by sussexpob » Mon Jul 15, 2024 12:21 pm
If I were ever to write my ten cricketing commandments in a list, "thou shall not covert an express pace bowler based on his pace alone" would be a strong candidate for rule number 1 on the list. Only a few weeks ago, the chief of English cricket bumbled on about express pace being the most important skill in bowling, a skill that invites us to forget about how a bowler actually performs or what else he brings to the table. Anyone who has posted here regularly will know how much I disagree with this insinuation as it has very little evidence - pace without accuracy or guile just means the ball hits the boundary quicker, nothing else. If Jimmy Anderson has left a legacy on the game, it should be the that his career is the perfect example of why this argument is true.
I remember the first time I heard Anderson's name. I received a free copy of the Times at University now over 20 years ago, and in it was an article proclaiming the emergence of an extraordinary fast bowling talent coming out of Lancashire. There were no mentions of control or accuracy - he could bowl 90 mph, loop it like a banana and bowl reverse swing - Duncan Fletcher was getting all warm and fuzzy inside, as was everyone. All the tools a bowler needs to be a legend.
We all know how it went. Anderson turned up in the CB series in Australia such an unknown quantity, he had no name on his shirt and no squad number, but a few overs into his debut he pulled out a few banana balls, tore some stumps out, and everyone went into hyperdrive. Sadly it didn't continue, and for obvious reasons. Back then Anderson had one default setting... Rock N Roll bowling. When the ball swung, he looped it at speed, when he didn't he had nothing else. The ball would get fired in fuller and fuller trying to allow the ball more time to swing, and with it the boundaries would wrack up as batsman feasted on half-volley's. Occasionally he'd throw in a magic ball, something that would swing later at pace, and he would get you out. But mostly it was a lot of filth. The series vs South Africa in 2003 is a good example of this. He did well at Trent Bridge in the friendliest of conditions, but went at a run a ball and became unusable as SA wracked up 600/5 in the first test.
At this point Anderson was like a boxer with a once in a generation skull crushing power punch, but who couldn't defend his own chin - the answer the England coaches came up with to stop him being knocked out was to get him to punch harder. His runup was elongated, he threw himself into his delivery stride violently, he tried to up his pace - under the strain, his body started to give way. By the time he was trudged out a few times in the annihilation by Australia during 06/07, he was a shadow of his former self; physically crooked, unthreatening and barely able to get through overs.
The irony of all this is, it was the magic ball proponents that turned on him first despite getting what they advocated - a player capable of killer balls at pace with zero control. Isnt that "THE" skill they wanted? After that series in Australia anywhere you turned, you found articles or threads on message boards saying Anderson was useless. A small core of defenders were left to wonder... "well, rather than teach the kid to punch harder, what would happen if we taught him to defend himself?" ....
In many ways, Anderson can consider himself a lucky man. The physical ruin of remodelled actions and the toll of bowling way over his natural capability forced him to change, whether anyone liked it or not. The change of coach from pace/reverse swing obsessed Fletcher to ruthlessly efficient Flower helped also. Somewhere between the turn of 2007 and the NZ series of 2008, Anderson changed. His action became rhythmical, his pace comfortable, he trusted his wrist and the ball to do the work and when the ball didn't zip around everywhere he fell back on the unsexy tactic of tying up batsman and using what small amounts of help were available. Slowly over time he get better, and the more he trusted himself and his new method, the more he got better.
Chester-le Street in May 2009 felt like the real turning point. He bowled superbly in that game with a real cut in pace and increased control. But it wasnt really until 2010 that Anderson emerged as a leading bowler - in that year he was flat out world class, and he never looked back by that point. He became consistently great... Some people might turn around and say his average of 26 wicket never represented a top level career; I would say that, from 2010 he averages 24 over a span of nearly 150 matches. And from 2014 to the end, he had a decade where he took 350 wickets at a decimal point under 22.... sustained genius at the top level, for years upon years. If you want to hold the early points against him, be my guest... but it wont change the fact for over a decade he produced 100s of wickets at all-time great levels of performance.
