








|

|

|
|
|

Ryan Sidebottom made his England debut in 2001 but was overwhelmed by the occasion. 'I had never played in front of more than 1,000 people before'
© Getty Images
|
|
| |
Even seasoned England watchers would never have predicted the team's
seam attack for the First Test against India last summer. Not one member
remained of the decorated quartet that had famously regained the Ashes two
years before. In their place were James Anderson, Chris Tremlett and Ryan
Sidebottom, pitting their inexperienced wits against four Indian batting
galacticos - Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly and V. V. S.
Laxman - with more than 30,000 Test runs between them. Yet from the
moment the left-arm Sidebottom bent a delivery into the opener Dinesh
Karthik's pads, the Englishmen held sway. The four thunderbats made only
88 runs between them and India were dismissed for 201. The match was
eventually drawn, but the young England bowlers had seized an initiative
which, in subsequent Tests, their batsmen singularly failed to capitalise on.
To label Sidebottom as "young" is perhaps misleading. He was 29 when
surprisingly recalled to the England team for the Second Test against West
Indies early last summer. He had done almost a decade of service on the
county circuit. But he was "young" in terms of Tests. He had just a solitary
cap, earned in 2001, and most had assumed he was destined to join his
father Arnie in the one-Test wonders' hall of shame.
The most important thing his father had taught him, however, was never
to give up hope. The son's determination and consistency for Nottinghamshire
had been noted, and a combination of other bowlers' waywardness and
Matthew Hoggard's injury prompted a call to someone the England captain
could trust. Returning to his original home patch at Headingley, his opening
thrust in both innings laid the platform for a handsome English victory. Far
from being only a horse-for-the-Leeds-course, by mid-season he was an
automatic selection. Sidebottom's eventual haul of 24 wickets at 25 each made
him the England bowler of the summer, just ahead of Monty Panesar. Being
awarded a central contract was final confirmation of his coming of age.
Ryan Jay Sidebottom is that English speciality, a late developer. He
was born in Huddersfield on January 15, 1978, by which time his father Arnie
had finished his brief career as a professional footballer with Manchester
United and was a prominent fixture in the Yorkshire team. An irrepressible
seamer instantly recognisable for his ginger hair and a face purple from
exertion that earned him the nickname Red Dog, Sidebottom senior was too
preoccupied with his county commitments and the first rebel tour of South
Africa to have a major influence on his young son's sporting education. Ryan
was allowed the odd sortie on to the Headingley outfield before a Sunday
League match, but it was his maternal grandfather who really nurtured his
interest, especially on Blackpool beach during the family summer holiday.
By this time his father had made his sole Test appearance - against
Australia in 1985 - but seven-year-old Ryan didn't witness it. Later he played for Holmfirth, where his dad was the club pro, and showed promise with
the ball, but failed to achieve any significant recognition. Indeed, he was
positively rejected. "We had a trial game for Yorkshire Under-15. I thought
I bowled well taking two for 32. But I didn't get selected for the A-team
and was put in the B-team instead. After the B-team game the coach sat me
down and in front of all the lads he said: 'Find something else to do - you'll
never be good enough at cricket.' I went home and cried my eyes out. But
my dad said: 'Prove people wrong.'"
He had a brief flirtation with professional football (trials with Sheffield
United) before an invitation to the Yorkshire winter nets became the catalyst
for eventually turning pro. He made his first-class debut in 1997 but, with
a number of other talented fast bowlers at the club, he struggled to make
an impact, except for his nickname: Sexual Chocolate, after a band in an
Eddie Murphy film whose lead singer had similarly frizzy hair. An excellent
run of performances in 2000 earned him his county cap - on the same day
as Hoggard - but he ruptured a hip muscle in the same match and was out
for the rest of the season. He still finished second in the national bowling
averages, and the leading Englishman.
He also topped the bowling averages on the subsequent England A tour
to the West Indies and won a Lord's Test call-up against Pakistan in 2001
when Hoggard was injured. He and Arnie became the tenth father-and-son
pair to represent England, but Ryan was slightly overwhelmed by the
occasion - "I had never played in front of more than 1,000 people before"
- and ended wicketless. He helped his county to their first Championship
title for 33 years, but was not always first choice in subsequent seasons.
Somewhat disheartened, he ended the family's 30-year association with
Yorkshire and moved to Trent Bridge at the end of 2003.
|
|
|

The Sidebottom of 2007-08
© Getty Images
|
|
| |
It was the best decision he ever made. He was often given the new ball,
in all competitions, and thrived on the fresh responsibility and the helpful
atmosphere at Nottinghamshire. He gleaned valuable advice from fellow leftarmer
Greg Smith, and later the New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming,
who arrived in 2005 and encouraged the naturally laid-back Sidebottom
to be more aggressive. This coincided with his first 50-wicket haul and
Nottinghamshire winning the County Championship.
In contrast to his debut, he was now sure of his ability and trusted his
methods of fast-medium-pace and probing left-arm inswing from an impressive
6ft 3in frame. They soon brought rewards. After the appalling waywardness
of Harmison and Co in early summer, his steadiness was immensely reassuring,
and his duel with a struggling Tendulkar in the Trent Bridge Test was, for the
purist, one of the highlights of the summer. To cap a satisfying re-emergence,
he won the series award in England's unexpected one-day triumph in Sri
Lanka for his 12 wickets and subjugation of Sanath Jayasuriya.
Sidebottom's galumphing run and Cavalier locks conjure up an impression
of someone who has strayed on to the field from an earlier era, and his
patient perseverance is something of a throwback to the seemingly bygone
days of line and length. Such simple virtues, though, were sufficient for
Glenn McGrath to become the most successful seam bowler ever.
© Wisden Cricketer's Almanack
|