I have been away for the past
week sampling the delights of camping across various rain stricken sites in
England and Wales, so you’ll hopefully forgive me for this rather late piece on
the Kevin Pietersen retirement debacle. I must also apologise for another piece
on the inventor of the switch-hit, alas it seems noteworthy occurrences and Mr
Pietersen come very much as a package. I’m a huge fan of KP, and have made no
bones about it in past articles, so you can only imagine my horror when after
minutes twiddling thumbs as my ancient iPhone 3 strove heroically to gain a
modicum of reception I was given the news by my trusty ESPNcricinfo app.
Twenty20 will miss the switch hit.. |
The One Day International
retirement in itself wasn’t the cause of the horror. I saw that one coming, albeit
perhaps twelve months or so down the line. Pietersen isn’t the first English
cricketer to make noises suggesting that all is not well with the players when
it comes to the deluge of 50 over cricket pencilled in to their calendars. The
likes of Graeme Swann, another key performer across all three formats of the
game, have mumbled their misgivings, and it is easy to sympathise given the
vast amount of time spent away from their young families each year as they don
the three lions in all corners of the world. It was the seemingly desperate handling
of the situation by the ECB that provided the greatest cause for concern, not
to mention blindingly obvious double standards.
The ECB inform us that their
strategies across the two limited overs formats are closely aligned, and hence
require the same personnel to be available for both. Despite being an utterly
ludicrous statement, given that the difference between ODI’s and Twenty20
cricket is every bit as vast as the difference between Test cricket and ODI’s,
do the ECB believe we have forgotten that, up until last year’s world cup, Andrew
Strauss played ODI cricket despite having already announced his retirement from
Twenty20 cricket? Likewise, England’s
ODI strategy is very much based around the solidarity of Alastair Cook and
Jonathan Trott at the top of their batting order, yet neither name features on
England’s Twenty20 teamsheet. Players of such a style can find success in ODI
cricket, but an ability to nudge the singles fetches little reward in the
shortest format. Why, then, must Pietersen be available for both or none?
Have the ECB forgotten that
Pietersen remains the number one ranked batsman in the world in Twenty20
cricket? Have they also, in their hour of lunacy, overlooked the fact that shorn
of Pietersen (man of the tournament as England triumphed four years ago, lest
we forget) England hold two hopes, slim and none, of retaining their world
Twenty20 crown in Sri Lanka later this year? Oh, and in the words of boxing
eccentric Don King, “slim’s outta town.” Without Pietersen, England’s side
begins to look all too ordinary.
Pietersen retiring from ODI’s isn’t
ideal - losing a world class player and your best batsman in each and every
format never is - but the needs of the individual need to be considered. The
ECB have shown appalling man management in issuing their abrupt ultimatum. The
question of whether they would have acted similarly had it been another member
of the side is a delicate one, but perhaps worth asking. Tensions do, after
all, run high where the ECB and Kevin Pietersen are concerned. After a series
of run-ins commencing with the captaincy and Peter Moores saga, through to a
brace of confrontations over Pietersen’s use of the social networking site
Twitter (he aimed a barb at the ECB after being dropped from the Twenty20 team to
face Pakistan in 2010, and more recently was hauled over the coals for a slur
against Sky commentator Nick Knight), and now a falling out over Pietersen’s
participation in Twenty20 cricket after announcing his retirement from ODI
cricket it would be of little surprise if the ECB were reaching the end of
their tether as far as any dealings with the middle order batsman go.
What must be remembered, though,
is that Pietersen has often been in the right throughout the aforementioned
confrontations. Pietersen saw first-hand that Moores was not the right man to
lead England forward, taking a risk that ultimately cost him his position as
captain in order to voice his concerns. Since that moment England have enjoyed
unparalleled success in the Test arena. Likewise, use of social networking
sites is a touchy subject amongst many in the England camp, depending on who
you speak to, and whilst players would perhaps do well to censor some of their
innermost thoughts on such public platforms it would be wrong to discourage its
use, within limits. Pietersen may yet also be in the right with regard to his
ODI retirement. The ODI schedule for England’s cricketers, indeed worldwide, is
hugely excessive. As players age their priorities will change, and it appears
that Pietersen’s have now done so as he approaches his 32nd
birthday. As his team-mate Jonathan Trott says, it is of little surprise.
The worry now, of course, is how
the ECB will deal with any future lulls in Pietersen’s Test form. Previously,
with England’s tour of the UAE being a prime example, Pietersen was able to
regain form after an abject Test series in the subsequent ODI series, where he
scored back to back centuries. He will no longer have such a luxury. Could the
forthcoming series against South Africa be Pietersen’s last for England? Given
how the ECB have treated their premier batsman in this latest episode it would
come as little surprise, should Pietersen fail to perform against the country
of his birth.
England fans will hope that the
differences can be reconciled between Pietersen and the ECB. After all, England
needs Pietersen at both Test and Twenty20 level. It is disappointing to see one
of England’s greatest middle order batsmen handed such an ultimatum but,
regardless of the fallout, let us hope that it doesn’t contribute toward
curtailing an already magnificent Test career. It isn’t just England that needs
KP, it is the sport of cricket and the entertainment business that does, too.
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