Mark Butcher Robert Key Owais Shah Andrew Strauss Jim Troughton Michael Vaughan
James Foster
Rikki Clarke Andrew Flintoff
Kabir Ali Jimmy Anderson Steve Harmison Matthew Hoggard Simon Jones James Kirtley Ryan Sidebottom
Ashley Giles
With the certain knowledge of a desperately weak Zimbabwean team arriving on English shores, the ECB has stuck to their policy of trialling a vast selection of promising young players against less vaunted May tourists. On this occasion, eight debutants have been included in the 18-man Test squad. This does not include Paul Collingwood: after a very prolific winter for the ODI squad, Collingwood sustained a shoulder dislocation early in the season and was rendered unavailable. His place in the squad has been taken by Jim Troughton, who impressed everyone in his first full season with Kent and last winter with the ECB National Academy. Most of the Test squad's incumbent batters players have chosen to continue playing in the County Championship.
The captaincy has been entrusted to long-time ODI captain Nasser Hussain, who only recently returned to the Test match squad. It remains to be seen whether this is a long-term appointment for him, or if it is specifically for this series.
English XI Mark Butcher Michael Vaughan Robert Key (debut) Nasser Hussain Andrew Flintoff James Foster Ashley Giles Ryan Sidebottom Steve Harmison (debut) Matthew Hoggard Jimmy Anderson
Zimbabwean XI Dion Ebrahim Mark Vermeulen Stuart Carlisle Grant Flower Tatenda Taibu Sean Ervine Heath Streak Andy Blignaut Travis Friend Ray Price Douglas Hondo
- - -
England won the toss and chose to bat
- - -
For this least anticipated of Test matches, England fielded two debutants: Robert Key and Steve Harmison. Andrew Flintoff was listed at number five in the batting order, with no fewer than five specialist bowlers (including Ashley Giles) slated to come in below him. Clearly, the England management want to get a good look at their bowling stocks. However, after winning his first ever Test match toss, Nasser Hussain gave first use of the pitch to the English batters.
The brand new opening pair of Butcher and Vaughan started well, mounting a stand of 84 before Vaughan was trapped LBW by Ray Price. At least Butcher made his 50 before getting out, the first of two Douglas Hondo wickets in consecutive overs (the other being debutant Rob Key). In the context of the game, a lot rested on the shoulders of Nasser Hussain, but he made no mistake, and plundered an assured third Test century with support from Giles and Sidebottom at the non-striker's end. However, he surprised everybody by declaring the innings once the England total had passed 300.
With so few runs to work with, the English bowlers really had to be on their game, and they performed excellently as a unit. Most impressive was Jimmy Anderson, who claimed the wickets of Ebrahim, Vermeulen, Ervine and Friend. At the other end of the spectrum, Steve Harmison made something of a misstep on his debut in the Test arena, struggling to find his line and length, and as a result failing to take a wicket in the first innings. In the grand scheme of things though, that didn't matter: Zimbabwe were all out for 162.
At their second attempt, Butcher and Vaughan each went one better: Butcher completed a century, and Vaughan a half-century as the Zimbabwean bowlers struggled for impact. Vaughan lost his off stump to Heath Streak, which brought Robert Key to the crease. The Kent man played in much more assured fashion this time around, and had breezed to a classy 22 by the time Butcher reached his century. To everyone's surprise, Hussain declared again and set Zimbabwe a theoretically achievable 350 to win.
Of course, it was not a realistic target: the English bowlers again shared the wickets out amongst themselves, but Harmison again failed to find his maiden first-class wicket. It remains to be seen whether this will be held against him, but one must hope that such a talented bowler at least gets the second Test to prove himself. Speaking after the game, Hussain explained his declarations: "We knew we only had so long before the rain came, and we wanted to give everyone in the team the best possible chance of pushing for a Test match win before that happened."
I've also included a Player of the Season award in the style of the Allan Border Medal - the Barrington Medal.
Drawn or lost match
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Standings
1. Mark Butcher - 5 points (+5)
2. Nasser Hussain - 3 points (+3)
3. Jimmy Anderson - 2 points (+2)
4. Matthew Hoggard - 1 point (+1)
England (1) vs (0) Zimbabwe - Second Test at Chester-le-Street
English XI Mark Butcher Andrew Strauss (debut) Robert Key Nasser Hussain Owais Shah (debut) James Foster Ashley Giles Kabir Ali (debut) James Kirtley (debut) Simon Jones Steve Harmison
Zimbabwean XI Dion Ebrahim Mark Vermeulen Stuart Carlisle Grant Flower Tatenda Taibu Sean Ervine Heath Streak Andy Blignaut Travis Friend Ray Price Douglas Hondo
- - -
Zimbabwe won the toss and chose to bat
- - -
In the second Test, an unchanged Zimbabwe faced a much changed England: no fewer than four debutants took their places in the team, with Strauss, Shah, Ali and Kirtley taking the places of Vaughan, Flintoff, Sidebottom and Anderson. Troughton and Clarke will both have to wait for their first chances at Test cricket. This time, captain Nasser Hussain lost the toss and England were sent out into the field.
Finally, Steve Harmison got his Test wicket: an absolute thunderbolt ripping through Mark Vermeulen and toppling his middle stump at Harmison's very first attempt. However, the limelight would be stolen somewhat by debutant Kabir Ali, who took an eye-catching two for 26, and Ashley Giles who was given a nice long spell and was able to take four for 34. No Zimbabwean batter scored more than Stuart Carlisle's 37, making it three straight innings without a half-century from any touring batter.
Once again, Mark Butcher impressed with the bat: he made 74, his third straight 50+ score, while Robert Key also added a maiden Test fifty from number three. At number four, Hussain played another captain's innings: he made another unbeaten century, this time 106 from 239 deliveries. And his support came from Ashley Giles, who nudged and punched his way to a maiden Test half-century of his own. Once the Warwickshire man had reached that landmark, Hussain declared the innings once again to get his bowlers back out there.
To the surprise of absolutely nobody, England already had enough runs: the bowlers once again shared the wickets around, and on this occasion the best figures belonged to Simon Jones (three for 27) and Giles again (four for 22). By this point, one really got the sense that the Zimbabwean batters had internalised their poor form and started to believe it, which was a real shame as some players, in particular Tatenda Taibu, have shown real glimpses of talent this series. Glimpses, but no returns.
It will certainly be interesting to see whether Hussain retains the captaincy against South Africa later this summer; one certainly hopes that he will.
I've also included a Player of the Season award in the style of the Allan Border Medal - the Barrington Medal.
Drawn or lost match
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Standings
1. Nasser Hussain - 6 points (+3)
2. Mark Butcher - 5 points
=. Ashley Giles - 5 points (+5)
4. Jimmy Anderson - 2 points
=. Simon Jones - 2 points (+2)
6. Kabir Ali - 1 point (+1)
=. Matthew Hoggard - 1 point
Yep. It just went from bad to worse to even worse.
Honestly that Australian team was just too good for me to really do anything against, and it left me with a newfound respect for Nasser being able to eke out even one win in a dead rubber (and reluctantly for Michael Vaughan being able to score about a million runs that series)
Mark Butcher Nick Knight Mark Ramprakash Graham Thorpe Marcus Trescothick
James Foster Chris Read
Andrew Flintoff Graeme Swann
Kabir Ali Jimmy Anderson Matthew Hoggard Simon Jones James Kirtley Ryan Sidebottom Chris Silverwood
Ashley Giles
The headline news when David Graveney sat down in front of the cricketing press today was that Nasser Hussain retained his post as English Test captain for at least the near future. This is a rapid rise for a player who had until recently struggled for a place in the Test team, but it is thought that the ECB respects his tactical nous as well as his ability to mould an inexperienced team: this of course being a team that has lost the services of Alec Stewart, Graeme Hick, Alan Mullally and Phil Tufnell within a year. From the recent Zimbabwe series, Mark Butcher retains his place in the team as the form player, and may yet take Stewart's old number three slot. Of the new look seam bowling battery, only Steve Harmison lost his place in the team: Chris Silverwood preferred as the English management prefer Harmison to get regular overs for Durham. It will also be interesting to see if Ashley Giles is preferred to Graeme Swann after his masterful display of accuracy and control against Zimbabwe.
