Excellent article by Mark Nicholas;
Mark Nicholas: Surprised by England's World Cup debacle? Don't be | Cricket | ESPN Cricinfo
When I first played county cricket, I was struck by the gulf between those who were very good and those who, well, let's be generous, and say those who were not so good. It was a long time ago. One of my first games was against Gloucestershire. Mike Procter, Zaheer Abbas and Andy Stovold contrasted markedly with Jim Foat, Julian Shackleton and David Shepherd. This comparison is in no way meant as disrespectful. "Shep" was the first to point it out when he kindly spent time with us youngsters over an ale. It was the same pretty much everywhere. At my county, Hampshire, we had Barry Richards, Gordon Greenidge, Andy Roberts and some good English players such as Trevor Jesty and David Turner. But we had some pretty ordinary cricketers too.
Put simply, the system allowed it. Overseas players papered over the cracks in English cricket, in the same way a few exceptional Test players papered over the cracks in the England team. Geoffrey Boycott, Graham Gooch and David Gower were high-class batsmen, Alan Knott was a remarkably gifted cricketer and Bob Willis was a no-nonsense, world-class, fast bowler.
The South Africans gave England a bit of edge. Tony Greig and Allan Lamb, then Robin Smith and Kevin Pietersen. Occasionally an outstanding character, with rare skills, emerged to confront opponents with his very un-English attitude. I'm thinking Sir Ian Botham, Andrew Flintoff and, to a degree, Graeme Swann too.
Some good captains took England down the right paths - Mike Brearley, Gooch in his way, Michael Vaughan and Andrew Strauss. Mind you, they had some of the better cattle. In general, English cricket was spread thinly and still is now.
Back in the day, I played club and grade cricket in South Africa and Australia, and many of those weekend amateurs were obviously more talented than about 30% of the professionals in the county championship. England gives too many cricketers a job and rewards an alarming number of those who can cling on for long enough with a benefit year.
There is nothing wrong with this per se. The county system was conceived with good intentions 125 years ago. Much of it is admirable and sought after by cricketers from abroad who see the county game as a finishing school - and a decent boost to their bank balance. But it is a system designed to represent the country through the shires, and because there are a lot of them, that means a lot of cricket.
It is not a system best appointed to develop international players or prepare them for the international game. It is a system in which quantity overrides quality. It was ever thus and is exaggerated now by the way in which England contracted cricketers have been removed from the county game, thus diminishing its relevance and standard.
A few years back, I wrote that there needed to be fewer county teams and fewer matches at the top level of the game. The best players need more exposure to one another to raise the overall standard. This caused a tremendous hue and cry, especially within the counties that missed out in a streamlined proposal for the future structure of the first-class game in England. This is an old record but if you were given a blank sheet of paper, you wouldn't start the 2015 season with 18 teams in the top flight. The point is that successful England teams take the field in spite of the system not because of it. English cricket has always had a limited talent pool.
It is 23 years since England performed well in a World Cup. During that time, the once hugely popular NatWest Trophy and Benson and Hedges Cup have morphed, alongside various other sponsors - Cheltenham and Gloucester, Friends Provident, Royal London - into a competition that passes almost unnoticed, with a final played in the mid/late September chill that no longer even threatens to sell out. This used to be a showpiece first- Saturday-of-September event, and a hard ticket, which bookended the summer. No one in administration cares about 50-over cricket anymore.
The county system is not best appointed to develop international players or prepare them for the international game. It is a system in which quantity overrides quality
The players' response to this neglect has been their own neglect. If we say Alastair Cook and Ian Bell have been the best English-born batsmen of this generation, what can we say about their 50-over cricket? Not enough, is the answer. Have they evolved or grown as one-day players? No, they have stood still. Opponents work you out; the best work themselves out in response and move on to new and more fashionable methods.
