From England's point of view, arguably the most perfect aspect of the
"perfect" performance that they turned in at the Adelaide Oval last week was
the sight of
Graeme Swann doing exactly what was expected of him. The
batting feats of Alastair Cook and Kevin Pietersen were the
outstanding components of a memorable result, while James Anderson's
first-morning spell was devastating and invaluable. But come the fifth
day, with a victory to be harvested on a wearing pitch, though with bad
weather lurking over the horizon, all eyes turned to one man - and he
delivered at precisely the moment it was required.
Such is the peculiar nature of the specialist spinner - a cricketer
bred to contain for long periods of a game but then, every now
and again, is launched into an offensive of such intensity that
failure is not an option. Many a spinner has paid the price
for underperforming on a fifth-day wicket - most recently Australia's
offspinner Jason Krejza, whose failure to prevent South Africa from
chasing 414 in Perth
two years ago meant his 12-wicket haul on debut in Nagpur one match
earlier counted for nothing when it came to extending his
international career.
Swann's second-innings performance of 5 for 91 was his tenth five-wicket
haul in 26 Tests, seven of which have now come overseas. It was the
13th time he had played a part in an England victory since his debut
in December 2008, and with 72 wickets at 20.25 in those matches, his
value as a deal-sealer cannot be underestimated. One week earlier in
Brisbane, he'd failed to nail the correct length for Australia's
pitches and been battered to all corners by Michael Hussey. But the
speed with which he re-evaluated was a testament firstly to his skill
as a spin bowler, but moreover to his inexhaustible confidence.
Swann plays cricket fully expecting to win, and enters every spell
with a spring in his step that has many of his opponents beaten in the
mind long before they can be confounded by his flight or the unusually
prodigious turn that he extracts for a fingerspinner. As Australia's
selectors continue their search for the natural successor to Shane
Warne, with Michael Beer set to become their tenth applicant in the
past four years, Swann stands as a reminder of everything that they
have lost in the interim. For at Test level, the art of spin bowling
is about far more than mere talent, and while Swann's current tally of
122 wickets at 27.23 has no hope of rivalling Warne's legendary mark
of 708 at 25.41, there are distinct parallels in the mindset of the
two men.
"The main thing you find out about Test cricket is that it's exactly
the same as county cricket," Swann said. "It's just that the pressure
is ramped up ten-fold and that causes things to happen. The best
players in the world and the best batsmen, I believe, are the ones who
treat a Test match as if it's a knock in the back garden. The pressure
doesn't seem to affect them and they treat it like the bat and ball
game they grew up with."
It's a lesson that Beer, or Steve Smith - or maybe even, come Boxing
Day, Victoria's own left-armer Jon Holland - will have to come to
terms with in double-quick time if they are to play their part in
rescuing Australia's Ashes campaign. Even the great showman Warne was
over-awed at first, as he returned figures of 1 for 150 on debut
against
India in
1991-92, but by the time his career was into full swing, his
personality had become large enough to dwarf all external pressures.
Swann's brand of showmanship is subtly different to that of Warne -
for starters, it has involved far fewer dalliances with the front end
of the newspapers, although his cat-under-the-floorboards
drink-driving episode was an impressive variation on a theme. However,
to judge by his ease in front of the cameras during his acclaimed
Ashes tour diary, he could also end up one day fronting his own
talkshow, because it is that very desire to be the centre of attention
that has rationalised the challenges faced by both men, not least on
days such as the fifth day of the Adelaide Test, both in 2006 and four
years later.
To be approaching such lofty heights is remarkable for the long years Swann spent in the wilderness, and also for the fact that his particular art, traditional offspin, was widely assumed to be heading for extinction at the highest level
"In amongst all the jokes, he's quite a smart cookie, and I think he's
really good for our dressing-room," said Andy Flower, a demure and
thoughtful England coach whose willingness to accept Swann, warts and
all, sets him apart from the last Zimbabwean to hold that position,
Duncan Fletcher. "It's not exactly the rowdiest dressing room in the
world, and he's a good guy to have around. We want people to influence
our dressing room in a positive way, in their own way, and he does
that. He's very much his own man.
