Swann tells England to keep one-day ‘courage’
Former England off-spinner Graeme Swann has told Eoin Morgan’s men to
maintain their ‘courageous’ approach to one-day cricket and rid
themselves of a fear of failure once and for all.

Graeme Swann |
Swann was severely critical of England’s build-up to this year’s
World Cup and his fears were proved correct as the side suffered an
embarrassing first-round exit, having failed to beat a single rival Test
nation.
But a revamped team, still captained by former Ireland batsman
Morgan, have changed tack in stunning fashion during their ongoing
one-day series against New Zealand.
They head into Saturday’s finale of a five-match series at Durham’s
Chester-le-Street ground all square at 2-2 with the World Cup finalists.
More than the raw results, the way England have played has been the
greatest possible contrast to their World Cup debacle in Australia and
New Zealand.
They have now scored in excess of 300 in four successive one-day
internationals, something no England side had previously managed, and
have played in a bold style that many observers thought was simply
beyond them.
Swann, a member of the only England side to win a major global
limited overs trophy the 2010 ICC World Twenty20 in the Caribbean has
been impressed.
“It’s so refreshing because it is like they have held their hands up
and said ‘you’ve all got a point’,” explained Swann, speaking at an
event for charity Chance to Shine, which promotes cricket in British
schools, in Nottingham.
“Everyone knew it was the most obvious thing in the world we were
playing an outmoded, outdated form of the game,” said Swann.
“But (there was) the arrogance that saw us stick to our guns and say
‘everyone is wrong’ and in that World Cup I think England got
justifiably vilified, because they were so stuck in their ways.”
England’s World Cup exit played a key role in the sacking of former
coach Peter Moores.
Now, under caretaker coach Paul Farbrace, who is soon to cede control
to Australian Trevor Bayliss ahead of the Ashes, England appear to have
thrown off their shackles.
However, Swann warned England against reverting back to their old
ways should results go against them.
- Unleashed -
“It will take courage to stick to it,” he said. “But they should take
what New Zealand have done as a blueprint.
“There is no way on God’s green earth we have a worse talent pool
than any other country in the world we’ve got these players who, if
unleashed and given free rein, can be incredible one-day players.”
Swann added: “In Eoin Morgan, they have a good leader because he
genuinely couldn’t give two hoots what the public are saying.
“If he thinks something is right he will go all out for it.”
Swann also urged that players be given a decent run in the team to
prove their worth ahead of the 2019 World Cup in England and not be
discarded if their attacking approach did not produce results within a
matter of games.
He cited hard-hitting Surrey opener Jason Roy, brought into the
one-day side following the World Cup, as someone worthy of prolonged
backing by the selectors.
(AFP)
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