketers.

        Amateur cricketers are then the ones that coach the youth cricketers who become the next generation of professionals.

        Its a self-sustaining structure, with all four sections (youth, amateur, professional, international) required to be in good health for cricket to maintain its position.

        Currently, spectator numbers are down, youth cricket numbers are down, and amateur cricketer numbers are down. If we are not careful, this will spiral away from us.

        The main problem at the moment, is that without FTA tv access, the link where professional cricket attracts new spectators, fans, and players is becoming damaged. New players are simply not being attracted to cricket at the same rate that old players/fans/coaches/volunteers are leaving the game. Something must be done about this before it is too late.

        However, we need to be VERY careful about how we alter county cricket to make sure that we increase our fan base, and don’t shrink it. I’m told attendances at the T20 blast were up 25% this year, which is incredibly encouraging.

        Withdrawing T20 cricket from the shires and retrenching it in the big cities would be a massively damaging step – not only have the majority of the county lost access televised cricket, but a significant number more would then lose the ability to go and watch live cricket as well! This really would be the final nail in the coffin.

        If you want to reduce anything, reduce the number of teams playing 4 day cricket. Very few people go to watch these games anyway, and perhaps having 8 regional teams playing 7 “tests” a year might generate a bit more interest.

        But for god’s sake don’t take T20 cricket away from places like Essex, Somerset, Leicestershire or Kent. Those counties would go bankrupt without T20 games and the growing number fans from those areas will simply be lost to the game forever. If anything, we need to be bold and EXPAND the number of T20 teams to try and reach new fans in Scotland, N Ireland, the South West and East Anglia. We know that T20 is popular enough to be financially viable, most clubs make upwards of £100,000 per home game.

      • Excellent post, Mark, and thank you. I agree with a great deal of what you have to say.

        In terms of FTA – that’s an issue we have devoted a great deal of attention to, and will again. You may be interested in this piece from a few months back:

        https://www.thefulltoss.com/england-cricket-blog/lost-key-crown-jewels/

        County cricket is vastly the poorer for its lack of superstar overseas players completing in championship matches, across a season. It’s not doing Australia much good either – they were a better batting side in the days when a good chunk of them had acquired at least some experience of county cricket.

    • Well trying not to wallow in sorrows here ;)

      I just (finally) discovered http://www.changecricket.com…three minutes of silence should get some attention.

      Reading with interest. What do you think? I’m going to be out of the country so won’t be able to see the film unless it somehow made it to Hollywood :) how I hate not being able to watch any DVDs I want where I want.

  • I’m afraid that I found this posting rather saddening.

    In particular, the reference to Orwell seemed to me to be ironically hyperbolic. While it is true that “he who controls the present controls the past” I think this posting also exhibited a more modern fact of the blogosphere “He who obsessively bores on in defiance of the facts can continue to push an outdated view and agenda.”

    The KP issue is now dead. Whatever you think about the history of this, it’s done. He’s gone. Sure, rake over old coals if you feel the need, but he’s not coming back to Test cricket. Use it as a talisman for where you stand on the administration of the sport and the management of the team if you must, but it no longer serves any purpose.

    Similarly, everyone’s view on Cook’s captaincy and even his batting should no longer be a significant factor in self-identification. He captained the team to an emphatic series victory. That’s as much of a fact as his captaincy of a side that was comprehensively whitewashed in Australia too. Both are facts: one is more recent than the other. Only a very small handful of people will ever penetrate the bubble around the man to know and understand him properly and all reasonable commentators should accept that they are dealing with a conflation of media presentation, management angles, soundbites and revisionism and will never really know the man. By all means, express a view on character, but have the decency to accept that you don’t really know.

    There are issues at stake: the over-long removal of international cricket from UK terrestrial free-to-air television and its inevitable effect on the development of the game for the future, ticket prices, the slow death of county cricket and the failure to re-structure the game to turnaround participation and support at the local level, the decline of the game in our schools, the absurd and probably corrupt shenanigans at the ICC.

