Lillian Thomson
Hall of Fame Member
The problem is they cant. The failure rates of selections are far too high.
I can eyeball and judge players I really like and rate. However its impossible to take that as an indication of productivity.
At all levels, guys that look great in the nets may not produce in games like others who are less impressive.
Looking good and performing well are 2 seperate things and sometime people (including selectors) get seduced by how a player looks.
A system has to be based on metit to have any credibility. Randomly picking players on hunches and then claiming victory when a small proportion succeed is a mess. It also hurts hope and moral of those that actually do perform.
No one has suggested picking players after watching them in the nets for 20 minutes. David Gower was obviously going to be a Test player at the age of 17 but on the merits of productivity in County Cricket we'd still be waiting, perhaps Harry Pilling should have been chosen instead.
If the England team is chosen on that basis you have an bigger mess. This sort of idealogy might work if you have a lot of high class performers demanding selection but when you're struggling to find 11 proven international cricketers you have to occasionally use your judgement based on something other than stats. There was a period of three or four years when Mal Loye would have been the first name on the list.