Simon Hughes: Series turns into the lab Tests (28 July 1997)
THERE was much consternation about the preparation of the pitch for this fourth Cornhill Test, but you certainly couldn`t say that about the players
28-Jul-1997
Monday 28 July 1997
Series turns into the lab Tests
Beyond the Boundary by Simon Hughes
THERE was much consternation about the preparation of the
pitch for this fourth Cornhill Test, but you certainly couldn`t
say that about the players.
With England`s three-day camp, Australia`s strategic use of
their warm-up county matches, and the monitoring of practically
every blood vessel and capillary on show, the only doubt is
whether 22 cricketers have ever turned up for a match more meticulously prepared.
A short, stocky man with hair like a miniature bushfire supervises the Aussies` health and fitness. `Tattoo` they call him because of the blue scrawls all over his body, one of which depicts
a boxing kangaroo brandishing a fist at a timorous Springbok.
"I had it done after we won the series in Port Elizabeth,"
Tattoo, real name Steve Smith, says proudly. Perhaps after this
game, he`ll get a moth-eaten lion added to the scene.
Previously a diver in the Australian navy, Smith is now the
team trainer, attending to everything from diet to body dynamics, keeping dossiers on VO2 levels and resting pulses,
checking every ground and hotel for food quality and gym facilites.
"I make sure all our bowlers loosen up in the hotel pool before breakfast and stretch off there after play. Jason Gillespie`s particularly keen in this area, but the others are
catching on," he says.
Tattoo varies the morning warm-ups, one day organising a squad
volleyball match, alternating that with football and touch
rugby or yesterday`s sprint relays. Once play has started he goes
off to order the lunches.
"I regularly measure everyone`s fat percentage and skin folds
and keep a careful eye on what the lads eat," he says. "Most
of the grounds here have made quite an effort, and Glamorgan
was fantastic, with signs on the walls saying low-fat this and
special that."
England are not lagging behind in the scientific department.
Dean Riddle, a New Zealand trainer formerly with Leeds RLFC, is
now a permanent part of their squad and is to be seen every morning before play laying out a maze of plastic cones as if for a
cycling proficiency test.
This might be for a game of `bounce passing` as a prelude to
jogging on the `footwork ladder` - a canvas contraption with
plastic rungs designed to improve movement and balance.
"The main aim is to improve muscle conditioning and create a
more rounded base of fitness," Riddle says, "but to keep it varied with different emphases depending on their mood and the
match." Trevor Lee, nutritionist for Manchester United, attends
the first day of every Test to measure body fat and check the
menus.
And lurking in a cubby hole beneath the dressing rooms is Nick
Slade, a sports scientist graduate, sitting by a video console
tap- ping on what looks like the coloured keyboard of a checkout till. In fact he is taping the entire day`s play and logging
the precise details of every delivery on computer. Almost
immediately he can then produce copies of players` innings or
bowling spells to view in the dressing-room.
Alec Stewart is the most consistent user of this -L15,000 ECB-
purchased facility (Australian-conceived, of course) more for
his wicketkeeping than batting. He likes to analyse his diving
technique and the way he deals with balls not carrying. This
new technology is also a huge help to his coach, Alan Knott.
"Alan spent two days at home videoing Alec`s keeping at Edgbaston and was astonished to find I could programme the computer to do the same thing in a couple of minutes," Slade said.
"We use it to look at where the Australians score their runs
[everywhere] and most of our guys like to have a record of their
innings."
After this match, some hope he accidentally recorded the wrong
channel.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)