English XI Nick Knight Marcus Trescothick Mark Butcher Nasser Hussain Graham Thorpe Andrew Flintoff Chris Read Ashley Giles Ryan Sidebottom Simon Jones Jimmy Anderson
South African XI Graeme Smith Herschelle Gibbs Gary Kirsten Boeta Dippenaar Jacques Rudolph Mark Boucher Shaun Pollock Robin Peterson Dewald Pretorius Makhaya Ntini Charl Willoughby
- - -
South Africa won the toss and chose to bat
- - -
For their first testing Test of the summer, England's playing XI looked much more familiar: there were still a few new and returning faces in the form of Butcher, captain Hussain and Giles, but by and large this was a return to the tried and tested formula. Their opponent would be a highly talented South African XI, led by their youngest ever captain in Graeme Smith. They were clearly missing some first-choice players, most obviously Jacques Kallis whose shoes were being jointly filled by both Boeta Dippenaar and Dewald Pretorius, but this is still a mighty team.
With Smith winning the toss and batting, our first look was at the South African batting and it wasn't entirely flattering. Gibbs and Kirsten both fell early to the bowling of Simon Jones, before Andrew Flintoff followed that up with the wickets of both Dippenaar and Smith. At 71 for four, a huge amount was going to depend on both Jacques Rudolph and the all-rounders. The all-rounders also struggled (of them, only Robin Peterson passed 20), but Rudolph cut loose with superb strokeplay. Rudolph of course famously started his career with a dominant double-hundred in Bangladesh, and his unbeaten innings here at Edgbaston pushed his Test batting average up to 476 thanks to innings of 222*, 71 and 183* today. He couldn't have got there without a Test and first-class career best 40 from Makhaya Ntini: will England be left to rue that 111-run partnership?
In their reply, England didn't have a big score like Rudolph's to count on. Instead, their best contributions came from Marcus Trescothick (73) and Mark Butcher (42). Aside from those two players, nobody could handle the pace and menace of Ntini: riding high on the back of his batting best, he took five of the first seven English wickets to fall in an awe-inspiring spell. Then, in a bizarre few minutes of play, England went from 237 for 7 to 237 all out as Sidebottom, Jones and Anderson all managed to get out to Robin Peterson in the space of five deliveries. The contrast with Ntini's resistance was profound.
Sporting a big first innings lead, South Africa just had to go out and bat properly. The batting conditions were tricky though: Simon Jones was extracting bounce and sideways movement, and it was enough to account for Smith, Dippenaar, Boucher and Peterson over the course of the South African second innings. Unlike the first innings, South Africa's batters couldn't muster a game-defining innings: only Herschelle Gibbs reached 50, and a disciplined bowling effort from the hosts kept their target just about within reach.
For the first time in roughly a decade, England were staring down a difficult run chase without the talismanic Alec Stewart. If that phased them, they didn't show it: Nick Knight (no longer captain) started serenely, and Mark Butcher channelled his best Alec Stewart by cruising to a very fluent fifty. Neither was able to push on to three figures, Graham Thorpe picked up the mantle excellently: he looked world class for every one of his 83 runs, and it came as a total surprise to everyone when he slog-swept Robin Peterson into the hands of Ntini on the leg-side boundary. When his wicket fell, England still needed 47 runs to win and it was down to the four bowlers. Would an unlikely hero put their hand up?
Yes! Simon Jones, with the bat. He used his ungainly, crablike method to find the boundary on five vital occasions, especially off the bowling of both Pretorius and Peterson, the latter of whom he biffed for the game-winning boundary. What a performance under pressure from the Welshman.
I've also included a Player of the Season award in the style of the Allan Border Medal - the Barrington Medal.
Drawn or lost match
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Standings
1. Ashley Giles - 7 points (+2)
=. Simon Jones - 7 points (+5)
3. Nasser Hussain - 6 points
4. Mark Butcher - 5 points
5. Andrew Flintoff - 3 points (+3)
6. Jimmy Anderson - 2 points
7. Kabir Ali - 1 point
=. Matthew Hoggard - 1 point
=. Graham Thorpe - 1 point (+1)
England (1) vs (0) South Africa - Second Test at Lord's
English XI Nick Knight Marcus Trescothick Mark Butcher Nasser Hussain Graham Thorpe Andrew Flintoff Chris Read Ashley Giles Ryan Sidebottom Matthew Hoggard Jimmy Anderson
South African XI Graeme Smith Herschelle Gibbs Gary Kirsten Boeta Dippenaar Jacques Rudolph Mark Boucher Shaun Pollock Andrew Hall Paul Adams Dewald Pretorius Makhaya Ntini
- - -
England won the toss and chose to bat
- - -
Both sides made changes after a thrilling first Test match: for England, a simple bit of rotation in the bowling attack: Simon Jones was rested with the intention that he comes back in at Trent Bridge. For South Africa, Andrew Hall and Paul Adams come in for Charl Willoughby and Robin Peterson in the hope that it lends a bit of balance to the side. Both sides wanted to bat at the toss, but it was Hussain, and therefore England, who won the opportunity to do so.
