Devon Malcolm: Our boys must believe
June 4th, 2009 by Sam Collins in West Indies in England
Mind games will be important in the build up to the Ashes. The press does play a big part. I remember when we toured Australia you would never read one negative thing about the Australian team in their press. Everything was so positive. We need to do the same here – build up our boys a bit. In the past the Aussies had the fantastic Shane Warne, and Glenn McGrath, but this time the boot is on the other foot – I reckon England can really give Australia a run for their money. We need to tell the boys they can do it, and for them to start talking themselves up. Jimmy Anderson is bowling well and Stuart Broad is a revelation and improving day by day.
We have to believe in ourselves. When we toured Australia in 1994-95 Mark Waugh spoke to the press about me. He said he wasn’t worried about Devon Malcolm because he’d just been playing the West Indies and when you’ve been facing Ambrose and Walsh why would you be scared of Malcolm? Well I showed him why at Sydney. I got him very early there, did him for pace, and pointed him back to the pavilion. I lost it a bit, and got called into the match referees office for the first time, but sometimes you wish people would wind you up more often. We have to try and control the aggression and turn around the negative things that the Australians say to the press.
England need to win or avoid defeat in Cardiff – it is a clever move holding the first Test there as Australia have a very good record at Lord’s. It was a big surprise to me that they got a Test match there, but Australia never made things easy for us over there and it will be difficult for them in Wales. I remember one time when they sent us to Hobart, where it was absolutely freezing, a few weeks before sending us to Brisbane – the most humid place in Australia – for the first Test match. It is a good bit of gamesmanship – we must use our home advantage. Right from that first ball.
A lot has been made of it in the press but it is ridiculous that the counties are bending over backwards to give the Australians match practice before the Ashes. If any of our boys were touring Australia, and just wanted to have a run out even in the Leagues it wouldn’t happen. Gloucestershire wanted Stuart Clark for two matches – they have to realise that they are here to produce players for, and protect, the national team. It is a disgrace really. They know the Aussie boys are just coming here for a net and that should never happen. These counties should be penalised. With the Future Tours Programme there is no excuse, the counties know Australia are going to be here when they sign these Australian players, and they should be made to prepare elsewhere.
It reminds me of an incident towards the end of my career, when Steve Waugh came over to play for Kent for a few games at the end of the 2002 season before that winter’s Ashes in Australia. I was playing for Leicester at the time, and even though Steve was one of my favourite players, as soon as he came into bat I was round the wicket, and you didn’t need to ask why. He was trying to get a practice and by the third ball he was off the pitch – in hospital having his hand checked out after trying to fend one off his face. He didn’t get much practice.
If you look back it’s not really since Gladstone Small (1985) and Ian Botham (1987) that active England players played Shield cricket – it’s a closed shop. I would have loved to test myself in Shield cricket one winter – you see the way those guys prepare, with not so many games in the season I would have loved to have seen how much better I would have been. I was constantly dropping it in, saying “I would love to play in Australia, play at my optimum, at six cylinders all the way through’, but that door was firmly shut.
Devon Malcolm is writing weekly for thewisdencricketer.com for the duration of the West Indies tour of England in association with the Antigua Tourist Board
Posted in West Indies in England | 1 Comment »







