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Robin Martin-Jenkins might have persuaded another selection panel that he deserved a bash at one-day cricket

Posted on 07 October 2010

Robin Martin-Jenkins might have persuaded another selection panel that he deserved a bash at one-day cricket, others like Tim Ambrose and Matt Prior might still. If the Championship is there to serve England this is not a sound reflection on that objective, or the competition’s winners.But that is to ignore potential. James Kirtley won a Test for England last summer and is unfortunate to have been overlooked. After all, was it not a Pakistani, Mushtaq Ahmed, who had taken 103 wickets, and a Zimbabwean, Murray Goodwin, who had scored a club-record 335 not out in the final, decisive match? And were not two of the leading batsmen, Adams and Tony Cottey, men whose international aspirations had long since faded? None of the Sussex squad is on tour with the England Test team this winter. “I’ve been sitting behind you for years and never spoken to you,” he said, “but isn’t this marvellous.” “Yes, isn’t it,” she replied, without a flicker of recognition, since she had had her back to him for three decades, “and this is a good moment to introduce yourself.” They resisted the urge to embrace.Yet there was the uncomfortable feeling that this lovely scene made it easy to ignore recent observations on the state of the domestic professional game. A middle-aged man in thick glasses went up to a woman of similar years with a ruddy, no-nonsense complexion. There were men and women at Hove last Thursday who had waited all their lives for this, as had their parents before them.It was still frightfully English in a quaint, middle-class way.

What not a single one of the fancy-pants cricketers of Sussex’s stylish past – not Ranji, Duleep, Fry, or the Nawab of Pataudi, none of the Gilligans, neither Sheppard nor Dexter, not Greig or Imran Khan – had managed. Sussex finished bottom again, Adams survived.It is truly something, then, to achieve what he and the county’s coach, Peter Moores, have achieved. Adams’s methods worked initially, but in 2000 he and Sussex were in trouble again. During one match he pushed an opponent and was fined by the England and Wales Cricket Board, after another he rowed with an umpire. The day he arrived in 1998, his agent – a county cricketer with an agent! – said cricket needed stars and big salaries made stars.But it was not all hunky-dory.

That itself made it a heck of a story, and it was uplifted by the awareness that six years earlier the club had been in turmoil.Six of the first team left, so did the club chairman and chief executive; the committee were sacked It did not get better quickly The following year, Sussex finished rock bottom Then they hired Chris Adams on smart money. “Sussex By The Sea”, a happy ditty, was played repeatedly because, 164 years after being formed, the county had won the title for the first time. The Championship matters all right.
Perhaps it is too easy to be ensnared by the allure of popular marching tunes and the fact that one of the longest waits in sport was at last over. From the England captain downwards, they would have had their answer in Hove last week.

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