England’s World Cup Plan (Version 25b, WIP)
At the end of the English summer we thought Andy Flower and a plan™. England would build on their World Cup campaign on a similar basis to their Twenty20 success story, 5 bowlers, 5 batsman (including a wicket keeper) and 1 Luke Wright. Time has however made fools of us all, it’s quite clear that England have many plans for this World Cup and can’t quite make up their minds what which one is their favourite.
Wicket Keeper Opener?
Instead of working out who the best one day opening partner for Andrew Strauss is England have recently stuck the keeper in and hoped for the best. This seems to have rapidly backfired just in time for the the World Cup, having selected Matt Prior on the basis that he’s the better all round cricketer and keeper they forgot he’s not really an opening bat. Prior is not a power hitter and he’s certainly not the stay around type, more of a finesse player Prior excels when the fields are spread exploiting the gaps and running hard.
In the absence of a specialist opener or pinch hitter, England have shoved Kevin Pietersen up the order. At first this seemed almost desperate but I’m beginning to think it will be seen as one of the more intelligent selection moves made during this World Cup. Pietersen has been steadily going stale in the one day middle order, he hasn’t hit a one day international hundred since 2008 and as of late his contributions seem to be more fleeting than substantial. The move up the order will focus his mind on a new task, no longer will he be ‘protected’ or treated like a prima donna during this World Cup Pietersen will have to take responsibility. Something that I think he’s craved since he lost the captainancy.
Bit ‘n’ Pieces
England’s batting line-up just seems to get longer and longer, since the selectors have now worked out that Luke Wright seems to serve no useful purpose in England’s batting or bowling line-up we’ve had a steady string of weird and wonderful solutions to maintaining the balance of the team. Collingwood selected as a bowler or even weirder actually playing Tredwell. The decision however seems to be a simple one; Bopara or Yardy?
- Can Collingwood be used for a full ten overs? Will the big hitters go after him?
- How good are the bit n pieces bowlers (Trott, Bopara, Pietersen)? Can they cover for Collingwood or an injury?
- Who is the better batsman Yardy or Bopara?
On the basis that we’re playing on flat sub continent wickets which we will often yield run no matter who is bowling it would seem to me to come down to that final question as England will need to maximise their batting. Bopara might have the edge in class; test match batting pedigree with hundreds to his name, I don’t believe he has the guile of Yardy who is very much capable of playing a match winning innings.
Andy Flower it’s your call, not one I’d wish to make.