"I think he's an outstanding bowler," added Flower. "An outstanding
competitor and his results suggest that. You can't get away from
results, what's in black and white, and he's been producing results
for us on a consistent basis."
Fletcher, famously, never saw anything beyond the cockiness in Swann's
cricket, and banished him after a single five-over performance in a
one-day international in Bloemfontein in January 2000 - with some
justification, it has to be said, given the tales of late alarm calls
and misplaced arrogance that stalked the 20-year-old Swann's maiden
England tour.
Likewise, Kepler Wessels, Northamptonshire's autocratic coach of the
mid-2000s, took umbrage at his light-hearted attitude to the game, and
in an episode of his career that Swann regarded as out-and-out
"bullying", effectively drummed him out of his home county and forced
him to seek new opportunities with Nottinghamshire - a move that would
prove instrumental in his second coming.
"He has spoken about some of the situations he's been in with
captains, teams or coaches, in which it hasn't worked that well," said
Flower. "You learn as much as a player from watching, listening and
observing other people and learning what not to do, as you do from
watching great performers and learning what to do."
In hindsight, the years of hard yakka on the county circuit have made
Swann the player he is today, a man who had come to accept that he
would never get the chance to play Test cricket, only to be offered a
belated opportunity that - like his former Northants team-mate Michael
Hussey - he was too long in the tooth to allow to go to waste.
When asked if he felt frustrated not to have been given his chance to
impress sooner, Swann's reply was disarmingly candid. "Not really," he
said. "I fully accepted the situation I was in. I had made a rod for
my own back with the previous regime and that wasn't going to change
until the regime changed. There are no regrets from me.
"It's easy being 31 and having bowled for 12 years because I won't
have to worry about my action or where the ball is going to land," he
added. "I didn't feel close to the Test team two years ago. I was a
very jovial tourist but just that, so it's nice I got the chance in
the first place and to have grabbed the opportunity with both hands is
very pleasing. I think I was bowling at a pretty consistent level for
a couple of years before I got into the Test team but you get better
as you play."
By the end of his second year of Test cricket, if Swann can maintain
his form at Perth and Melbourne, he could find himself emulating Warne
in another significant manner, by displacing Dale Steyn as the No. 1
bowler in the world - a position that Warne first captured during his
command performance during the 1994-95 Ashes.
"It's quite flattering that I may get to be No. 1 in the world
although it's still two good games away," said Swann. "It would be
very nice, my mum would be very proud, but I honestly couldn't give a
monkey's as long as England win the Ashes. I could get to No. 1 and we
could lose a Test match so it wouldn't matter at all. I'd rather be
down at No. 20."
Nevertheless, to be approaching such lofty heights is
remarkable for the long years Swann spent in the
wilderness, and also for the fact that his particular art, traditional
offspin, was widely assumed to be heading for extinction at the highest
level - beaten into submission by heavier bats, shorter boundaries and
the difficulty of imparting sufficient revolutions on the ball with
just the fingers, and not the wrist. Unless you were a "mystery"
spinner with a doosra in your armoury, it was assumed you need not
apply.
"Towards the end of my playing days I'd have said times have moved on
for the orthodox spinner being able to take wickets like he's done, so
that has surprised me," said Flower, who was one of the best players
of spin in his day. "But all that does to me is emphasise the value of
doing the basics very well, and the basics for him are getting enough
energy on the ball that it drifts and turns.
"I played against him, I always saw something there. He always had
lots of energy on the ball, that's what I remember about him, and
therefore got the ball to drift or dip a little and spin. He's always
had that. The stuff he's acquired now are his patience and nous, he's
quite a canny operator now."
Whether he's canny enough to close out an Ashes series in Australia
remains to be seen, but his natural ebullience is these days tempered
with a worldly wisdom that matches the ethos of the squad in which he
has made his home. "We're not going to go down the Aussie media way of
saying we're the best team in the world and that they're all doom and
gloom because we know that's not true," he said. "As the ancient
Chinese proverb says, 'He who looks at the clouds takes his eye off
the plough'."
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo.