Yes, on reflection your word "corinthian" is better than "amateur" with its indelible associations. And perhaps also a couple of French expressions, espieglerie and joie de vivre.
It's true that Randall had dips in form, as he acknowledged, but it was just that sometimes Gatting was preferred when his average was no better than Randall's. And to his modest Test average (though in an age when the high averages of today were much less common) should be added the many runs Randall saved by virtue of his presence in the field, not just through the number of run-outs he achieved but through his deterrent effect when runs would have been taken to other fielders. That was certainly not the case with Gatting by comparison. And Randall's technique cannot have been that bad to make 174 in that Centenary test against Lillee et al.
I suppose it's just a psychological preference for the carefree quality over professionalism, for Gower over Gooch, for the elegant, the idiosyncratic, the unpredictable and sometimes downright infuriating over the boot-camp, the hours-in-the-gym, relentless net practice, hard work ethic. Of course, as the 1990s Australians and the present English team shows, the latter gets results but it's a shame we don't see so much of the former.
It's true that Randall had dips in form, as he acknowledged, but it was just that sometimes Gatting was preferred when his average was no better than Randall's. And to his modest Test average (though in an age when the high averages of today were much less common) should be added the many runs Randall saved by virtue of his presence in the field, not just through the number of run-outs he achieved but through his deterrent effect when runs would have been taken to other fielders. That was certainly not the case with Gatting by comparison. And Randall's technique cannot have been that bad to make 174 in that Centenary test against Lillee et al.
I suppose it's just a psychological preference for the carefree quality over professionalism, for Gower over Gooch, for the elegant, the idiosyncratic, the unpredictable and sometimes downright infuriating over the boot-camp, the hours-in-the-gym, relentless net practice, hard work ethic. Of course, as the 1990s Australians and the present English team shows, the latter gets results but it's a shame we don't see so much of the former.
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