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To bowl, perchance to lead

Top-level international cricket now has two bowler-captains, Anil Kumble and Daniel Vettori, which is a whole lot more than there have been in recent times. We take a look at a little-understood breed


Sidharth Monga

February 18, 2008



Giffen: you have a problem if I bring myself on now? © Cricinfo Ltd

George Giffen, perhaps Australia's first great allrounder, was more of a bowler than a batsman, with seven five-fors and one century from 31 Tests. As a captain he was, according to the Australian Dictionary of Biography, cantankerous and a bit too trusting of his own bowling. In Farewell to Cricket, Don Bradman mentions a time when the crowd had to shout at Giffen to "take yourself off". He acceded ... and changed ends.

In his four Tests as captain Giffen bowled 236.2 overs (1418 balls, as opposed to 4973 in his other 27 Tests) - and that after not bowling at all in one innings. In his first Test as captain, Giffen also became the first man to put an opposition in. Although he took 26 wickets in those four Tests, at an average of 22.34 and a strike-rate of 54.50, both better than his career figures of 27.09 and 62 respectively, that was the last series in which he captained Australia. Giffen possibly embodied everything what is traditionally thought of to be wrong with bowler-captains. He wasn't the first bowler-captain in Test history, but none of the breed till then had had a run longer than ten Tests.

A bowler leading a team somehow doesn't sit well with traditional cricket thinking (win the toss and bat first, remember?). Bowlers are only the henchmen, the doers; batsmen are the shrewd planners. A bowler-captain is supposed to over-bowl or under-bowl himself, be imbalanced and over-aggressive, too simplistic and instinctive. It is no surprise that out of the 71 men in the history of cricket who have captained a team for 20 or more Tests, only ten are either bowlers or bowling allrounders or plain allrounders. The last time two bowlers went out for a toss in a Test match was in January 2003, when Shaun Pollock and Waqar Younis did the honours; 226 Tests have been played since then.

A captain is at his busiest when his side is in the field. A batsman-captain can focus his energies on strategising and leading the side, which gives him an obvious advantage over a bowler, who has to think about his own bowling, apart from making sure he has the right fields set and that he has used his other bowlers judiciously. It is physically taxing, too, especially if the captain in question is a fast bowler. "You are worried about your own bowling, about the batsman you are bowling to, and then at the end of a tiring or frustrating over, rather than switch off, you have got to captain for the bowler at the other end," Mark Taylor, one of the more acclaimed modern captains, points out. "As a batsman you field in the slips and can tend not to worry about the bowling, and can spend a lot of time thinking about changes of bowling if necessary."

It is tough for bowler-captains in other ways too. To return to popular perception: a bowler is regarded as a simple creature, when reduced to essentials - give him a set field and he will try to hit a rhythm of bowling to that field, and as far as possible not diverge. A bowler, especially a pace bowler, hates somebody coming up to him every ball and telling him what to do. Captaincy is a bit more complicated than that. A batsman is naturally more flexible and more innovative, and thus more suited to the task of leading a side.

These are perceptions, and commonly held ones, and not always true. Is a bowler not best placed to understand the requirements of a side, considering the bulk of captaincy work happens when a team is fielding, and has to do with the taking of wickets? Imran Khan writes in All Round View how, at one point during the Barbados Test in 1976-77, Mushtaq Mohammad overlooked the wishes of Sarfraz Nawaz and Imran, who were reversing the ball at the time, and took the new ball. "We were right, and the new ball got thrashed about all over the park ..."

 
 
The secret is to pick a good bowler as a captain. The good bowling captain will only get better under his own leadership because he'll have the right fields Ian Chappell
 

Imran strongly believed that only a bowler-captain could understand what another bowler was trying to do. "... Allan Border tells me he did not fully understand what his pace bowlers were trying to do, and is honest enough to admit he didn't know what advice to offer them when they were being hit."

"The secret is to pick a good bowler as a captain," Ian Chappell, himself a batsman, and one of the best Australian captains of all, says. "[Richie] Benaud and Imran are good examples ... Then they will justify bowling a lot. The good bowling captain will only get better under his own leadership because he'll have the right fields."

Imran concurs, referring to how he would get irritated by a batsman telling him what to do with the ball. "Being a bowler helped my captaincy a great deal," he writes. "Having bowled in different conditions, I felt confident of handling my attack, and capable of advising the younger bowlers in the side. It was easy for me to advise and encourage them because I understood what they were trying to do.

