Key ECB figure on the challenge of replicating standards across first-class cricket

Matt Roller23-Dec-2019There was a time not too long ago when the to-do list of a batsman hoping for an England recall contained just one task: score County Championship runs, and lots of them.But as England prepare for the first Test of their tour to South Africa this year, there has been something of a shift. The batsman added to their previous squad did not score a single first-class run between his omission for the New Zealand tour and his selection for this trip.Instead, Jonny Bairstow was in South Africa already, finding his way back to form on a training camp in Potchefstroom, alongside James Anderson and Mark Wood, specifically designed with England’s immediate interests at heart.Those names are three of the 11 names in the initial 17-man touring party that have played 12 or fewer of a possible 28 County Championship games in the last two seasons, a figure that reflects not only the shift in availability in the central-contract era but also a slight change in thinking from those running the English game, which will see the ECB’s pathway programme brought closer to the England team than it currently is in the coming years.ALSO READ: Has the era of batting specialisation arrived?“County cricket itself isn’t necessarily reflective of international cricket,” explains Mo Bobat, the man recently appointed as England’s new performance director and one of the figures masterminding the strategy that will underpin the game in years to come. “If you look at the evidence, we’ve got enough to know that the difference between pace bowling and spin bowling in international cricket and domestic cricket is stark.”Of course, the cases of two Surrey batsmen and their contrasting fortunes in this summer’s Ashes series seem to present clear evidence that hard-fought Championship cricket retains its place as a breeding ground. Rory Burns, who averaged 44.61 across eight seasons in the Championship going into the series, ended as England’s second-highest run-scorer; Jason Roy, for whom the comparable figure was just 38.82, and who had played just seven first-class matches in the previous two seasons, made 110 runs in four innings and was dropped for the fifth Test.But the figures underlining Bobat’s point are clear: spinners bowl more than 40 percent of overs in Test cricket, compared to less than 20 percent in the County Championship. The same is true of bowling in excess of 83mph, which comprises less than 20 percent of balls bowled by seamers in domestic cricket but around 61 percent in Tests, according to his figures.”When you then compare that to say Ashes cricket,” he says, “those levels and intensities go up again. And then on top of that you have the pressure, the scrutiny, the expectations – in many cases, it’s a different game.”Take something like county batting average. We know that a county batting average does not significantly predict an international batting average, so a lot of the conventional things that are looked at as being indicators of success – they don’t really stand true in a predictive sense.”I’m not saying county averages aren’t useful: they tell you who’s doing well in county cricket, and that’s fine, but it’s not a predictive element.”Those comments may seem to go against the way in which England have seemed to go about their selection of Test batsmen in recent years. After all, the incumbent opening pair, Burns and Dom Sibley, both broke into the side on the back of prolific Championship form, and the list of discarded openers since Andrew Strauss’s retirement is filled with men who have had a single standout season in domestic cricket.But even if Burns’ call-up took years of hard graft – he was only handed his first Lions call-up during a sixth successive season of more than 900 Championship runs – it should be noted that like the majority of national-team debutants, Sibley has been on England’s radar since his teenage years as a former Under-19 and Lions player.In 2018, 73 percent of England’s debutants had played for both those teams, a figure that Bobat considers to be “a really healthy number” in that it allows late developers like Burns to break into the side while representing a good return on investment in young players.