And who cares about stats? Some players capture the imagine for the artistry with which they go about their business.... its hard to find many players in the history of the game with the guile, intelligence and ability to control the ball's destiny like Anderson. McGrath did it in a different way, Ambrose did it in a different way, but Anderson's ability to swing the ball and control the position of a batsman was second to none I have witnessed play the game. In the history of the game, if you played on a dusty wicket in Asia, I'd pick Murali over anyone. If you played on a bouncy wicket offering pace and bounce, Id pick Ambrose. If you played on a normal wicket with a hint of seam around, I'd pick Mcgrath..... and if it was cloudy, humid and the ball is going to move in the air, I'd pick Anderson over any man I have seen play the game.
As a player, I couldn't have liked him more, but as a person he remained somewhat of an enigma. After Matt Prior's "Big Cheese" public schoolboy arrogance vibe and Graeme Swann's inability to realise he isn't funny, Jimmy had a period particularly at the end of the Flower era where he was England's most unlikeable cricketer, for a side that were in the why they played and handled themselves already pretty unlikeable. I guess there were and still are sections of England fans that lapped up this combative, arrogant persona on the field, but as the dust fell at the end ofthe Flower era it felt like it was a major contributing factor in why England imploded spectacularly, and then declined sharply for the rest of the decade.
In what became Anderson's signature moment in this regard, Mitchell Johnson wound up by Anderson's chatter over the series finally loses his temper and fires a few insults at Anderson as he's turning back to his mark... Anderson responds by getting him out next ball and giving him the expected send off. The video was shared all over the internet and the fans laughed at Johnson for being foolish.... then a few months later, Johnson responded by sending a generation of England's best batsman into retirement, their most successful coach in decades left his post, and the team ended up rudderless for the best part of 10 years after..... and obviously by no accident, as it was occurring it was the video of Michael Clarke telling Anderson revenge is a dish best served cold that became the most "instagrammable" memory of the moment. Johnson didn't break Jimmy's arm, but he broke everything else in spirit.
I get the feeling if I ever met Jimmy in a bar, I wouldn't know what to expect in the slightest. Some who know him seem to say that he is shy, and that side of him came from Flower as a way to toughen him up. It represents an on field character he plays, while off the field he is mostly silent and unassuming.... then again, he married a pop-star/supermodel, once dyed his hair with a red flame streak through the centre (and blue, and peroxide blonde) and finished his career by downing a pint of Guinness unnecessarily Infront of the crowd. As I say, all I can come up with is "enigma"..... hes played for 20 plus years, and while I know the cricketer, I cant say I know the man at all.
Will 700 test wickets ever be surpassed by a test cricketer? I doubt it. The game itself is declining, I doubt even a fully fit 20 year old with no history of injury or form drops is going to play 188 test matches again. There simply isnt the desire for that much of it now, and I would imagine that trend will continue into the future. All in all, its a hell of an achievement... all the more because I reckon if England hadn't chosen to dump him from the side, he could have gone onto 800 possibility. I didn't get much of a sense during the last test he was near finished or slowing down badly. At well past 40, he was fit as a fiddle, still bowling with decent pace and still doing what he always does.
I guess even if test cricket survives the T20 Franchise era intact and someone does have a chance, will we ever see a bowler of such old fashioned guile and intellect in an era where cricket has become more of a blunt force trauma affair? I guess the sad thing about Jimmy's legacy if anything is, we have ignored it. We still have selectors who are suspicious of medium fast bowlers who are accurate. We strangely crave the Anderson of 2003, and dismiss the Anderson after 2010 in the county game.
All that's left is to say thank you Jimmy for the memories and the efforts. You deserve the applause and respect that has poured in.... but to echo ACs previous point, please please please.... don't become a commentator.
2010 French Open fantasy league guru 2010 Wimbledon fantasy league guru 2014 Masters golf fantasy guru 2015 Players Championship FL Guru 2016 Masters Golf Fantasy Guru
And a hat and bra to you too, my good sirs!