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Farewell Test for Atherton, Stewart?
By Ted Corbett
LEEDS, AUG. 15. Michael Atherton and Alec Stewart may be playing
in the farewell Test at Headingley in the next few days. ``In an
ideal world they would make announcements about their retirement
before we pick the squad for the final Test at the Oval,'' said
Nasser Hussain, the captain, today as the two teams prepared for
the 300th Ashes Test and the 400th Test played in England.
I think I am entitled to draw the conclusion from that wish that
if they declare they are not available for the winter tours
England will make an immediate step into the future and pick a
new opening batsman and a new wicketkeeper. Of course, there are
no obvious replacements but after the disasters of the last few
weeks England's rulers believe that it is time to step into the
future.
I hope neither of these good servants and true men are allowed to
slip away unnoticed. Atherton has given blood, sweat and backache
for his country and accumulated 7,676 runs in the process. He
does not rank alongside Geoff Boycott, the last great opening
batsman under an England sweater but he has never played for his
run aggregate nor his average. I found myself at variance with
him over every cricket subject - from his captaincy to his ball-
tampering episode - but his undefeated innings of 185 at
Johannesburg was one of the finest innings of its type and no-one
can deny his fortitude nor his concentration.
Stewart was greater entertainment, a swashbuckler of the highest
class and, for all his critics compared him unfavourably with his
rival Jack Russell, he was one of the best of wicketkeepers, neat
and athletic and as adept as he needed to be to the spinners. I
think he was the smartest cricketer I can remember and
undoubtedly if he had not been such a fine batsman he would have
made some officer a wonderful batman.
On one occasion England was unexpectedly asked to turn out in
blue. Only Stewart had the appropriate sweat bands.
Australia has decided that Simon Katich would replace the injured
skipper Steve Waugh, even though Justin Langer might have
expected the call, especially as Ricky Ponting has had a poor
series, batting as if he had suddenly been propelled into a 25-
over game and giving all the old No. 3 batsmen apoplexy. The new
captain Adam Gilchrist is also Australia's most destructive
batsman with a series average in the '90s.
England has still not made up its mind how the pitch will play,
but we may have had a hint that off-spinner Robert Croft has a
serious chance since Duncan Fletcher, the England coach, had just
spent half an hour giving their new boy Usman Afzaal an intensive
course in the art of fielding at short-leg. ``I am not trying to
be funny,'' said Hussain, ``but the pitch could seam, swing or
take spin and we will make up our minds at the last moment.''
Part of the lunch period here today was taken up with the
opening of the West Stand and the Hutton Gates about which there
has been any amount of controversy. Three of the `Headingley
Four' - Boycott, Ray Illingworth and Brian Close - attended the
opening even though they had been ignored as the right men for
this momentous occasion. Fred Trueman was noticeable by his
absence. He feels, as I do, that the stand should have been
opened by a former great player and that it should have been
named after one. Don't call it sour grapes; Yorkshire has an
appalling record going back more than a century of failing to
honour its old players.
The Stand, a magnificent sweep of blue seating where the racists
and sexists used to indulge their habit, was opened by the
president of the Yorkshire club Robin Smith who promised further
improvement shortly.
He referred to the controversy over Asian women being portrayed
on the gate and claimed they stood as a ``continuum in the
history of the Yorkshire game.'' Lady Hutton opened the gates,
her son Richard made a speech and his sons Ben and Oliver
watched. But to hidebound Yorkshire members the presence of the
family did nothing to make up for the slight they feel from these
gates.
The teams:
England: Michael Atherton, Marcus Trescothick, Mark Butcher, Mark
Ramprakash, Nasser Hussain (captain), Alec Stewart, Robert Croft,
Alex Tudor, Andrew Caddick, Darren Gough, Usman Afzaal, Richard
Johnson, Alan Mullally.
Australia: Michael Slater, Matthew Hayden, Ricky Ponting, Mark
Waugh, Damien Martyn, Adam Gilchrist (captain), Shane Warne,
Brett Lee, Jason Gillespie, Glenn McGrath, Simon Katich.
Umpires: David Shepherd and S. Venkatraghavan. Match Referee:
Talat Ali (Pakistan).
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