To keep or not to keep - Buttler's big decision

To keep or not to keep - Buttler's big decision
News Desk

By News Desk


Published: 30/10/2024

When England begin their latest white-ball tour in
Antigua on Thursday, they will again do so without their captain.

Jos Buttler's troublesome calf has kept him out of action
since June, forcing him to watch the rebirth of his side without him.

The latest setback has ruled Buttler out of the three-match
ODI series against West Indies, although it is hoped he will be fit for the
five T20s that follow next week.

It is awkward for Buttler, denying him the chance to set the
course before Brendon McCullum arrives as coach in the new year, but has also
kicked one question continuing to nag England down the road.

Should the 34-year-old still be trying to do it all as
captain, wicketkeeper and premier batter or is it time for Buttler to give up
the gloves?

Buttler's big decision

Buttler has kept in all but two of his white-ball matches
for England over the past 12 years but, since he was retained and coach Matthew
Mott sacked following this year's T20 World Cup exit, the whispers from the
England camp have suggested a change.

Even had Buttler been fit to play Australia last month, Phil
Salt would have kept wicket in Buttler's place in the T20s with Jamie Smith
also primed to do so in the ODIs.

"I was going to give up the gloves and commit to being
at mid-off and see how that felt," Buttler told Sky Sports.

"If it will help me with my captaincy it is something I
am open to."

Buttler has been backed to remain as captain but knows,
having overseen two disappointing World Cup exits, he does not stand upon
especially firm ground.

At the start of the summer he was resolute.

"I feel like I've got the best view. I can see exactly
what's happening and I can make calls," he said in May about whether he
would stay as wicketkeeper.

Now, with a mind focused by a need to improve, the mood has
changed.

The case for change

The benefits of Buttler giving up the gloves are obvious.

With a younger, less experienced side he will find it easier
to talk his bowlers through pressure situations from the outfield than he can
behind the stumps.

In recent years he has relied heavily on Moeen Ali and Chris
Jordan to provide the calming voice in a bowler's ear, with Buttler himself
tied to his wicketkeeping position by the ever-more-stringent constraints of
the pace of play.

Moeen has since retired and 36-year-old Jordan moved on,
leaving Buttler as one of the few experienced heads - and he does not have to
look far for an example to follow.

McCullum played most of his career as a wicketkeeper-batter
in white-ball cricket only to give up the gloves in 2013 aged 32.

Afterwards he played 41 ODIs across three and a half years,
including leading the Black Caps to the 2015 World Cup final - an Indian summer
Buttler, who has not scored a century in 33 white-ball internationals since
September 2023, would likely take.

Furthermore, the England skipper's teenage idol, South
Africa great AB de Villiers, also played much of his career as a wicketkeeper,
but kept in only three of his last 78 matches and averaged 65.

When Buttler has not to kept, in The Hundred, the Indian
Premier League and two T20 internationals, since 2021 his average also
improves, albeit slightly from 38.43 to 42.22.

A refresh could reenergise an England great's career.

The case to remain

But if those arguments sound convincing, the reality is less
straightforward.

Yes, the sample size is too small to draw definitive
conclusions but when Buttler has captained from the outfield there has been no
obvious upturn in results - three wins and four defeats his return from seven
matches for England and Manchester Originals.

"Being wicketkeeper is a massive benefit in terms of
getting tactical information around decision-making," says Sam Billings, a
wicketkeeping captain who has won the 2021 T20 Blast and the past two editions
of the Hundred as skipper.

"As a wicketkeeper you can read conditions, field
positions, and the angles far better than any other place on the field."

There have been few more successful white-ball captains than
India's 2011 World Cup-winning skipper MS Dhoni, famed for his tweaks and
tactical nous from behind the stumps.

"It is hard to go from captaining and keeping your
whole career to change to a captain at extra cover the whole time,"
Billings adds.

"[Former England skipper] Eoin Morgan was such a good
captain because he had always captained from cover and worked on those
conversations."

There is also, of course, no guarantee that fewer
responsibilities means an upturn in results.

McCullum's career may well have been extended by giving up
the gloves but his batting average was just 29.76 after doing so.

Should he want to stay on as keeper, Buttler could easily
point to one of his other confidantes, Kumar Sangakkara.

The Sri Lanka great kept wicket until the end and finished
his illustrious ODI career with four centuries in his last five matches.

The stats may well tell Buttler whatever it is he wants to
hear.

If not Buttler then who?

But if Buttler does decide the team would benefit from
giving up the gloves it leaves England with intriguing selection decisions
while adding importance to the two weeks to come in the Caribbean.

In T20s the solution is obvious. Salt, currently third in
the world rankings, is a regular wicketkeeper and can take Buttler's place.

The answer in ODIs is less straight-forward.

Salt struggled against Australia, managing just 95 runs
across five innings, and leaving doubts over whether he is suited to the longer
format.

With Joe Root and possibly Ben Stokes to return in the new
year, spaces in the top six will be at a premium.

Smith, also absent for this tour because of his Test
commitments, remains the mystery.

McCullum has been gushing in his praise of the Surrey
24-year-old.

In the first squad after McCullum's appointment was
confirmed, Smith was put straight into the XI as keeper and number five - the
role Buttler has made his own.

How Smith fits into a side that includes Buttler, Ben
Duckett, Joe Root, and Harry Brook is not obvious.

If he bats at six, England would have no significant bowling
option in their top order.

England will have to make their final decision in January,
when they play India as part of their build-up to February's Champions Trophy.



































































































It is then that the can will not be able to be kicked down
the road any longer.

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