Cricinfo



Cricket Alerts

home


Cricinfo 3D

Audio

Stats

Fantasy

Slogout

Video

Help and Feedback



Columns


Columns Home

The Week That Was

Ask Steven

The List

Top Performer

Cricinfo XI

The Numbers Game

Rewind to



Charlie Austin

Vaneisa Baksh

Sambit Bal

Aakash Chopra

Tim de Lisle

Peter English

Neil Manthorp

Andrew Miller

Dileep Premachandran

Peter Roebuck

Osman Samiuddin

John Stern

Siddhartha Vaidyanathan

Anand Vasu

Martin Williamson




 





Live Scorecards
Fixtures | Results
3D Animation






England v South Africa
Sri Lanka v India
Bangladesh v Australia
Canada Tri-Series
ICC Champions Trophy
County Cricket
ICC Intercontinental Cup

Current and Future Tours



News
Photos | Wallpapers




Cricinfo Magazine








Match/series archive
Records
Statsguru
Players/Officials
Grounds



Women's Cricket
ICC
Rankings/Ratings




Wisden Almanack



Games
Fantasy Cricket
Slogout



Daily Newsletter
Desktop Alerts
Toolbar
Widgets







The abbreviated Ashes tour

Waiting for Lord's

Peter English

April 28, 2005



Allan Border led the 'worst' Australian team to a 4-0 victory in 1989 © Getty Images

Ashes tours have always accompanied bouts of extreme anticipation. Throw a tour party on a boat or a plane every four years or so, and the talk flows instead of ebbs. The 2005 build-up - presuming, naively, that it started after New Zealand were finished off and not six months before - will be almost twice as long as the visit itself, and the sustained interest of Australia's supporters might not make the journey.

The players would have been on board already in earlier eras, waiting for the white cliffs to replace the white peaks. Some squads would have passed Dover by the end of April and been gazing at Worcester Cathedral or remembering their recent deck dances mixed with black-tie dinners, shuffleboard and Bill O'Reilly's singing. In 2005 the shuffling is from leg to leg waiting for the first Test at Lord's. As it was sold out months ago, the Australian fans are more likely clicking from station to station until the first July 21 delivery from SBS, cricket's television debutant.

Complaints of crowded playing schedules have become as regular as updates on Andrew Flintoff's ankle. (Is it ahead of schedule, on schedule, flopping, flapping, or flipping madness?) But this southern autumn the lack of action is forcing empty laptops to be filled with perforated news. Australia's squads have been chosen and there's nothing left but to wait and speculate. About Shane Warne and the Michaels, Kasprowicz and Clarke. About rain in September and carbon-graphite strips. Sometimes even about England.

The sailing isolation that ended for Australia 41 years ago must have been bliss. There are now no deck quoits from the players or dancing with the stars. Instead it's lots of gym and family time, too many questions and too much tackling on the box.

Past players are trying to fill the void by predicting results, but the verdicts have been as uncompromising as the past four tours. The crystal Kookaburra balls say Australia 5-0, 4-0, or 3-0 with two Tests ruined by the weather. Parent-teacher interviews have never been so one-sided. It will take an early-series loss for most Australians to learn that England's resurgence is not a 334th false dawn. Even then it might not register.

The dismissive attitude was previously the star quality of the north. Allan Border's 1989 squad was dubbed the worst to land in England and departed four months later with a 4-0 victory. Geoff Marsh, the tour vice-captain, still remembers the barbs that gave the team celebrations extra satisfaction and began a 16-year grip on the urn. Bob Simpson's favourite Ashes memory in four tours as player and coach was leading the 1964 squad to a 1-0 series win when "we weren't supposed to". Both trips are relevant reminders of the upsets of underdogs.



Bill Woodfull's 1930 team played 31 matches in England while Ricky Ponting's will appear in only ten once the one-dayers have finished © The Cricketer International

Simpson's '64 journey was the last to England by boat and the first by plane, the players steaming to Bombay before flying into Heathrow. With the novelty photograph of the squad walking down the steps taken, the captain and the manager attended the arrival press conference. Modern-day players must drool at the lack of participants: they find it difficult to escape the glare before or during any visit.

Another downside is the tour downsizing. These jet-in, jet-out trips form short stories rather than a series of chapters. Silver-haired greats discuss their Ashes migration in no doubt that it was the time of their life. The tours unfurled like sails and there were weeks to discover form, friends and fun.

The first rope was usually untied at Worcester in April or May; this time the opening first-class game will be in July against either Leicestershire, Sussex or Somerset at the TBC ground, the most popular venue for unsure schedulers. There were 32 matches in 1902, one more than Bill Woodfull's 1930 tour, and Simpson's '64 outfit turned out in 33 fixtures before Border guided his men to 35 in 1989, including end-of-tour giggles against The Netherlands and Denmark.

Twelve one-day games beef up the 2005 itinerary, but the warm-ups and the Tests - the dinky-di Ashes Tour - total only ten games. Lead-up matches once covered as the interviews and form guides, but now the players' voices have been forced to take on the role. The tour will be over in less than two months, as the trip of a lifetime barely becomes extended leave.

The current players fit much more in a year than their predecessors, but it feels like everybody is missing out. As they carry huge levels of expectation they will not be the only ones hoping the abbreviated trip will be worth the hype.

Peter English is the Australasian editor of Cricinfo

 
Post this story on your favourite website Email this page to a friend Print this page Feedback
Live scores, results, news, features and more - a click away
Download the Cricinfo Toolbar
    Current fantasy: SL v India, England v SA & County Cricket
Login to check standings
    Live scores, news & ball-by-ball commentary on your phone
Cricinfo Mobile

Cricket Minute


About this columnist









Related Links



Players/Umpires

Teams






Cricinfo Products
Steve Waugh talks on cricket at the Olympics
Watch on Cricinfo.tv
The Cricinfo Quiz - Sri Lanka v India special
Take the challenge
Scores, text comms & news on your phone
Cricinfo Mobile
Play Slogout - our cricket action simulation game
Two formats to choose from

Sponsored Links
The story of the 1983 World Cup (DVD)
Available now at Cricshop
Follow the new 2008/09 Premier League season
On ESPNsoccernet
2008 Tri-Nations rugby coverage at Scrum.com
Live scores, news & more



 
Top 5 player searches
Most read stories