A set of car keys thrown over a bonnet, a pair of socks bundled together and hurled down a hallway, you must have felt it. That feeling. Children get it too. Have you ever seen a toddler clinging on to a beanbag or – more likely – a half-eaten nub of jammy bread purely by chance? Their eyes blaze with the wonder of it, staring down at their hands in disbelief and joy. Some cricketers speak of the magic few split seconds when they have taken a catch and they and only they know it. There’s the briefest beat before the other players, officials and spectators realise what has happened, it’s just themselves and the ball, a euphoric secret shared in the liminal space. We love to take catches, to watch them and debate them. Just as a catch dropped can bring a particular despair – a hollowing of the soul – a catch safely taken can stir it like almost nothing else. Catches win matches A conversation with Mark Taylor last summer (13th on the all-time Test list with 157 catches in 104 matches, mainly from his position at first slip) sparked a few thoughts. Taylor believes that the standard of slip catching has fallen from his era to now. “Fielding has improved so much in the modern game, the athleticism, hunting the ball down, all incredible. But, I don’t feel like slip catching has improved in the last 20 years and may have even gone slightly down.” It’s hard to back up Taylor’s hypothesis even if there is a suspicion he might be right. Unfortunately, the Test slip catching stats only go back to 2006, in that period there isn’t too much of a change in standards across Test cricket year on year. Test Year Slip Catch % 2006 80 2007 80 2008 81 2009 80 2010 84 2011 77 2012 77 2013 80 2014 79 2015 80 2016 75 2017 78 2018 78 2019 82 2020 81 2021 86 2022 79 2023 77 2024 78 (Statistics courtesy of CricViz) Taylor went on to say that he “probably oversells the importance of being a slip fielder, maybe as a reaction to others who I feel undersell it …” but as far as Test cricket is concerned – those in the know know how important slip catching is, according to CricViz’s Head of Insight Ben Jones. “In red ball cricket, the value of fielding is essentially slip fielding. Boundary fielding, high catches, etc, they have little to no opportunity to impact the game on a meaningful level.” Jones has been in the room and advised franchise teams on selection. What he said next I found particularly fascinating. “In T20 (and to a lesser extent, ODI), it’s reversed. A slip catcher is valuable for maybe one over, but a gun boundary fielder or a stopper in the ring is hugely valuable. Those are probably the fielding skills that add extra value to a player in a T20 auction/draft – so it’s fair to say that there’s limited financial reward for being a good slipper. “Equally, if someone’s an absolute gun (catcher) – Chris Jordan or Jordan Cox, say – then they can bring value even if they’re not in the XI, as a sub fielder. That stuff gets considered, whether people admit it or not.” Quote of the week “I don’t actually look at the big screen when I’m bowling” – Shabnim Ismail was seemingly unaware she had sent down the fastest recorded delivery in women’s cricket on Tuesday evening. The South African fast bowler clocked a speed of 132.1 km/h (82.1 mph) in the Women’s Premier League match between the Mumbai Indians and Delhi Capitals. |