That was an excellent decision from Hussain: although neither Knight nor Butcher was able to record a big score, it was clear from how Trescothick played that England had the best batting conditions of the summer so far. First, it was Trescothick who breezed to a century: the big left-hander crunched 13 boundaries and a six en route to a superb 122. He was finally dismissed as he tried to hit a straight ball to the leg side, but this brought Graham Thorpe to the crease with 236 runs already on the board. He watched on as Hussain passed his own century, then set to scoring some runs of his own and doing so quickly. He was very quick on the pull shot, finding the leg-side boundary as many as ten times as he made an excellent 144: the third English hundred of the innings. The innings was not declared until Thorpe was the seventh English batter dismissed, by which time Ashley Giles had also cashed in a half-century.
After spending almost two days out in the field, the South Africans looked tired and it showed in their batting: Gibbs snicked off for an eight-ball duck before Kirsten played all round a straight ball while stood in front of his stumps. Dippenaar and Smith did their best to rebuild, but the right-hander ultimately became another Test victim for Jimmy Anderson with the score on 128. Then, a pivotal moment in the series: Jacques Rudolph, at that moment averaging exactly 250 in Test cricket, tried to hook a Flintoff bouncer. He missed it, but it did not miss him. The resulting impact ultimately ruled him out of the innings, the Test, and eventually the series.
Without one of their key batters, South Africa more or less fell apart: in the first innings, they crumbled to 203 all out, and nobody was surprised when Hussain enforced the follow-on. The second innings was certainly longer as the touring side tried to hold on for an unlikely draw, but only one batter passed 30. Even more dully, that one bowler was Boeta Dippenaar, and his unbeaten 89 was not spectator-friendly. The star English bowler in the second innings was Ryan Sidebottom: the left-armer ran rampant with his third Test five-for as England romped to an innings win.
That's now eleven consecutive home Test wins.
I've also included a Player of the Season award in the style of the Allan Border Medal - the Barrington Medal.
Drawn or lost match
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Standings
1. Ashley Giles - 7 points
=. Simon Jones - 7 points
3. Nasser Hussain - 7 points (+1)
4. Mark Butcher - 5 points
=. Ryan Sidebottom - 5 points (+5)
6. Graham Thorpe - 4 points (+3)
7. Andrew Flintoff - 3 points
8. Jimmy Anderson - 2 points
=. Marcus Trescothick - 2 points (+2)
10. Kabir Ali - 1 point
=. Matthew Hoggard - 1 point
England (2) vs (0) South Africa - Third Test at Old Trafford
English XI Nick Knight Marcus Trescothick Mark Butcher Nasser Hussain Graham Thorpe Andrew Flintoff Chris Read Ashley Giles Ryan Sidebottom Simon Jones Matthew Hoggard
South African XI Graeme Smith Herschelle Gibbs Gary Kirsten Jacques Kallis Boeta Dippenaar Neil McKenzie Mark Boucher Shaun Pollock Andrew Hall Paul Adams Makhaya Ntini
- - -
South Africa won the toss and chose to bat
- - -
The wonderful thing about having such a gifted player as Jacques Kallis is that he is able to fulfil not one, but two specialist roles in your team. As a result of his return to fitness, not only did South Africa have an upgrade on Jacques Rudolph with the bat, but also on Dewald Pretorius with the ball. As a result, there was now room to squeeze in an extra batter and so Neil McKenzie also got the call. For England, just another little shuffle of the pace bowling deck: a rested Simon Jones comes into the side in place of a resting Jimmy Anderson. With cloudy weather forecast in the second half of the game, this would be a big toss to win, and it was Graeme Smith who managed to do exactly that.
