Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
You know why he was in and out of the side so much between 1991 and 1995/96? Because he averaged 16. Regardless of anything, that is execrable.Ramps in particular was never given an extended run in a key position and played a fair chunk of his test innings at 6 (or lower). In fact one of the better runs he had higher in the order was when he was thrust into an opening role, another unusual role for him.
Aside from the fact he was in and out of the side a fair bit in any case, when he was in he never had any real sort of run at #3 or #4, he'd get a couple of Tests there before they decided to push him back to 6 again.
Ramprakash did bat at six (as well as higher) later in his career, and made a pretty decent fist of it, averaging 37 as a middle-order batsman from 1997 onwards.
But as a new player, you have to bat below established stars. That's just the way it is. If you have Gooch, Atherton, Smith, Gower, Lamb and others in the side, you don't walk into the top five. You get the chance lower down, and if your performances merit it you get moved up as other names move on. That's the way it's always been throughout history.
Sadly, due to temperamental deficiencies, Ramprakash was unable to achieve Test success early in his career. But it's near enough unthinkable that an exception being made to the age-old rationale of batting positions would have changed this.