alfie wrote:The big disappointment of course is what happened to Robinson. Three years ago I thought he would be the successor to Anderson : but something went badly wrong between the last Ashes series and the India tour.
I lived through enough of Andy Flower at the ECB to smell a created narrative justifying a conclusion based on no actual methodology a mile off. Robinson got injured for Sussex in a match vs Glamorgan in 2023, was rushed back for the Ashes not 100%, as a result got injured again in the 3rd Ashes test. He then got picked to go to India, played one game on a pitch where England had Joe Root open the bowling (in fact, 3 of the 4 innings were opened by spin at both ends), and that was it - career has been stoned to death.
I guess we can take from this that Key values fitness - which is why in Robinson's absence, he picked a mid-20s pace bowler who in his own words nearly retired 12 months before because of consistent stress fractures. He then picked Woakes, who has missed about 150 tests since he debuted with injury. And then Mark Wood, who also has missed 100 plus tests injured and has never made it through a test series in his whole career. Ok, maybe it wasn't fitness. Maybe it was form he was looking for - which is why he picked someone with an atrocious ODI record and who averaged 100 a wicket in the CC that season? Worth noting Wood replacing Robinson had a worse season than Robinson has ever had in his career, and missed more matches injured.
There is no logic here.
Let's just sum up this "badly wrong" in the context of others in the team..... For all bowlers to play from start of 2023 to the India series in 2024, only Broad and Tongue have better averages than Robinson in that time period - both took 5-for nowt in the game against Ireland, and neither played in the hardest tour (India away) where everyone's average plummets. Once you remove the India game from Robbo, and Ireland from Broad and Tongue.... ah yes. Different story. Top performer our Robbo.
In the end, its hard to see where this terrible run of form comes in. He went to Pakistan and averaged 21, including two pitches which were ranked in top 10 all time flattest on record. He went away to the test champions and averaged 30 odd, and then came home and went sub 30 in the Ashes (28). None of these series are remotely "badly wrong". In fact, his MOTM bowling winning the game in Rawalpindi will go down as one of the modern great moments for English cricket, on a pitch that never should have produced a result, and was one of the flattest pitches ever measured.
You end up with a worrying conclusion - Robbo had one bad game in India on a pitch both sides hardly bowled any overs of pace on, and that was it. One bad test. Nothing before that is bad, not in the context of the game, not in the context of his contemporaries. There was no reason to single him out.