The New Zealanders in England, 1994
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins
From Wisden 1995, pp. 343-6
New Zealand lost their 12th Test series in England and beat
only Glamorgan during their programme of 12 first-class matches.
But to call the enterprise a failure, as no less a judge than
Sir Richard Hadlee came close to doing during the final Test
at Old Trafford, would, nevertheless, be to divorce it from
history both ancient and modern.
New Zealand have beaten England only four times in 65 years
all the wins coming when Hadlee himself was cutting swathes
through the best batting teams everywhere. If the 1994 tour
was, to some extent, the latest exercise in coming to terms
with life after Hadlee- he last played for his country in
1990- it must also be seen in the context of the temporary
of the steadiest of their batsmen in recent times, Andrew
Jones, and of injuries to their two established fast bowlers.
Chris Cairns, an all-rounder of proven Test ability, if not
quite in Hadlee's class, missed the trip in order to recuperate
after knee surgery. Danny Morrison travelled but, because
of persistent groin trouble, played only in the first one-day
international. Another of the seam bowlers originally selected,
Simon Doull, managed one match before being obliged to return
home injured. Michael Owens replaced him but, by the end of
the tour further casualties meant Stuart Roberts of Canterbury
had to be called up from English league cricket. It says much
about the lack of experience and consistency in the fast bowling
department that Roberts should, by taking eight wickets in
47 overs, have finished comfortably top of the averages.
No cloud is without its silver lining, however. In Dion Nash,
only 22 and pleasantly ingenious, New Zealand discovered a
champion of the future. He took 17 wickets in three Tests
and at Lord's, where he surpassed any previous performance
by a Kiwi bowler against England with match figures of 11
for 169, he and Martin Crowe, whose masterly batting in the
last two Tests saved the tour from being a complete debacle,
all but won the day. Had Ken Rutherford, a captain whose humour
and equanimity never wavered during god and mainly bad times,
taken the gamble of bringing Nash back to bowl in very dim
light in the dying moments of the game, the ambition of every
touring side to England- victory at Lord's- might have been
achieved. As it was, England held on for a draw and moved
on to dominate the third Test almost as clearly as the had
the First at Trent Bridge, which they won by an innings and
90 runs. But for rain, England would have won at Old Trafford
in four days. In the event, traditional Manchester weather,
another hundred by Crowe (aided, with skill and determination,
by Adam Parore) and some ill-directed bowling as time ran
out, combined to ensure that England won the series by no
more than 1-0. Thereby justice was done; although the stronger
team, England would have been flattered by a 2-0 margin.
The paradox was that New Zealand made more progress than
England. A new home selection committee, under a very different
chairman in Ray Illingworth, dismantled the winter's touring
party. At Old Trafford, only five players- the captain Mike
Atherton, his deputy Alec Stewart, plus Angus Fraser and two
insecure batsmen in Robert Smith and Graeme Hick- survived
from the tour of the West Indies that had ended barely two
months before and which had included a famous and romantic
victory in Bridgetown. And both Fraser and Smith wee later
left out of the winter touring party to Australia. Some critics
looking to the long-term future were dismayed by the recall
of Graham Gooch, who scored a double-century at Trent Bridge,
but 13 runs in his next three innings.
The rebuilding against New Zealand, was, nevertheless, half-hearted
and clearly incomplete when the South African series began
in July. While England were feeling their way towards a brighter
future, partly by piercing the mists which had hitherto hidden
Yorkshire from the gaze of the selectors, New Zealand were
busy proving that, in addition to Nash and Parore, Bryan Young
and Stephen Fleming both have what it takes to succeed in
Test cricket. Young reached 94 at Lord's before nerves defeated
him. He is a brave, compact, correct opening batsman, with
a nice balance between the on and the off sides and also between
front and back foot. It is a pity for both himself and his
country that he did not make the decision to abandon wicket-keeping
earlier than he did; his true worth as a batsman has been
recognised only recently.
Fleming had established himself in the last few weeks before
the tour as a batsman of exciting potential. Tall and dark-haired,
he shares with David Gower left-handedness, a birthday- April
1- and the same ability to hit good balls for four. Like Gower,
he is a distinctive puller of the short ball; unlike him,
he is still largely an on-side player. Two hundreds in first-class
matches and 170 runs in six Test innings confirmed the god
impression he had made when scoring 92 in his first Test,
against India, and 90 in his first one-day international.
