Monday, 6 May 2024

Further thoughts on Derbyshire and Arthur

There have been a lot of comments, understandably, after the debacle of the Derbyshire defeat against Sussex yesterday. 

In the years that I have been doing this blog, comments have always been greater in number after a poor performance than after a good one. Perhaps it is human nature, but it is certainly an observation substantiated by checking back in this instance. 

One thing I would like to say is in response to assertions that Mickey Arthur 'doesnt care'. 

I disagree with that, entirely. 

He is an international coach of high pedigree. He has been in charge of the national cricketing fortunes of Australia, South Africa, Sri Lanka and Pakistan, with varying degrees of success. 

Like a number of you. I had my concerns last year, when the club agreed that he could do our job as well as that of the Pakistan national side. I was quite clear in my assertions at that point that it was unsustainable and unfair on both the club and the country. It is impossible to serve two masters and to give equal time and focus to two jobs of such high profile. 

However, at no point have I felt that Arthur didn't care about Derbyshire, nor that he knew nothing about the club. On his arrival, he told of his long- time interest in county cricket and ever since has been one of its strongest advocates, when others have been quick to drag it down. Equally, he spoke with passion about Eddie Barlow and Fred Swarbrook, the tales they had told him and his long-time interest in the county for which they played. 

His arrival was much heralded and rightly so. His first season offered a glimpse of what might be, with players galvanised by his reputation, perhaps by his approach. But we see that all the time in sport, a new coach with fresh ideas brings a previously lacking impetus to a side. 

Last season was different. There was a clear and obvious decline, heightened by the absence of Shan Masood, a talisman of the highest order in that first summer. His Sri Lankan overseas pick, Suranga Lakmal, was an abject failure, seldom fit to take the field and underwhelming when he did so. Haider Ali was easy on the eye, but his loose technique and his being told to open the batting early season was always going to fail. There was a decent run in the T20, partly because of Zaman Khan and his toe-crushing yorkers, but the Head of Cricket was consistent in claiming that next year he would have HIS team.

Perhaps his plans for that team took a hit when the Pakistan role disappeared before the season, his services no longer required in the latest of many power shifts in that country. We don't know if he had people lined up, but it seems a strong possibility that his early knowledge of who would NOT be going to the T20 World Cup might well be to Derbyshire's advantage.

It is too early to know if Blair Tickner and Daryn Dupavillon will have the requisite skill set to inspire a fine one-day summer. But the sad news about Tickner's wife yesterday suggests that his availability may be limited, depending on her treatment and the needs of the family, which obviously come first. 

I will admit to having several concerns. One is that recruitment appears to have been lop-sided. The batting, while individually not short of talent, tends to misfire without a consistent someone to bat around. There are players capable of individual brilliance, but not necessarily used to being the focal point of that side. Perhaps a gritty batsman at the top of the order would have been beneficial,  someone like Marcus Harris, Dean Elgar or others. A di Venuto or Rogers in this side would be gold dust...

The seam bowling now has plenty of options, but if he plays both overseas then domestic talent is squeezed out. If he doesn't, then it rather ignores the point of having two overseas players, when everyone else is fielding them. An overseas player should be better than what you have and should fill a gap. I'm not yet convinced we have done that, but I will maintain optimism. 

Spin? Alex Thomson was given a 2-year contract and grounds for optimism that he realised with a 12-wicket haul in the first game. But then he is omitted, despite being the leading wicket taker and a player who offers balance, in favour of a loan player who, talented as he is, isn't as far on in his cricketing development. 

For me, the greater need was for a spinner who could bat, or a batter who could offer a spin option. It would have given the team balance, as at present it isn't. Yesterday's eleven offered little prospect of runs after number seven, Zak Chappell's cheerful occasional clumping not yet warranting my regarding him as a genuine all-rounder. 

