Bobat feels, therefore, that the introduction of sophisticated ball-tracking data into county cricket is an important step. “That would give us a bit of an indication of who is delivering or facing and coping with deliveries that are international-standard,” he says. “My caveat or fear with that is we might simply prove that there aren’t that many deliveries or incidents that are reflective of international cricket [in the domestic game].”None of that, Bobat is keen to note, is to suggest that county cricket isn’t important – “it’s absolutely integral to what we do,” he says. “It’s just that the reality is that county cricket presents a player identification challenge.”We could not do what we need to do internationally without county cricket – that is very clear. But on the other side, county cricket alone won’t produce international cricketers. We need to work closely with counties [because] we’ve got shared assets in the players.”While Bobat – who joined the ECB in 2011 after working as a teacher and a lecturer, and has spent most of the last three years focusing on player identification or ‘talent ID’ – has a role that primarily demands he works “within the system” to support the England team and the pathway programme, he is another voice in the perennial debate about the structure of county cricket, and how it might be adapted to be better suited to the task of preparing players for Test cricket.”We have those sorts of conversations. That domestic structure stuff is probably more Ashley Giles’ domain than mine – my job is mainly about working within the system we’ve got to do as good a job as we can. Clearly, I have a view and have some influence on those things; if the gap [between domestic and international cricket] continues to get bigger, we might have to do that with a little bit more urgency.”The earliest outward sign of change since Bobat’s promotion in October has been the introduction of more bespoke camps: he travelled to Mumbai last month alongside five batsmen and three spinners to further their exposure to subcontinental conditions, as well as pushing for the individualised training that took place in Potchefstroom. He claims that picking Lions squad is the “trickiest selection that we do”, and the inclusion of Sibley, Zak Crawley and Keaton Jennings in the red-ball squad for the Australia tour next year seems to hint at long-term planning ahead of the next Ashes series.ALSO READ: Sibley, Crawley, Jennings named in Lions squadBobat has also been present at selection meetings at all levels of England cricket since 2016, and suggests that the scouting network they have built up in that time period means “the rigour and identification that underpins [England] selection is as good as – if not better than – any of our cricketing competitors”.Mo Bobat was promoted to performance director at the ECB in October•Getty ImagesHe speaks glowingly of Ed Smith, who was appointed as national selector ahead of the 2018 summer – “incredibly smart… very analytical but can balance that and understand the holistic element of a player and their human needs” – and suggests that “the public and the media probably know less than 50 percent of what’s factored into a decision-making process”.The jury is still out on Smith’s record in the role in Tests, with his success in bringing Jos Buttler back into the red-ball set-up and shifting the balance of the side significantly in Sri Lanka counterbalanced by Roy’s struggles in the Ashes, and the failure to find a team suitably well-equipped to win in the Caribbean and in New Zealand.”Selecting teams is always tricky,” Bobat suggests, “because in sport it’s one of the most transparent things you do. Take coaching as an example: nobody sees what a football coach does all week with their squad. They don’t see what happens in the gym, or a lot of what goes on, but everyone sees selection.”My job has been trying to make sure we’ve got real rigour to our process. It’s the same with any decision-making process: you can still make a call that with hindsight you think you could have done differently.”He also points out that while the ECB have publicly focused on the 2021-22 Ashes series as their main priority in the coming years since the conclusion of this summer’s World Cup, there are multi-format performance targets which include winning “at least one” of the two T20 World Cups in the next 24 months.”[We want to] do as well as we can in the World Test Championship. Given the way India have set off, we’ve got a bit of work to do, but ultimately we want to be in the final; if you ignore the noise of other people’s results, we can still do that. It’s important to stress that we’ve got aspirational targets across all formats.”

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