    But please, please, please: stop the incessant KP slo-mo replay and the bad-mouthing of Cook. It just makes it so much harder to read your views on the actual issues that will matter in the future and which I would like to be able to read and understand without having to spew my cornflakes over my iPad.

    You should feel free to write what you like, it’s your blog. Just as, because I don’t view the England cricket team as “the ECB XI” but as a bunch of (mainly) exciting cricketers who are thrilled to be playing for their country, I will feel free not to read.

    • I’m sorry that I failed to place my last paragraph in quotation marks. It was, of course, the final paragraph of Penguin’s posting yesterday at 6:45 PM and seemed to sum up my position too. Apologies. Unintentional plagiarism.

      • Is it ok to be fine with reading about He Who Shall Not Be Named, or the Mysteries of Captain Cook, and yet also wanting to discuss the important issues you just mentioned? I care deeply about those issues and look forward to hearing much more about them.

        But I am sure that sometimes things will be written about here which don’t interest me. When that happens, I’ll find something else to do with the minutes I might have spent on reading (maybe do some deep breathing, call my mum, or yodel out the window) and read again when my interest is piqued. I don’t expect the blogs I follow to write about what happens to interest me in each and every post…do you?

    • KP has gone. So has free to air international cricket. By the same logic that you use we should stop talking about that too. I think the ECB are no more likely to bring that back than they are KP. After all it’s been 10 years and a new contract just signed. Silence on that front would suit them equally well as it does in the case of KP. If everyone tires of complaining of poor decisions then it will make it even easier for them to do whatever they like. Stll no doubt they will anyway as long as we keep coughing up the cash so I’ll stay here and let the ECB bandwagon ‘move on’

    • Very well written and well put. Our focus is best placed on the current issues of importance which you so clearly and precisely defined. We can’t change the past but we can try to secure a better future for test and county cricket and all who follow it.
      ‘The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ, Moves on: nor all thy Piety nor Wit
      Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line,
      Nor all thy Tears wash out a Word of it.’

    • Xan, it will stop. Once journalists read by millions of people stop writing articles about Pietersen filled with lies and poisonous bile, bloggers read by hundreds of people will stop replying. But it is very difficult to allow the other side to an argument to have the last word when you know that they are wrong!

    • Thanks for connecting Xan. I’m not sure if you’re a regular reader or not, but we do talk about those other issues. I don’t think KP has been mentioned at all during the Ashes. Certainly not by me.

      • James,

        I’ve been a much more regular reader than contributor I confess. I’ll try to pitch in a little more frequently now I’ve started and overcome my hesitancy.

        The characters are, of course, an essential and enjoyable part of any discussion of the game, but I just think that the issues we face in the game at the moment are so significant that it diverts attention to fall prey to the KP factionalism and the see-saw of Cook deconstructionism.

        It’s also such a wonderful surprise to be on the right side of 3-1 in this Ashes series that I’d like to take a moment (er, make that three months I think) to savour it in just simple wonder!

    • Xan,

      Thank you for your very eloquent and thoughtful comments.

      However, I’d like to point out once again that the original post is, quite simply, not about Kevin Pietersen. I only invoke him fleetingly, as a response to those who have recently suggested the Ashes victory vindicates his sacking.

      I have never argued here that Pietersen should be automatically re-selected – neither in this post, nor anywhere else.

      However, his sacking does still matter, because in most respects the ECB – aided by friends in the press – were allowed to get away with murder. They treated a fine servant of English cricket with vindictive treachery, for their own selfish ends. Is this how we want our administrators to behave – and without them being held to account?

      By accepting that we have to put up with Pietersen, we agree to put up with all the ECB’s other sins – because they stem from the same root. Their handling of Pietersen, like the Big Three deal, occurred because they believe cricket belongs to them, as their own private property, and is none of anyone else’s business.