It will be the same for T20. To accommodate two non-batting overseas quick bowlers, as well as Pat Brown who is a T20 specialist, Chappell will need to bat at eight. Unless Thomson plays as a second spinner to Samit Patel, in which case Brown or Chappell would miss out.

Maybe the hand will be forced. Another overseas may need to be engaged to allow Tickner down time with his family, but I am sure the imbalance isn't only obvious to me. He cannot really play Jack Morley either, because you have another bowler with few pretensions to batting. You could argue that if the top seven fail, there should be no expectations of the rest changing the game, but it would be nice to have that option and with the greatest respect to those concerned, I don't see it. We have all seen enough T20 to know that we are as likely to be 60 for five off 10 overs as we are 100 for one...

It hasn't been an easy year for overseas recruitment. With the World Cup on and so many other counter attractions around the globe, the challenge is clear. But I can't see how all of our domestic bowlers will get the game time they require to maintain rhythm, especially when Ben Aitchison is fit and I have no idea how Nick Potts gets near this side. Which is a shame, because a Derbyshire side without any home-reared talent in it yesterday is at odds with the investment in and heightened profile of the Pathway. 

Yet for all that I feel that he has made mistakes, I do not doubt for a minute that Arthur wants success at Derbyshire. His pained, stressed expression in the post-match interview yesterday told its own story. I don't know his plans for the future, but if they included a return to international cricket those plans would only be improved by a strong showing by his domestic side. 

Perhaps his approach needs to be considered. You cannot treat good quality first class cricketers in the same way that the elite, the creme de la creme are treated. Any more than you could use those methods on club cricketers or on a school side. The approach needs to be measured, needs to be appropriate to the needs of the individuals concerned. I speak not as an international cricket coach of standing, but as someone who has managed dozens, hundreds of people over many years. 'One size fits all' doesn't work well in management and an inflexible approach to that is seldom the way to consistent success. Nor indeed a happy and productive environment. 

I wish Mickey the very best for the remainder of the season. I hope that he can turn it around, just as I hope that individuals within the team who seem to be suffering from a crisis of confidence at the moment can return to their best days. 

Only by working together, learning from the bad days and celebrating the good ones will they do so.

We must only hope that they return to action after this fixture-enforced break with appetite renewed, bodies restored to full vigour and a desire to succeed foremost in their minds.

9 comments:

  1. Interesting thoughts as always, Steve. Looking ahead to the T20, my concern is our depth of batting. If the recognised batsmen fail, then we could be in big trouble. Here's the T20 batting averages for our lower order:

    Chappell: 10.00
    Brown: 10.66
    Dupavillon: 6.66
    Tickner: 7.42
    Thomson: 13.87
    Amir: 6.77

    I agree that we should have recruited a bowler who can bat or a batsman who can bowl.

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  2. Many thanks for your insightful analysis Steve. If MA genuinely believes he can turn things around I'd like to give him the benefit of the doubt. But I would really know what the players think. I assume that they are not allowed to express their feelings to the media or surely someone would have stepped forward before now to tell us what he thinks has gone wrong. My own view for what it us worth is that our bowling attack is woefully weak and that the massive totals which the opposition has been regularly accumulating puts great pressure on our batsmen to perform against attacks much better than ours. To put it bluntly, while our batsmen are capable of performing much better I doubt whether our bowlers are.

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    1. You see, I don't think the attack that bad. There are good bowlers in there, but I question some of the tactics. Why do we persist in bowling short? Why don't we focus on line and length, frustrate them, make them work for runs? To be fair, had we caught better this summer, results might have been quite different. It is a team game and collectively we have failed to work as a team

