Cricket books written by current players can be
a mixed bag. For every classic like ‘Eight Days a Week’ by Jonathon Agnew, there
are dozens that read like an accountancy exam, devoid of originality. Many fit
somewhere in the middle, with some genuine insight given, but not too much, we have the end of career
biography to think of, mixed in with some hefty padding. ‘Calling the Shots’
by Michael Vaughan falls in the higher end of this middle group.
The book contains plenty of filler: match
descriptions, scorecards, statistics and player pen pics that you could probably
have a stab at writing yourself. But in-between there are enough insights into
Vaughan, his team-mates and the
England set-up, to keep you
interested.
The book covers Vaughan’s leadership from the resignation of Nasser Hussain
as England one-day captain, up until the
end of the 2005 Ashes campaign. Emphasis is very much on the national team, with
Yorkshire managing only two entries into the
index, a number matched by Mick Jagger. Such is the life of the modern
England cricket
captain.
The most interesting aspect of the book is the
assessment Vaughan makes of other players, as he’s a
shrewd judge. Fellow international captains are given sympathy for the pressure
they are under, but honestly assessed. Stephen Fleming is held up as a model to
follow, whilst Ponting is unsurprisingly given short shrift for his complaints
about fielding substitutes. Tillekeratne’s captaincy of Sri
Lanka is described as “bizarre”and Graeme Smith
comes across as the kind of guy ASBO’s where designed for.
A chapter towards the middle of the book about
Harmison, Flintoff and Vaughan himself is particularly revealing. Harmison seems
someone who practically needs babysitting when away from home. Description of
gangs of mates coming down to stay with him when he’s strayed as far as London
give you the impression, unintended I’m sure, of the slow kid at school who
could only be trusted with the safety scissors. Vaughan’s prediction that GBH will retire when
he’s thirty is starting to look a good bet.
Many of the clichés and whining so prevalent in
the genre are avoided. Tales of golf games against former legends, niggles about
facilities on tour, complaints about dips in form, dodgy umpiring decisions, and
press criticism are all kept to a minimum. In fact, it seems that the only time
press flak really annoyed Vaughan was when it
came from Ray Illingworth at the time Vaughan was appointed. Illingworth’s reward in
the book is the selection of a particularly shifty looking photo, which makes
him look as if he’s trying to explain to a judge exactly what happened to the
Christmas club money.
Indeed, good quality photographs form an
important aspect of this and all sports books. The majority here are on-field action
shots, and whilst they’re excellent - probably the best available to the
publishers – we’ve seen them before many times. What are missing are more
personal glimpses into Vaughan’s career, as well as candid snaps of
dressing room life. If you’re hoping for a chance to see backroom tactical
discussions or Geraint Jones gently washing Duncan Fletcher’s feet at the end of
play, you’ll be sadly disappointed. The only one that really stands out in the mind
afterwards is a rather gruesome photograph of the Sky sports commentary team -
Gower and Hussain with nervous smiles and Botham with a face as blank as a list
of great Australian scientific discoveries. They are all towered over by what at
first appears to be a badly constructed waxwork of Albert Steptoe, which on
closer inspection turns out to be Bob Willis. I’m shuddering just thinking about
it.
Reading the book now, at the end of the dismal
2006/07 Ashes tour, it’s interesting to speculate what influence Vaughan might have had if
match fit. You suspect many things would have stayed the same as he is in favour
of coach as selector, an extensive back up staff and the replacement of Read by
Jones during the 2004 WI series; although he concedes that change could have
been handled better. Whilst the amount of cricket needed to build up for a tour
isn’t directly addressed, Vaughan does stress the importance of giving
players rest and seems unworried by a lack of runs going into an important game.
If so, perhaps England’s attitude to tour
preparation this last winter is not radically different than
before?
The overall impression left is of a highly
intelligent man, who is focused and above all, honest. It would be interesting
to see what some of the TV and Radio commentators make of his views on field
placement, etc. I’ve certainly come away with the impression that out on the
field, without any of the computer analysis available, he’s still capable of
being a good few overs ahead of where the ‘experts’ are in reading the
game.
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