"I used to study a bowler's run-up and delivery, and suggest what he might be doing wrong ... If a bowler bowled a long-hop, my comment - if any - was not the parrot-cry of 'pitch it up'. I'd ask if everything was all right."

With captaincy, a lot of it is about adjusting to the added responsibility. Imran did that well, was a good man-manager, and his captaincy brought the best out of his team and himself. Pollock took his own game to a higher level when leading South Africa, but he will also go down in history as a captain who failed to get the best out of his team. Daryll Cullinan, who played under Pollock, says that that period in Pollock's career will be remembered for his lack of man-management skills and insight into what captaincy was all about.

As Chappell says, "A bad captain, whether he is a batsman or a bowler, will make mistakes not because of what he does, but because of his ineptitude. Both a batting or bowling captain have to make adjustments once they have the extra responsibility. The good ones do it and the bad ones can't."

Although Imran was self-admittedly helped in his captaincy by his being a bowler, and Pollock not necessarily hampered by the same, the truth is there hasn't been a highly successful bowler-captain since Imran and Kapil Dev. It may be unfair to judge Courtney Walsh, Heath Streak, Waqar, and Andrew Flintoff solely on the basis of results: Walsh and Streak didn't have the strongest teams to lead, and Waqar and Flintoff were way off their best when their selectors ran out of options or the first-choice captain was injured.

A tale of two leggies
In recent times, a certain legspinner promised to make an innovative captain, and thereby prove bowlers could make for leaders the equal of batsmen. But one indiscreet phone call too many and Shane Warne, deputy to Steve Waugh at the time, lost his chance forever, leaving a host of questions unanswered.

Would he have brought himself on as soon as he saw Cullinan at the crease? Would he have been instinctive or patient, just like Warne the bowler? Would he have raised his own game even higher? Would he have been aggressive - as he showed in the few ODIs he led Australia in? How ready would he have been to play out draws? How good an off-the-field captain would he have made?

Following Warne's retirement, Anil Kumble has done two things Warne never managed to: score a Test century and lead his national side in Tests.



In his Tests as captain Kumble has shown he possesses the qualities of a statesman - which not many credit bowlers with © Getty Images
When he captained Karnataka in Ranji Trophy games before he took over the Test captaincy, Kumble would walk up to the stumps to direct the point fielder to the exact angle he wanted him at. The mind immediately saw something special, something it was not used to seeing. In the Tests that have followed, the tough character of Kumble the bowler has accompanied that of Kumble the captain. He hasn't glaringly under-bowled or over-bowled himself, has handled his young bowling attack well, and has emerged unscathed from the toughest tour a modern captain can make, Australia. In tricky times he has shown the qualities of a statesman - skills not many usually credit bowlers with.

Yet he was not the first choice for the job, only getting it because Rahul Dravid resigned, Sachin Tendulkar refused the job, and Mahendra Dhoni was too inexperienced. Was it not the same prejudice against bowlers that Kumble was not thought of as a contender for captaincy till there were no alternatives at hand? Even after he started as captain, it seemed he was just keeping the seat warm. That should be far from the case now.

Warne's Australia against Kumble's India would have been a dream contest. Two of the greatest legspinners of all time, two of the smartest bowlers of all time, trying to lead their teams in the prime rivalry in Test cricket, adding that final missing feather to their hats. That won't happen now. One last gripe with Warne will always remain.

Sidharth Monga is a staff writer at Cricinfo

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Posted by Burmanolo on February 20 2008, 20:13 PM GMT

Great captains are great thinkers, great motivators and great leaders, not great performers albeit batsman or bowler. Good captain's( and i dont mean a successful captain) have always find ways to put ones team before self. Recent greats like Ranatunga,Cronje or Waugh did not come out thinking about getting 100's or 5 wicket hauls,they came out to win. Being a successful captain is not about being a batsman or a bowler but being someone who can see the bigger picture,someone who knows his teams strengths,limits and weaknesses. Sometimes it comes with experience,some times with skill but more often than not its with perseverance, thirst and a dedication. Think of a cricket team as the human body, being batter or bowler is just being left or right limbed, while the skipper is brain. The brain,left or right sided comes with both positive and negative energy.

Posted by gregb on February 20 2008, 04:04 AM GMT

Boys, I suggest some review of Richie Benaud's credentials as a Test captain may be appropriate. Never lost a test series!!?? Attacked with his own bowling...example Old Trafford and the Ashes on the line in 1961!!??