Fifty-over cricket has become a confused obligation. Why? Because T20 has taken over the hopes and dreams of counties, who must balance the books. T20 should have been wrapped up in a series of franchises and given its English-summer window five years ago when the mood was ripe and a breakaway cabal was ready to go. But such acumen was stifled by thoughtless and selfish leadership from the ECB, a body that refused a) to accept its own shortcomings, or b) look into the future.
As T20 franchises were leading the game's zeitgeist and opportunity, England was fumbling along with its own version geared towards, guess what, the county system.
Watching England lose to Bangladesh was sad, but sadder still was watching the witless, old-fashioned cricket and the alarming lack of confidence and flair.
Honestly, I have no idea whether Peter Moores is good at his job or otherwise. Paul Downton famously called him the outstanding coach of his generation, which he might be. But I sense he is of a type. Pulling a decent fellow from the heartlands of county cricket and expecting him to cut a dash on the international stage seems unlikely to me. To do so twice is unlikelier still.
It is not that the blame for England's World Cup humiliation should fall specifically on Moores - far from it - but his appointment is symptomatic of the way in which English cricket thinks. It is like picking James Tredwell ahead of Adil Rashid. Or James Taylor ahead of Jonny Bairstow.
Moores said he would need to review the data. The data! You watched the matches, Peter. The reasons are before your eyes. England's batsmen are rooted to the spot (Jos Buttler excepted); England's bowlers lack speed, swing and spin. The players' body language betrayed their fear of failure. It appears from afar as if free spirits are frowned upon.
But why should they fear failure? Because they have seen what is going on around them. This tournament is an explosion of the senses; a unveiling of the modern one-day game. During it, England have been playing a limited-overs league match on a grey day in the burbs. Around them, artists throw thick paint at huge canvases while they join dots with pencils and a rubber.
Only Eoin Morgan and Buttler have the game to match some of the creators elsewhere. But Morgan, inexplicably, seems shot and Buttler bats too low. Ian Bell has abundant class but no direction. If Bell would look to slay the opponent without fear of recrimination, he would come closer to justifying his talent. Bell should think Aaron Finch more than he should think Hashim Amla. It is his limit. Instead, he bats with the word responsibility pounding in his head and eventually the pain overtakes him.
Joe Root is just 24 and bravely seems to carry the burden of the team's fear. He is trying so hard he looks as if he might burst. The same can be said of others but Root's apparent determination sets him apart. Trying too hard is a terrible thing. Your mind, muscle and sinew become so tight that breathing is difficult enough, let alone changing the situation of a critical match. England's cricketers need to be set free.
Then there is the strategy. The foolishness of believing that the seven-match series in Sri Lanka prior to Christmas meant anything. The late change of captain, the later change of No. 3 and Nos. 6 and 7 batsmen. The mistrust of talent such as Ben Stokes. The sameness and predictability of the attack. The staggering tactic of bowling back of a length at the death. The use of Buttler. Against Scotland, England's first wicket fell in the 31st over with the score on 172. Gary Ballance walked to the wicket, not Buttler. Why not Buttler? Be Scotland and think who you do and don't want to see walking to the wicket right then.
And then there is the toss. Why do England put the other blokes in to bat? The pitches are terrific for batting and the impact of a good first innings has changed. Now the last 10-15 overs are weighed so heavily in favour of batsmen that outrageous totals are the norm. Get to the 35th over with wickets in hand and it's like a charity match. The best players don't worry about their stumps, the most adventurous have no regard for their wicket. Manageable scores of around 300 have turned into 350-plus. This does terrible things to the mind of the run-chaser. You can just about get your head around six an over. Seven and beyond is destabilising.
Yes, blame the players for a few things. They are well paid for work they are performing inadequately. But blame the leadership and the administration too. Ask questions about a lack of foresight, ridiculous schedules, muddled thinking, arrogant liaisons and a complete disregard for the format of the game that is, after all, the format of the World Cup. Surprised that England fell short of expectation? You shouldn't be.
Two new and good men are about to take the helm in London - Colin Graves as chairman, Tom Harrison as CEO. If only they had that blank sheet of paper.