I noticed yesterday that people were surprised when I pointed out the small percentage of Test cricketers who ever make a Test appearance above the ages of 32, 33 and 35. People tend to cite the odd exception like Misbah or Younis who has a longer Test career, and forget that for every Misbah there is an Ollie Pope and a Zak Crawley and a Dom Bess..
I think that this overvaluing of age is an Asian phenomenon, due to deference towards seniority.
I can understand why a team like Australia or India ranked in the Top Three might retain elderly players. At least they have got their team to the top of international cricket.
But I cannot for the life of me see why teams like Pakistan or South Africa or England which have a relatively large player pool (compared with micro-countries like New Zealand who can't afford to be too choosy about age) would persist with old players even though they are not highly ranked.
The benchmark that I have proposed repeatedly is that 8 players in the starting eleven should be aged between 21 and 30.
Here is today's South Africa team:
OPENERS: 33 and 26
MIDDLE-ORDER: 36, 31, 30
WICKETKEEPER: 28
ALL-ROUNDER: 22
SPINNER: 30
QUICK BOWLERS: 27, 24, 22
It narrowly misses my model of "8 players aged between 21 and 30".
So what about England? They, like Pakistan, are not in the Top Three and therefore have some rebuilding to do. here is the team which played their last Test:
OPENERS: 29 and 25
MIDDLE-ORDER: 29, 23, 22, 22
WICKET-KEEPER: 29
SPINNER: 23
QUICKS: 38, 34, 31, 23
Again, the England team has 8 players aged 21 to 30. And 3 players aged over 30.
For the sake of comparison, here is the Pakistan team which played at the Bay Oval:
OPENERS: 33 and 31
MIDDLE-ORDER: 35, 35, 31 (officially)
WICKET-KEEPER: 28
ALL-ROUNDER: 26
SPINNER: 34
QUICKS: 30, 20, 17
Pakistan had just two (yes, TWO) players in their peak years of 21 to 30. They had SEVEN (7) players in their thirties, and two (2) raw players under 21.
This was not always the case. This was the last Inzamam/Arthur Pakistan Test team, 2 years ago:
OPENERS: 29 and 23
MIDDLE-ORDER: 33, 32, 24
WICKET-KEEPER: 31
ALL-ROUNDERS: 25 and 20
QUICKS: 28, 26, 24
The Inzamam team had 7 players aged 21-30, 3 over 30 and a single 20 year old.
So to sum up:
PLAYERS AGED 21-30:
England 8
Pakistan (Misbah) 3
Pakistan (Inzamam) 7
South Africa 7
PLAYERS AGED OVER 30:
England 3
Pakistan (Misbah) 6
Pakistan (Inzamam) 3
South Africa 4
PLAYERS AGED UNDER 21:
England 0
Pakistan (Misbah) 2
Pakistan (Inzamam) 1
South Africa 0
If, like England, Pakistan and South Africa, you are not in the Top Three teams, you need to rebuild.
But how do you rebuild with OLDER players?
I think that this overvaluing of age is an Asian phenomenon, due to deference towards seniority.
I can understand why a team like Australia or India ranked in the Top Three might retain elderly players. At least they have got their team to the top of international cricket.
But I cannot for the life of me see why teams like Pakistan or South Africa or England which have a relatively large player pool (compared with micro-countries like New Zealand who can't afford to be too choosy about age) would persist with old players even though they are not highly ranked.
The benchmark that I have proposed repeatedly is that 8 players in the starting eleven should be aged between 21 and 30.
Here is today's South Africa team:
OPENERS: 33 and 26
MIDDLE-ORDER: 36, 31, 30
WICKETKEEPER: 28
ALL-ROUNDER: 22
SPINNER: 30
QUICK BOWLERS: 27, 24, 22
It narrowly misses my model of "8 players aged between 21 and 30".
So what about England? They, like Pakistan, are not in the Top Three and therefore have some rebuilding to do. here is the team which played their last Test:
OPENERS: 29 and 25
MIDDLE-ORDER: 29, 23, 22, 22
WICKET-KEEPER: 29
SPINNER: 23
QUICKS: 38, 34, 31, 23
Again, the England team has 8 players aged 21 to 30. And 3 players aged over 30.
For the sake of comparison, here is the Pakistan team which played at the Bay Oval:
OPENERS: 33 and 31
MIDDLE-ORDER: 35, 35, 31 (officially)
WICKET-KEEPER: 28
ALL-ROUNDER: 26
SPINNER: 34
QUICKS: 30, 20, 17
Pakistan had just two (yes, TWO) players in their peak years of 21 to 30. They had SEVEN (7) players in their thirties, and two (2) raw players under 21.
This was not always the case. This was the last Inzamam/Arthur Pakistan Test team, 2 years ago:
OPENERS: 29 and 23
MIDDLE-ORDER: 33, 32, 24
WICKET-KEEPER: 31
ALL-ROUNDERS: 25 and 20
QUICKS: 28, 26, 24
The Inzamam team had 7 players aged 21-30, 3 over 30 and a single 20 year old.
So to sum up:
PLAYERS AGED 21-30:
England 8
Pakistan (Misbah) 3
Pakistan (Inzamam) 7
South Africa 7
PLAYERS AGED OVER 30:
England 3
Pakistan (Misbah) 6
Pakistan (Inzamam) 3
South Africa 4
PLAYERS AGED UNDER 21:
England 0
Pakistan (Misbah) 2
Pakistan (Inzamam) 1
South Africa 0
If, like England, Pakistan and South Africa, you are not in the Top Three teams, you need to rebuild.
But how do you rebuild with OLDER players?
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