Despite getting the short straw, the English fast bowlers set to their work with all their usual levels of effort and skill, and all four of them were rewarded with a wicket before lunch on the first day. First Jones removed Gibbs, then Flintoff got Kirsten, then Hoggard dismissed Smith and finally Sidebottom bested Dippenaar to leave South Africa reeling at 58 for four. This was where that selection of an extra batter could have proved vital, because even when Hoggard made Kallis his second victim, South Africa weren't yet down and out. No, that wasn't the case until Sidebottom got his second wicket moments later. From then on, the collapse continued until a complete team performance from England had left their opponents 147 all out.
Scores of 66 from Trescothick and 73 from Butcher meant that England had pressed into the lead for the loss of only two wickets. However, a superb spell from Shaun Pollock with support from all three of his fellow seamers meant that England couldn't get completely out of sight. Their eventual total of 272 might have been almost double South Africa's, but it was "only" a lead of 125, and we've seen England come back from far worse positions in recent years. Clearly the situation demanded another vintage performance from England's bowlers to make sure this game didn't slip.
Herschelle Gibbs tried to take the initiative right away, coming out of the blocks swinging with a flurry of boundaries. It took a Flintoff in-swinger to stop the situation getting out of hand, and that pattern characterised a fascinating period of play: just as one side looked likely to take a slight advantage, the other team would wrest back control. First it had been Gibbs; then a couple more quick wickets threatened to put England back ahead. That brought strong resistance from Kallis and Dippenaar who fought right back. Then just after their partnership passed 100, Hoggard and Flintoff came back and dismissed both players. Then, as Boucher started to proffer some real resistance, Ashley Giles spun a web at the other end to bamboozle the lower order. The result of all this to-ing and fro-ing was a modest target for England of 140 runs to win.
The inclement weather on Day Four meant that the players were on and off the field at regular intervals, but between those times the broad bats of Trescothick and Hussain were clearly up to the task. Taking no undue risks, they saw England almost all the way to the target. Even some top quality South African fast bowling couldn't turn things around: it was simply too late, and Graham Thorpe sealed the series with a tidy single nudged into the leg side.
I've also included a Player of the Season award in the style of the Allan Border Medal - the Barrington Medal.
Drawn or lost match
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Standings
1. Ashley Giles - 9 points (+2)
2. Nasser Hussain - 7 points
=. Simon Jones - 7 points
4. Matthew Hoggard - 6 points (+5)
5. Mark Butcher - 5 points
=. Ryan Sidebottom - 5 points
=. Marcus Trescothick - 5 points (+3)
8. Andrew Flintoff - 4 points (+1)
=. Graham Thorpe - 4 points
10. Jimmy Anderson - 2 points
11. Kabir Ali - 1 point
I think it's likely that he'll end up at around the 35-Test mark. Of course, avoiding that Ashes knee injury is vital, but I don't intend to play him past the end of the 2005 Ashes, in line with when his body had had enough in real life.
It does! I was worried I wouldn't be able to get him into the side, and then if I did that he wouldn't make sense as a captaincy candidate, but Thorpe's marriage breakdown and Nasser's recall gave me just enough to work with. 2005 might be Nasser's Ashes!
England (3) vs (0) South Africa - Fourth Test at Headingley
English XI Nick Knight Marcus Trescothick Mark Butcher Nasser Hussain Graham Thorpe Andrew Flintoff Chris Read Ashley Giles Kabir Ali Matthew Hoggard Jimmy Anderson
South African XI Graeme Smith Herschelle Gibbs Gary Kirsten Jacques Kallis Neil McKenzie Boeta Dippenaar Mark Boucher Andrew Hall Monde Zondeki Makhaya Ntini Dewald Pretorius
- - -
South Africa won the toss and chose to bat
- - -
Once again, England came into a Test match with a shuffled fast bowling pack: this time, Kabir Ali and Jimmy Anderson come into the side with Simon Jones and Ryan Sidebottom rested. Unusually, South Africa have taken a similar approach: with Pollock unavailable, South Africa have brought in both Zondeki and Pretorius, leaving them with no spinner in the side. All the more curious then that Smith still chose to bat first after winning the toss.
The English fast bowling efforts have been excellent all summer, but even then their start to the fourth Test has to rank as a real surprise. Hoggard and Anderson shared the wickets of Gibbs, Smith and Kirsten before the tourists reached 20, and things did not really improve. In fairly helpful conditions, Hussain relied on three of his front-line quicks, with Kabir Ali also taking two important wickets. Indeed, it came as something of a surprise when he belatedly threw the ball to Giles, but it was no surprise at all that he then immediately wrapped up the last two wickets of the innings: just 137 all out.