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  3. Given MA coma ments that we perform in training really well that the players are committed and show real desire, then may I be so bold as to say I think I know why it's not happening. So Professor Steve jr believes it performance anxiety, fear of failure playing for a County that historical fails and loses far more games than it wins is actually a tremendous burden. Even if your new to the Derbyshire team your still coming into a losing set up.Alan Hansen must have played over 600 hundred games for Liverpool won everything including the egg and spoon race, retired because he'd had enough of being physically sick in the toilet before games. OK he played in front of 50,000 people where as Derbyshire apart from t20 play in front of one man and his dog.Often the dog doesn't bother even turning up as he'd rather have a nap than freeze to death or probably drown at the incora ground. If your scared to fail then you'll only occasionally be successful this is bona fida sports science proven to be accurate and sound judgment. I told my dog he's opening the batting on May 17 against Northampton, now he's gone walkabouts I can't find the little bugger anywhere he's disappeared It's a clear case of performance anxiety plus the fact he knows he's got no thermals and just doesn't fancy it.
    Steve jr.

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  4. We lack a 2019 Billy Godleman. Someone who can stick around in 4 day cricket. Lloyd and Donald offer attractive cameo's, but there isn't a lynchpin. Looking at the newly erected honours board at Derby, there are plenty of current players on it. Conners has plenty of 5 wickets hauls in years gone by, so what's gone wrong? Kris

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  5. The facts are this whoever has played for Derbyshire since 2015 we have not won first class matches. We have won just 4 first class games at the incora ground since 2015 two in 2018 and two in 2019.Othwise it's 0 0 0 0 0 0 and so far this season 0. Shan Masood didn't win a game, de plooy didn't win a game since 2019. Matt Critchley didn't win a game after 2019.All three of these players are prospering elsewhere maybe Shan would want a little more but he has still scored 3 CC hundreds for Yorkshire. Leus already has 2 fc hundreds for Middlesex.Matt has 3 hundreds and a pile of fifties for Essex.So these albeit very good players immediately walk into proven environments and hey presto their successful.Now that tells me immediately theirs something wrong with the culture and whatsmore it runs much deeper than Mickey Arthur theirs something inherent in that dressing room that isn't right and historically has rarely been right.Bear in mind Middlesex are almost bust and can't afford any overseas players, Leus walks in and bang hits the ground running, why?Middlesex may unbelievable have to leave Lords so with that hanging over their heads will probably still get promotion.That shouldn't happen Leus will probably get 1200 CC runs. Why is that ? besides the fact he's a very good player.My late father said to me 50 years ago theirs something wrong with the set up at Derby.As a young boy I didn't know what he meant I do now, Mickey now has just 2 wins in 33 CC games both back in 2022 his first very promising season. I'm still 100 % behind him and will be till whenever it ends.

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  6. My view is that there was always going to be a question mark over whether Mickey Arthur could adjust to managing players who are mostly not international class players. Now into a third season that question seems even more pertinent. With due respect to Arthur l would have preferred someone who has coached at this level and has an understanding of the demands of county cricket.

    Recruitment also brings up questions over whether we have the right balance and l feel that one of the overseas recruits should have been an all rounder otherwise it leaves a long tail as we have already witnessed.

    As another contributor said recently, we have lost Critchley, Masood and du Plooy and we no longer have that batting strength. When we don’t accumulate a decent first innings total it does put great pressure on the bowling unit.

    Hopefully we can turn things around but it will take some doing.

    Nudger

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  7. I've attended. number of sessions at the County Ground and I've held off from commenting on the performances thus far .I think the batting in the Championship is a light and we haven't really replaced the run making or crease occupancy time of Godleman ,Masood or Du Plooy which has impacted over the last few years .The par score in FC games for the Sussex line up was 280 so was 246 such a surprise ? , and the options for replacement are Came (30) Whiteley (27) Patel (35) Wagstaffe (33)Thomson (19).
    I think we will fair better in the white ball game but time ,form and confidence will tell .
    It's not helpful having seam bowlers who seem to be out of form or not fully fit ,they desperately need Potts ,Aitchison ,Moore, Brown and Conners playing plenty of cricket and knocking the door down for selection .
    Much to work on for the Coaching and Leadership team before the Northants game .

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