Ha i'm enjoying this now..
Ok, this is bizarre.
1. Fletcher played favourites, everyone knows this. He has he mind set very much on "greater than the sum of their parts" cricketers who provide intangibles, and he selected teams based on that selection philosophy. So let's not pretend that Venn diagram of England's best available players and the squads Fletcher picked is a perfect circle; it isn't (and that's not necessarily a critique on Fletcher, so many unrevealed things mean that selectors decisions may be fine at the time, but look really **** in hindsight). As Cribb points out, selectors aren't omniscient.
Who is these "everyone" that know's this? Ha
Fletcher simply picked the best available players available for ENG. The only sort of favourite Fletcher had was for Giles, he was indeed a "greater of sum of the parts" player as valuable lower-order bat & non world beating spinner - who was very useful in the right conditions in 5-man attack philosophy.
Maybe you also argue to some degree Thorpe could have started the Ashes 2005 & Pietersen could have come in middle of series when Bell starting failing - but its hard to say that given how brilliant KP was.
Otherwise there was no obvious player at the time who may have been better in a set role that was not picked by England, that Fletcher/Hussain/Graveney had in team over no "Fletcher favourites" - that is completely revisionist.
2. Flintoff and White weren't good enough as batsmen or as bowlers to play Test cricket in the Hussain/Fletcher era. Flintoff's average split from 1999-2003 was 27/44, White's was 28/36. That is fine if you're a #7 batsman and a 4th seamer, but not if you're a frontline bowler who just happens to be good enough to bat at #7. In short, playing either of Flintoff or White at #7 requires a 'keeper who bats at #6. You wouldn't want to pick: 6. Next-Best-Batsman, 7. Flintoff, 8. Foster, 9. Giles, 10. Caddick, 11. Hoggard in 2002; you'd never take any bloody wickets. Or you can pick 6. Stewart, 7. Flintoff, 8. Giles, 9. Caddick, 10. Next-Best-Quick, 11. Hoggard and be far better balanced. You might've been able to pick the former if Giles was actually Swann, but he wasn't.
The England selectors picked Stewart with the gloves in 2003 for literally the same reason you pick him in your England ATG XI -- because the all-rounder wasn't a #6 at that level
Haha oh my, these theories you all coming up with is makes me wonder if you were another planet when these matches were played.
First FYI i'm pretty sure the I said the period I was referring to where Fletcher/Hussain's England could have relieved Stewart with the gloves & used Foster long term ish was from Foster debuted tour in India 2001 to Stewart Final series vs S Africa 2003.
So mentioning 1999 is reference to Flintoff is totally irrelevant since its well known at that point Stewart was still needed as keeper because ENG had finished with Russell by then & Flintoff was joke player during 1998-2000
Flintoff also was a perfectly competent # 6 batsman from 2001, coincidentally during that same 2001 series in India when he began to look international standard. White was the one who was only a # 7 & rightfully he never batted so high.
A correct synopsis from the 2001-2003 period looking at the entire ENG team at the time would clearly show a way where Stewart could have played as top 6 batsman, Flintoff/White/ all-rounders & Foster as keeper.
- You had Trescothick/Vaughan as openers with Vaughan peaking during that time
- Hussain//Butcher were two regular middle-order players throughout this period because Thorpe went awol from international cricket until Stewart's final test
- Guys like Ramprakash/John Crawley/Ed Smith/Rob Key were given chances and struggled to hold down a regular place
- Caddick/Hoggard/Cork main three seamers because Gough didn't play much tests - while Harmison/Jones were now emerging
Thus the team below could have easily be chosen so try again:
Trescothick
Vaughan
Butcher
Hussain
Stewart
Flintoff
White
Foster
Giles
Caddick
Hoggard