Cricket: In search of the lost chord

Stephen Brenkley says Mark Butcher is ready to lead from the front

Stephen Brenkley
Sunday 21 November 1999 00:02 GMT
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IN THE nostalgically reflective way of these matters, most of the attention during the long countdown to the First Test this week will be on an England opening batsman. This will not be Mark Butcher. The name of Michael Atherton will be hither, thither and everywhere else.

It is as natural as it is certain. Atherton is returning to the Wanderers ground at Johannesburg, the scene of his greatest accomplishment, a rear- guard feat of such magnitude that it was instantly granted legendary status. The last time Atherton was there, four years ago, he batted unbeaten for 643 minutes, faced 492 balls, made 185 runs and saved the match for England from a hopeless position. The then team manager, Ray Illingworth, described it as one of the great innings of all time, a verdict with which it was impossible to disagree, unless you wanted to accuse him of underestimation.

Each moment, it seems, is being relived in the days before Atherton goes back, partly because it was a truly heroic captain's effort, partly because the hero himself is once more in prime nick, the form, it is being whispered, of his entire career. It is straightforwardly accepted that if England are to win this series, if indeed they are to compete effectively, his contributions will need to be in the region approaching enormous.

All of which has tended to deflect the spotlight from Butcher. He will be glad of this, being aware that he has not scored heavily enough on this tour so far. One score of 87 not out was partnered by six of under 21 until yesterday when he made a well-ordered 39. His place in the line- up on Thursday is guaranteed not by his average but by the faith that the management have in him. But, make no mistake, Butcher's success is hardly less crucial than that of Atherton. England have been short of good starts lately and their importance is about to become increasingly pressing. Butcher knows the score.

"Athers and I have been talking about the hazards of the first 20 overs of an innings here," he said. "It really is a key part of the game because there tends to be a bit of juice in the pitch then and the hard Kookaburra ball moves about. The more balls that you can leave in that part of the game the better. After that it seems to change almost completely. The ball goes soft and it's a case of patience, almost whoever makes the first mistake."

It was his impeccable judgement of what to leave as much as what to play that initially made Butcher a serious candidate for Test cricket. The ability has not quite deserted him at present, but nor is it as fine as it has been in the past. He has been lured into the forcing shot early on when he might have known better. On the first morning at Centurion Park last Thursday, for instance, his opening scoring shot was an edged drive which went high and wide of the slips. It went for four down to third man but another option would have been to let it slide by.

"Maybe it's the sort of thing you stop doing quite so automatically when you're having a bad run," Butcher pondered. "You do the same things in terms of preparing to face but it only takes a very little difference in foot movement for your rhythm to go."

If Butcher has not exactly overstayed his welcome in the middle since his arrival in South Africa he has at least looked mightily impressive in the nets. A good ball here, a run-out there has hindered him.

But he is an impressively relaxed cove who has learned to cope with the expectations, sometimes unfeasibly high, of playing for England. Much was made, for instance, of his run of low scores in England's opening forays on this trip. As he observed, had they been notched in the warm- up games at the start of the English season nobody would have noticed, let alone commented.

Until Thursday at least he is not actually the man in possession of one of the opener's berths in the England side. Last summer he joined a pretty elite band of Test cricketers, captain in one match, dropped for the next. Against New Zealand at Old Trafford, in the absence of Nasser Hussain with a broken finger, he led the side who belatedly escaped with a draw. For the deciding Test at The Oval he was replaced by Darren Maddy.

"It was an eye-opener for me being captain of England if only for that one match," he said. "Captain of England, but you'd be surprised the sort of things that are just outside your control. I was a bit disappointed to be dropped for the last Test because I like to think I can do myself justice in those sort of do or die situations but I can't say I was surprised. I just had not scored the runs that I needed to."

Butcher has now played 22 Tests since his first appearance against Australia in 1997 without quite establishing a state of permanence either in the side or at the crease. He has scored two hundreds, the first against South Africa at Headingley, the second in the First Test at Brisbane last winter. These were both noble efforts, but his unbeaten 24 which secured a nerve- racking victory against the West Indies in Trinidad two winters ago embodied his spirit as much as any other single innings for England.

If he begins to play with his bat as well as he plays his guitar - he is a real slow hand, always ready with a tune - then he and Atherton will form, as they have threatened to do in the past, a trusty and trusted first-wicket partnership. Like the rest of the squad, Butcher is making no predictions about this rubber, in which nobody dare expect much of England. "South Africa are one of the best sides in the world and they are at home so it's a big ask for anyone to come along and beat them," he said. "Our first objective is to be highly competitive, and to do that it will probably need three of the batsmen to get 350 runs. Who knows, then we might surprise ourselves."

Relaxed, but gritty when the chips are down, and perhaps after the Wanderers Test this time they will not be talking only of England's other opening batsman.

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