Giles warns of further pain to come

Yorkshire 381 (Handscomb 75, Rashid 65, Bresnan 61) beat Warwickshire 178 (Barker 50, Coad 5-52) and 115 (Patel 49*, Coad 5-50) by an innings and 88 runs
Scorecard

Ben Coad claimed a ten-wicket match haul © Getty Images

Ashley Giles has warned there will be “no quick fixes” to Warwickshire’s problems and told supporters to expect more pain in the months ahead.

Giles, who returned to Warwickshire as director of sport ahead of this season, admitted the club was “going to the wall” with an ageing team and “nothing behind them” after they succumbed to their second successive innings defeat of the Championship season. The result leaves them bottom of the Division One table with just three points from their first two games.

But while Giles gave assurances that all involved would be doing everything they could to improve results – and, most pertinently, avoid relegation – he suggested it would take time to correct some of the club’s long-term problems.

“We knew before the season that we would be entering a period of transition,” Giles said. “But maybe that is bordering on transformation.

“Are we as well prepared as we thought we were? Are we as good as we thought we were? Either way, our goals may have to change. We came into the season with high hopes but now we want to stay in Division One. We’ve been rocked back by the first hit.

“There’s no quick fix. We have a group of players aged 32-plus and a group of players aged under-19 and a huge void in between. Our development system hasn’t really been working – that’s not a new thing, it’s been that way forever and a day – and we can’t just go out and recruit in the middle of a season. It’s going to take time to put things right. There’s no magic bullet.

“We’ve not made this transition smoother over a period of years. So now we’re going to the wall with this group of players and there’s nothing behind them. We’ve had a lot of success with this team from 2010, but now we’re going to suffer some pain, that is for sure, and a bit of that is self-inflicted.

“Building a team is an ongoing process. You always have to be bringing new players on and we haven’t been doing that. These issues have not been dealt with.”

While Giles remains confident that the experience of his current team – four of the XI beaten by Yorkshire are 35 or more, one more will be before the end of the year – can be an asset he did hint that Ben Coad, the Yorkshire seamer who had played such a huge role in bowling his side to victory, had reminded Warwickshire of an important truism of the game.

“Each year it takes an effort to go back and keep improving,” Giles said. “You have to keep going back to the well and keep drawing from it. You can only do that so many times.

“What we saw from this kid Ben Coad, who I thought bowled incredibly well, was a kid who wanted it bad. He’s been in the seconds for four years and he came into the side wanting it badly. Whether you’re 20 or 35, you have to want it more than the opposition.

“Our senior players give us quality and experience. They’re the guys in possession and they will have the opportunity to respond. But it takes fight to go through the cycle of transition and we have to work out which ones want that fight. It’s going to be tough, but you have to be excited by that challenge.

“You either blame everyone and everything else, or you look at yourself and say: ‘What can I do?’ That’s where we are. You can’t be thinking ‘poor me’. We need to get out of that frame of mind.”

Giles confirmed that Warwickshire had not pursued any interest in Angus Robson and suggested they were unlikely to make an approach for the currently unsigned Jaik Mickleburgh, either.

“I’m not just going to replace one of these guys – probably with someone with worse stats – just so it looks as if we’re doing something,” he said. “And if people are falling out with other clubs or not doing well, you have to ask the question: are they the answer?

“Recruitment takes times. I know some supporters expect us to go out and sign five players, but it doesn’t work like that in cricket. We don’t want knee-jerk reactions, we want decisions that are of long-term benefit.”

While Warwickshire’s batting has been the most obvious problem so far this season – they have only once reached 180 in four Championship innings and in the Yorkshire game were 77 for 7 in the first innings and 40 for 7 in the second – Giles feels the bowling has been below par as well.

“All-round we’re under,” he said. “The most obvious thing is our batting, but all-round the guys have to hold their hands up and say we’re being outplayed. Whether it is confidence or technical intervention, we have to get them better.”

In the short-term, there is a chance Ateeq Javid will come back into the team in place of Sam Hain for the Championship match against Surrey starting on Friday. Ian Westwood could also return at the top of the order if he comes through a 2nd XI game without a reaction to a foot injury.

Might Giles’ words reassure Warwickshire supporters? While they make it clear the club is in for a tough ride in the foreseeable future, they also accept the issues the club faces. And by acknowledging those faults, he provides some encouragement they will be addressed. Diagnosis is surely the first step towards the cure.

George Dobell is a senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo

© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

Source: ESPN Crickinfo

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