Despite the testing conditions, the English opening batters then added insult to injury by passing the South African total without losing a wicket. Marcus Trescothick was his usual irascible self as he made a solid 75, but for Knight this was a genuinely special innings. The experienced left-hander made his first Test century since resigning from the England captaincy, and he did it when batting was really tough. There were some punchy middle-order contributions from Thorpe and Flintoff, the latter of whom made 45 from just 41 deliveries. It was during yet another break in play on the third day that Hussain sprung yet another of his patented early declarations with England's lead at 189.
He was immediately vindicated yet again by the efforts of his fast bowlers. The South African opening batters did their best to fight through to the close, but they both failed: first Gibbs edged Flintoff through to Chris Read, then Smith was deceived by Anderson's swing. Early on the fourth morning, things went from bad to far far worse for South Africa when Kallis missed an Anderson bouncer and went down immediately. He had to be helped off the pitch and was not seen again for the rest of the game. This series was truly turning into an eventus horribilis for the South Africans.
Kirsten and McKenzie did their best to mount a proper recovery though: including the brief contribution of Kallis, the third wicket partnership contributed 125 vital runs. That hard work and genuine promise only served to make it more heartbreaking when Hoggard and Anderson returned to the bowling crease and promptly turned a position of 163 for two (effectively three) into a desperate 199 all out. Both bowlers were fantastic, but the batting really was not.
Hussain sprung one last surprise by sending himself and Andrew Flintoff out to knock off the target of just 11, which they did in just three overs with Flintoff hitting the winning run.
I've also included a Player of the Season award in the style of the Allan Border Medal - the Barrington Medal.
Drawn or lost match
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Standings
1. Ashley Giles - 9 points
=. Matthew Hoggard - 9 points (+3)
3. Jimmy Anderson - 7 points (+5)
=. Nasser Hussain - 7 points
=. Simon Jones - 7 points
6. Marcus Trescothick - 6 points (+1)
7. Mark Butcher - 5 points
=. Ryan Sidebottom - 5 points
9. Andrew Flintoff - 4 points
=. Graham Thorpe - 4 points
11. Nick Knight - 2 points (+2)
11. Kabir Ali - 1 point
England (4) vs (0) South Africa - Fifth Test at The Oval
English XI Nick Knight Marcus Trescothick Mark Butcher Nasser Hussain Graham Thorpe Andrew Flintoff Chris Read Graeme Swann Ashley Giles Simon Jones Matthew Hoggard
South African XI Graeme Smith Herschelle Gibbs Gary Kirsten Neil McKenzie Boeta Dippenaar Mark Boucher Shaun Pollock Andrew Hall Monde Zondeki Paul Adams Makhaya Ntini
- - -
England won the toss and chose to bat
- - -
Coming into the final Test match of the summer, there was a lot on the line. For England, the opportunity to inflict a historic five-Test whitewash on South Africa. For South Africa, the need to stand up and show that they're a better team than Bob Willis has been saying. They'll have to do it without their best player: Jacques Kallis is on the sidelines, and that's a gap in the side that can't just be plugged. All the same, Pollock and Adams come into the side for Kallis and Pretorius. England have gone ahead and picked two spinners for this Oval Test. And though most observers had expected Matthew Hoggard to be rested for this game, he will play his fourth straight Test match, this time alongside fellow seamers Jones and Flintoff.
Once again, Hussain won the toss and chose to bat first despite tricky conditions: with two spinners, giving them last use of a worn pitch would be essential. Things started shakily with another duck for Nick Knight, followed by a low score for Butcher. The situation called for a captain's innings and Hussain was able to provide half of one: his dour 52 wasn't fun to watch, but it was the perfect foil for a more expansive effort from the broad blade of Andrew Flintoff. He belted eleven boundaries on his way to an all-important 80. Plucky contributions from Read (25), Swann (31) and Giles (33) saw England almost to 300: less than one might have hoped for after winning the toss, but a good total considering that Shaun Pollock was bowling at his world class, metronomic best from one end.
