The Cricket Paper

Numbers stack up for Cook as Sachin looms in sights again

Chris Stocks looks back to the start of the Alastair Cook story and forward to where his career might now lead

-

The time is November 2010. The place Adelaide’s Interconti­nental hotel bar. Days earlier Alastair Cook had scored his first Test double hundred, an unbeaten 235 in the Ashes opener at Brisbane, and is talking landmarks.

Conversati­on moves onto the feat of scoring 5,000 Test runs. I say he could be the youngest player ever to get there. Cook corrects my error. “I can’t beat Sachin.”

Not for the first time, Cook is right. However, he did go on to become the second youngest man behind Tendulkar to reach the landmark a few weeks later during his hundred in the final Ashes Test at Sydney. He was aged 26 and 10 days.

That was a series where Cook’s phenomenal return of 766 runs at an average of 127.66 helped England win an away Ashes series for the first time in 24 years.

It was a special achievemen­t for Cook, who even back then had a keen eye for statistics and his place among the game’s greats.

So when he made his 10,000th Test run at Durham on Monday, it was indeed a very special moment, even more so given he had finally reeled in Tendulkar, beating the Indian legend by 69 days to become the youngest batsman to reach the landmark.

I was lucky enough to get to know Cook during the four years we worked together on his national newspaper column. The highlight of that time was undoubtedl­y the 2010-11 Ashes tour.

It’s hard to believe he had not even got to 5,000 Test runs at that stage. Fewer than six years later he has more than double that amount.

People will now ask how many he can get during the rest of his career. Knowing Cook, it would be no surprise if he uses Tendulkar’s ultimate record – his 15,921 Test runs – as a motivating factor for the remainder of his career.

Speaking at Durham on Monday, Cook admitted: “The 10,000 has been a milestone that has driven me over the last few years. I never thought I would get 10,000. Now I will have to have a rethink and set something else personally.

“You need something tucked away to drive you to get up, go running in the morning or bat in the nets with Goochy [Graham Gooch]. I am still hungry to achieve stuff.”

Given Cook has been averaging 1,000 runs a year for his entire Test career, Tendulkar’s record is certainly achievable. At 31 he is fit, in form and enjoying his cricket. Ricky Ponting, No.2 on the all-time list with 13,378 Test runs, carried on playing until he was 37. And Tendulkar only retired when he was 40. What may stop Cook from overtaking both of those icons of the game is his life outside cricket. Such is the intensity Cook brings to the table as a profession­al that there is a danger he might decide to call time on his career much sooner than people think. Given he started out as a 21-yearold when making his England debut at Nagpur in 2006, he has already been at the top of his sport for more than a decade. Life on the farm with his wife Alice and young daughter Elsie might be a significan­t pull even for a man as ambitious as Cook. However, his time away from the game with his family, spent lambing and taking his dog, Floss, for a walk in the Bedfordshi­re countrysid­e, may keep him mentally refreshed enough to actually extend his career, especially now as those breaks are even longer given he no longer plays one-day internatio­nal cricket. Cook is a man who does totally switch off from cricket when he is not on duty. I once found this out when, trying to track him down for a column and with a looming deadline, he finally returned my numerous missed calls. He had spent the entire afternoon in his combine harvester working the fields. That ability to switch off is a useful skill to have, such are the pressures of internatio­nal sport. It’s one of the many reasons Cook has been so successful and why he might go on playing for longer than many of us would think. The end of his Test captaincy, and the thought is he may step aside for Joe Root after the next Ashes tour in the winter of 2017-18, would not necessaril­y signal the end of his career, either. Cook is a man without ego and one would think he would happily step back into the ranks to see out his playing days. Who would have thought during the time of that chat in Adelaide all those years ago he would have broken so many records. The chances are there will be many more that fall to Cook in the years to come.

 ??  ?? Milestone man: Cook salutes the Durham crowd after reaching the 10,000 run mark
Milestone man: Cook salutes the Durham crowd after reaching the 10,000 run mark
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom