Former England cricketer Sir Geoffrey Boycott has stated that Ben Duckett is no Viv Richards. Boycott observed how the left-hander tries to play like Richards by smacking the ball all around the park but claimed that Duckett isn't that special.
Duckett has shown plenty of promise at the top of the order since replacing Alex Lees at the top of the order. The Nottinghamshire batter averages 42.09 in 46 innings as an opener, scoring 1,810 runs, with three centuries to his name.
In his column for The Telegraph, Boycott suggested that Duckett's style is similar to that of Brendon McCullum, laced with unbelievable shots while also finding strange ways to get out. He elaborated:
Duckett failed to get a century in the Test series against the West Indies and Sri Lanka this season. The 29-year-old managed three half-centuries with a best of 86 against Sri Lanka at The Oval coming in a losing cause.
The 83-year-old pointed out that Harry Brook must find ways to improvise after an underwhelming summer as teams will try to dismiss him by bowling in the channel. Boycott elaborated:
Brook, who missed the entire India tour earlier this year, struck two fifties and a century this summer. He made four promising thirty-plus scores but failed to convert these into substantial knocks.
The 83-year-old who has scored 22 centuries for England in 108 Tests also called the 'Bazball' culture exciting but has asked the team to play more like Joe Root not to lose unnecessary and cheap wickets in the middle.
The 29-year-old opener scored 186 runs in the six innings that he played in the series against Sri Lanka that concluded on Monday, September 10. Before the Sri Lanka series, the southpaw scored 178 runs in 5 innings against West Indies. He accumulated 3 fifties across 6 Tests in the English summer.
So far, in his 26 Tests, Duckett has scored 1828 runs at an average of 39.73 with 10 fifties and three centuries.
The team have bought into the Bazball culture and, like all gamblers, they trot out the standard phrase “that’s the way we play”. If your boss and captain insist on the batsmen attacking the bowling then you do it or you may be dropped. It stems from the top.
Bazball culture is exciting but unless England’s batsmen play more like Joe Root they will keep giving away cheap wickets.
England lost at the Oval because they gifted wickets to Sri Lanka with some careless, overconfident batting. Once the team get it into their heads to attack, they are like lemmings falling over a cliff. They cannot stop so there are going to be occasional Test defeats that should have been wins.
When they do lose it is usually their own fault with batsmen being gung ho. Their hubris gets in the way of common sense; it is the gambler’s curse.
I believe Duckett is a good batsman but his batting borders on overconfidence with a touch of arrogance. If he could stop pressing the self-destruct button he would score a lot more runs. I am not suggesting play defensive, just be sensible.
It is such a distant memory how bad England were at the end of Joe Root’s time as captain. Players were at a low ebb and Root looked defeated and deflated. Test match losses were the norm, wins were in short supply.
Brendon McCullum deserves lots of praise for turning our cricket around, no matter how you like to see your cricket played. Yes, Ben Stokes as captain played a big part, too, but initially it was McCullum who freed up the players’ minds and told them to go out and express themselves and above all enjoy playing cricket.
All that has been brilliant. He has asked them to bat in a mirror image of himself - take the bowlers on, attack them, impose yourself, think positive. He is on record as saying he only thinks his glass is half-full. He has always been a talented gambler. That means when luck has gone with him he has played the most amazing innings.
But every gambler knows his good luck cannot last for ever and somewhere around the corner will be some low points. McCullum has had some spectacular failures to go with his high points and he has always accepted that as part of his make-up.
When he was appointed coach, some of his New Zealand team-mates said we should hold on to our hats because it would be an interesting ride. And they were right.
I don’t think he will change his thinking and I don’t believe he will ask any of the England batsmen to bat differently.
That is why we have top-order batsmen going after the new ball as soon as they get to the middle. When the England batsmen are successful it is thrilling to watch and it does put the pressure back on the new-ball bowlers. The scoreboard races and England supporters are on the edge of their seats.
Going after the new ball every time means there will be a price to pay on some occasions and, when things go wrong, the failures will be spectacular. The team have bought into the Bazball culture and, like all gamblers, they trot out the standard phrase “that’s the way we play”.
Dan Lawrence will never make an opening bat. He does not have the technique or the patience. Around off stump and outside off stump his bat is too far away from his body and that makes him vulnerable to new-ball movement. He is not a good judge of what to leave and what to play and for an opener that is so important. On his legs he is more comfortable but even when the ball is straight he is working across the line instead of playing straight back to the bowler.
Before his second innings at the Oval he had scored 85 runs in five innings so he tried another way. He attacked and made an entertaining 35 off 35 balls. It is obvious to anyone with cricket nous that he is better suited down the order where he can play shots to an older ball. But I am not convinced he will ever make it at Test level unless he tightens up his defence, plays straighter and has better judgment around off stump. A lot to work on there.
Harry Brook has had a rapid rise. In full flow there is a touch of Kevin Pietersen as he improvises with effortless timing and power. Just like Pietersen, he has charisma. But while Brook has been plundering runs, teams will have been searching for ways to get him out. Because of video analysis, teams are studying every dismissal and in future more and more bowlers are going to bowl wide at fourth and fifth stump to test his patience. Sri Lanka are the latest to wait for him to get himself out.
In the first innings at the Oval you could see he was getting frustrated and did not like being unable to score. Frustration got to him and he slapped one to cover. If the team directive is to get after the bowling and put bat to ball it goes against instructions to keep leaving wide balls, yet he is going to have to think on his feet and adapt.
Root had a period buying into the team ethos of attack and trying out some T20 shots but, after a few silly dismissals and much criticism, he cut them out. Now he plays himself in, rotates the strike by pushing and placing the ball for ones and twos. He only hits the bad balls for boundaries. Simple, basic batting, no frills, and then once set later in his innings he picks up the tempo. What is curious is if Root can adapt his batting then why can’t the others do the same, or is Root exempt from Bazball because he is too important to drop?