And in the tricky conditions that they faced, with two of their best out of action, one can hardly blame the South African batters for struggling again. Graeme Smith looked somewhat back to his best for 70 runs at the top of the order, and Boeta Dippenaar refused to give his wicket away while all those around him were losing theirs. Unfortunately for both Smith and Dippenaar, nobody else could deal with the immaculate away swing of Matthew Hoggard. He took the wickets of Kirsten (1), McKenzie (2), Boucher (9), Pollock (3), Hall (4) and Zondeki (1) as his six-for consigned South Africa to yet another sub-200 total.
With more bad weather forecast, it was vital for England to get a wiggle on and set the game up. Two ducks (Trescothick and Butcher) definitely didn't help with that at all. For a while, all thought of quick scoring went out of the window as Knight, Hussain and then Thorpe set about making sure that the wobble didn't turn into a full-blown collapse. Once Thorpe was dismissed, bested at last by a ball Paul Adams described as an "outspinner", Flintoff came to the crease with his bat resting against his shoulder. He set about finding the boundary as often as he could, biffing 28 of them just in boundaries. It was a real shame that he was dismissed short of another Test 50, but it gave Hussain the cue he needed to wave for yet another declaration. This one left South Africa with 352 to chase, and seven hours of cricket to do it in: a real tempter.
It is a credit to Hussain's captaincy that he seems never to worry about losing: he is focussed only on trying to win Test matches. And, for the seventh time in his seven-Test tenure, he was successful: once again, Matthew Hoggard made life horribly unpleasant for the South African batters, only this time the English spinners also made a real impact with two wickets each. Even a stoic three and a half hour rearguard from Andrew Hall couldn't quite see South Africa through to the sanctuary of a draw: in the end, the tourists fell about 15 overs short, and were consigned to their first ever five-Test whitewash.
OOC: I genuinely can't quite believe that this series has gone the way it did. On paper, this should have been a very close series, one where I would most likely have favoured South Africa to take it. With the buff of being player-controlled, a 3-1 England victory would have been just about expected. 5-0 is shocking to me, and is frankly one of the silliest things to happen in this playthrough. I love it.
I've also included a Player of the Season award in the style of the Allan Border Medal - the Barrington Medal.
Drawn or lost match
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Standings
1. Matthew Hoggard - 14 points (+5)
2. Ashley Giles - 10 points (+1)
3. Jimmy Anderson - 7 points
=. Andrew Flintoff - 7 points (+3)
=. Nasser Hussain - 7 points
=. Simon Jones - 7 points
7. Marcus Trescothick - 6 points
8. Mark Butcher - 5 points
=. Ryan Sidebottom - 5 points
10. Nick Knight - 4 points (+2)
=. Graham Thorpe - 4 points
12. Kabir Ali - 1 point
A stunning summer of bowling that yielded 30 wickets at 13.63 apiece were enough to bag Matthew Hoggard a well-deserved Barrington Medal despite only playing five of the summer's seven Test matches.
Partnerships
1. 323 - Mike Atherton & Alec Stewart vs India 1996
2. 418 - Nick Knight & Alec Stewart vs New Zealand 2002
3. 325 - Graham Gooch & Robin Smith vs West Indies 1991
4. 252 - Alec Stewart & Graham Thorpe vs Sri Lanka 2001
5. 313 - Graham Thorpe & Andrew Flintoff vs India 2002
6. 155 - Nasser Hussain & Ronnie Irani vs Zimbabwe 2000
7. 174 - Chris Lewis & Phillip DeFreitas vs Australia 1993
8. 110 - Jack Russell & Dominic Cork vs South Africa 1995
9. 95 - Robin Smith & Dominic Cork vs Australia 1995
10. 68 - Ian Salisbury & Phil Tufnell vs India 2001
Most Test Runs for England
1. Graham Gooch - 11,242 runs @ 48.04 (28 centuries, best 294)
2. Alec Stewart - 9,846 runs @ 45.58 (25 centuries, best 284)
3. David Gower - 8,506 runs @ 42.96 (15 centuries, best 215)
Most Test Wickets for England
1. Phil Tufnell - 511 wickets @ 29.81 (31 5WI, best 8/114)
2. Ian Botham - 400 wickets @ 28.13 (27 5WI, best 8/34)
3. Bob Willis - 325 wickets @ 25.20 (16 5WI, best 8/43)
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