Matthew Hart and Shane Thomson may establish their Test quality
to. Both were excellent in the Second Test. Hart did not take
as many wickets as his beautifully poised left-arm spin threatened
but, at Lord's in particular, he tied the English batsmen
down and helped to create the pressure which led to their
dismissal at the other end. His eventual four Test wickets
from 147.3 overs cost him almost 70 runs each. Thomson, a
batsman of undoubted flair, hit the ball with relish and style
during his partnership with Crowe at Lord's and confirmed
that he is a developing, although inexperienced, off-spinner.
His batting limitations were exposed at Old Trafford, where
he was distinctly unsettled by fast short-pitched bowling
on a bouncy pitch.
The same, unfortunately, was true of Mark Greatbach, who
joined Fleming, Rutherford, Crowe and Young in scoring more
than 500 first-class runs on the trip but could not earn a
Test place until the end of the tour. He took time to recover
from knee surgery, like Crowe, who played the first few matches
with a palpable limp. The difference was that Crowe showed
glimpses of his rare ability even before the Lord's Test,
notably on his old stamping ground at Taunton. His confidence
and self-esteem came surging back during his impeccable century
in that match and he went on o score two Test hundreds. By
contrast, Greatbach owed his return largely to the inability
of the two Blairs, Pocock and Hartland- both victims of uncertain
footwork- to establish a right to go in first with Young.
A broken thumb sustained in the field at Old Trafford sent
Greatbach home a disappointed man with an uncertain future.
The lack of a consistent opening pair is a frequent problem
for teams which struggle in England and, since Rutherford's
batting did him less than justice, New Zealand were one experienced
batsman short of presenting England's bowlers with a solid
challenge. In both the First and the Third Tests, the batting
was unravelled by the swing bowling of Phillip DeFreitas,
whose 14th reincarnation as a Test player was by some margin
his most successful. In the last match he had the support
of a hostile young fast bowler in Darren Gough.
But for all the anti-climax after Lord's- the New Zealanders
were held by the Combined Universities and badly beaten y
Derbyshire before Old Trafford- there was no pessimism and
no need for the kind of recriminations and post mortems which
have invariably followed recent tours by England. Indeed,
Rutherford, who played the game as New Zealanders still do-
with a smile and no attempt to bend either the laws or their
spirit- made the following bullish statement at the end of
the tour: "Twelve months down the line, I like to think that
Ne Zealand ill be a very, very competitive Test match unit.
In one-day cricket we already are. England tours are all about
development; we're disappointed to have lost the series but
we're looking forward to doing well in a busy season at home".
His optimism might be vindicated if Cairns and Morrison return
to full fitness and Crowe can act as elder statesman as well
as prima donna batsman. Stories in the New Zealand press suggested
that Crowe and the team manager, Geoff Howarth, were not seeing
eye to eye. Undoubtedly there were clashes, but both were
happy to give Ken Rutherford their support.
Parore played well throughout, though his best came in the
final Test when his stand of 141 with Crowe- more than three
and a half hours of determined resistance between the showers-
saved the match. His form made watchers in the United Kingdom
wonder why he had not been New Zealand's regular wicket-keeper-batsman
since displacing the injured Ian Smith on the previous tour
in 1990, when he was the baby of the party. He kept wicket
with neatness and agility and batted with a nice mixture of
solid defence and occasionally explosive attack. His penchant
was for forcing strokes off the back foot, sometimes played
West Indian-style against half-volleys. Already, Parore would
be on the short list for wicket-keeper in a world eleven.
Nash's strong, willing, accurate fast-medium bowling was
based on an excellent action, starting from close to the stumps.
His efforts won him the Cornhill award as his team's man of
the series and he was the bright light amid some rather dismal
fast bowling. Michael Owens had some good spells at Old Trafford
but the balls he bowled were seldom as impressive as his long
and menacing run-up. Heath Davis was as fast and as wild as
he had been when playing in Sussex two years before. Then,
bowling for Bexhill against Chichester, he delivered 42 no-balls
and eight wides in 14 overs, He was given every encouragement
early in the tour, because of his ideal build and genuine
speed, but his willingness to learn was not matched by his
ability to do so.
Chris Pringle and Gavin Larsen are more experienced and both
contributed much without being able to make an impact in the
Tests. It was because Pringle was injured before the first
match that Larsen, a medium-pacer who rarely bowls badly,
at last won his Test cap, after faithful service for New Zealand
in 55 one-day internationals. Even in defeat Larsen will always
be glad of that Test at Nottingham. His spirit was typical
of his team's: a determination to make the most of limited
ability, and to enjoy the game, whatever the outcome.
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