      It still matters not because of the selection of the XI on the field, but because if you let public bodies trample over common decency and propriety, and get away with it, they’ll keep on doing it.

      Re Cook – as I explained in an earlier comment, Cook was a prime mover in the Pietersen affair, as evidenced by the ECB’s own document. And yet he is still portrayed as a saintly national hero. It is irrelevant that neither you nor I know him personally. My stance is based on facts, which have been placed in the public domain.

      And in fairness, most of the other subjects you mention – from FTA to the Big Three to ticket prices, have been given ample attention here.

      At the risk of blowing our own trumpets, we conducted a full survey of English international ticket prices for the 2015 survey. I don’t think anyone else, in recent memory, has carried out such detailed research into this field.

      https://www.thefulltoss.com/england-cricket-blog/ker-ching-part-three/

  • My thoughts on KP are quite simple. If there were going to be sackings after the 5-0 massacre then there were quite a few candidates to join him including the clever people who decided to take an unfit Prior, an unfit KP, an unfit Swann and a poorly Trott on the tour to start with. Utter dicks…..

    But as soon as Strauss was appointed it was completely clear that there was no way he was coming back, no matter what dross Graves might have said. You just have to read KP’s book, and in particular the chapters of him whining about Strauss not giving him special treatment to realise why Strauss doesn’t trust the bloke.

    As far as Cook is concerned, I do think that this “cult of Cook” thing exists more in people’s minds than in real life. Yes the ECB have made some daft comments about him, but what do you expect? They are hardly likely to come out and say “our captain is a bit shit but there are no other candidates for the job at the moment”.

    Cook, Strauss, Farbrace and Bayliss all deserve credit for the Ashes win, as do the Australian batting coaches who have failed to drum into their team that pushing forward hard against a moving ball isn’t the best of plans…..

    • Exactly – I think what annoys me as much as anything is the juxtaposition of vitriolic slating of Cook based on pretty much nothing with the moral superiority implied by the constant criticism of the ECB with regards to KP

      • Ralph, I don’t think there has been any abuse of Cook whatsoever. Merely discussion of his record. Certainly nothing calling him poisonous or a ‘horsefly’ like many mainstream journos called Pietersen. We’ve also published some articles praising Cook, including one I wrote myself. Overall therefore I think we’ve been a lot more balanced than certain mainstream newspapers.

        • Maxie said he colluded and connived with the ECB to get rid of KP with the end goal of making the side his personal vanity project. That’s borderline conspiracy theory.

          As for KP, it’s pretty clear he ended up being sacked for being a bit of a dick who found it hard to get along with decision makers. There isn’t anything more sinister than that – maybe it’s not fair but it’s also not unheard of.

          • Is it better to put up with the incompetents running English cricket or make a stand when you know things are wrong? In the words of Simon Jones when I interviewed him, all KP was trying to do was improve things by standing up to things he knew were wrong – because he cares. He was always ultra professional, worked as hard if not harder than anyone else, and spent time mentoring the young players. He didn’t get pissed and steal at pedalo, he didn’t take drugs, he didn’t shag a barmaid, he didn’t go on a rebel tour. He was just headstrong (a bit of a dick sometimes) and refused to take incompetence lightly. His major sin was having the temerity to criticise the ECB and Andy Flower that they were going about things the wrong way. He was right, but has been exiled from English cricket because he went about it in abrasive manner. Seems ridiculously harsh to me.

          • I’m afraid it’s not, Ralph – the evidence is compelling.

            And Cook has had every opportunity to put his side of the story – but chickened out.

  • Seems to me that a lot of people are commenting on this article, and saying “Oh do be quiet Maxie, we won the Ashes didn’t we?”

    Which is just making his point for him, really.

  • Many thanks to all of you, once again, for your excellent comments. James and I both really appreciate your sparing the time to give us your insight.

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