Posted by Nipun on February 19 2008, 18:28 PM GMT

It's not about being a bowler or a batsman,it's about having an intelligent & thinking cricket brain.Sourav had almost all these qualities.Let's remember he had the weakest of bowling attacks,with new players still trying to find their feet.Inspite of inconsistency,it was under him that Yuvraj,Sehwag,Harbhajan & Irfan grew up & are now delivering results.Unfortunately,he is never given his due credit.Anil Kuble has shown himself to be a good caretaking & thinking captain so far,but it would be stupid to call him great just yet.Let's not forget that he lost the series in Australia whereas Ganguly drew the series in Australia.Though Kumble has shown himself to be a good caretaking captain,he must be a bit more aggressive to be a better one.Forget batting 1st at Perth-Ganguly did it numerous times,for example,Headingly 2002.A captain is not solely about results,he is also about building a sound future for the team with new players,such as Ganguly did with Yuvi,Harbhajan,Sehwag,Irfan......

Posted by masterblaster666 on February 19 2008, 14:08 PM GMT

Siddhart: "kumble's captaincy was way too defensive..." what kind of defensive captain bats first in Perth, especially with all the pre-match talk that it would be a brute, I would really like to know that. Incidentally, Sourav Ganguly, often referred to as one of our most aggressive captains, expressed copious words of worry when he saw that the Nagpur pitch during the 04 series against Australia was a green top. Somebody forgot to tell him that it was only in Jan the same year that India had squared a Test series in Aus. As for Akram, I also think he was probably a better captain than Kumble but we have seen too little of Kumble so far and yet in these few matches, he has been very impressive and his bowling seems to have got better with captaincy, thank God for that!!!

Posted by Aditya_mookerjee on February 19 2008, 10:11 AM GMT

All the great bowler captains were all rounders, or were not intimidated by batsmen, the stars of the team. I count Anil Kumble, among the two lists. Batsmen have always been stars, more so than bowlers, due to the public perception. I may be among the few who always admires a beautiful bowling action, in action, while the others may be waiting for the batsman's reaction. How many admired Mr Bedi's bowling thus? Not a sizable amount.

Posted by voyager on February 19 2008, 02:40 AM GMT

Key(s) is(are) that the captain himself is performing at close to his peak and has the services of the best players available. He should have good leadership skills and most importantly his second in command and rest of the team is not lobbying against him. Imran himself captained for about 10yrs and was successful only when all these things come together. When he was the best bowler in the country and was not available to the team as a bowler team performance was poor to say the least. Later on when his bowling declined he had Wasim Akram and others as match winners. So it is not simple to say that only bowler can be a good captain. There are all kinds of examples, Clive Lloyd, Ganguly etc..

Posted by leftarmorthodox on February 19 2008, 00:27 AM GMT

Warne HAS captained Hampshire exceptionally well for a number of years now and I would suggest been the reason for the successful development of players like Mascerhanas for example. He IS an example of a successful bowling captain.

Posted by T20_2007 on February 18 2008, 21:32 PM GMT

Point dead on about Akram. Also don't forget Kapil Dev. So he was an all rounder, but was a bowling one and did win the world cup. And get off Kumble's case about being too defensive. With R.P. singh out he was a bowler short. And what about batting first in Perth, not aggressive enough for you?

Posted by hawkeye2010 on February 18 2008, 20:14 PM GMT

Hmmm, Well I can agree with all of the comments, Wasim Akram was a good captain, He lead Pakistan to the finals in 99 world cup. However, even he did not have the capabilities like Imran Khan did. Imran used to choose his side and knew exactly how to use each one of them.He was very strict and punctual, No BS. Players like Abdul Kadir, Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis, Aaqib Javed, Big Inzi and many others emerged. Anil Kumble is a great Bowler,but certainly not a great captain. He still have to prove he's one of the best. And only time will tell. It is not necessary to be a great player and great captain. Personally, I think Ganguly was a good captain and BCCI treated him very unfairly.

Posted by Sri7 on February 18 2008, 20:13 PM GMT

Sid, Wasim Akram is missing from the list, I have never seen a better equipped pace-man. He was also a good captain. It is evident that Kumble has it in him to make one of the best captains India ever had - all he lacks (now) is years of play in him. It is big injustice to him and to India that he got the captaincy soo late. Still better late than never. Guru.

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