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We're not just individuals, insists Medlycott
CricInfo - 13 July 2001

Surrey coach Keith Medlycott is insisting his side are just as much a team as their opponents in tomorrow's Benson and Hedges Cup final at Lord's.

Gloucestershire have been labelled as a side without stars who play for each other while Surrey are seen as a bunch of individuals.

It's a tag which annoys Medlycott intensely, who says that though his side comprise a plethora of international stars, they still have the "all for one, one for all" mentality.

Medlycott told PA Sport: "I get disappointed that within certain circles I hear people talking about Gloucestershire being `a team' and us being `individuals'.

"That's the way some people are billing this final and it is absolute nonsense and I also think it is such a flippant comment that is so easy to make.

"Yes, we have some great individuals who play in our team. I accept that - but we are a team and that kind of remark frustrates me more than anything. These are two very good `teams' competing in this final.

"You only have to watch our boys, watch the way we are together and work together. We have some big players, some confident players, some highly successful players but it's a team doing it for each other.

"Saturday will come down to who does the basics very well. If we do that, it gives the opportunity for someone to produce a match-winning contribution.

"But if you don't do the basics very well, then what could have been a match-winning effort won't necessarily win the game."

Three semi-final defeats in recent times have made Surrey determined to make the most of their appearance in the final. And they will be hoping to carry with them to Lord's the form they showed in their Benson and Hedges semi-final performance this season, when they scored a massive 361 against Notts.

"We have lost three semi-finals in recent times and really played quite poorly in a couple of them. We played poorly at Taunton two years ago and we played poorly last year at Cardiff.

"In all three of those games the opposition had a batsman who scored a hundred and stats show the number of times a side wins when someone posts a century.

"We've been under par in those semis and if we are under par in any one-day game and just turn in an average performance then there is a great chance you will finish second.

"You never lose feelings of what it's like to lose - or to win - and you need to have those feelings inside of you. You need to remember what it feels like.

"What we need is a repeat of our showing against Notts in this year's semi when we played in every department at the highest level. It will up to us to emulate that on Saturday."

Medlycott went on: "We have a lot of respect for Gloucestershire. They play one-day cricket exceptionally well.

"Their bowlers have worked out lines, how to control the game, how to put pressure on the opposition. They work exceptionally hard in the field and their batters tend to give them enough runs to defend.

"They've worked their system out but what I will say is that if we play to the best of our ability, as a side and as individuals, then it will take a very good side to beat us."

Surrey skipper Adam Hollioake said the Lord's confrontation was a clash of the heavyweights. "It will be like two world championship heavyweight boxers coming together," he said. "It's the ultimate test for us.

"I'm not going to go into what I think are Gloucestershire's strengths and weaknesses - and in any case people should know them by now having seen them win four trophies - but they're undisputed champions at the moment.

"They have proven themselves the best side in the country in the one-day game. They are obviously doing things right.

"They've got two or three of the belts and we've got one of them which we will bring to the party on Saturday. It's a fantastic and a really big challenge for us.

"We are really up for it and, aside from the fact it is a final at a full Lord's with a trophy at stake, the fact Surrey and playing Gloucestershire means it should be a big occasion.

"We haven't played them for two or three years since a Super Cup meeting and we threw down the challenge to them over the winter and were due to play them a challenge game in April at The Oval but it was rained off.

"We've been talking about it for a while. We want to play them. No doubt they are the favourites - but we have to come out and wrestle those belts off them."

He said: "I think any captain would back their team - and I wouldn't change the players I've got for the world.

"They're fantastic, proven players. I know them inside-out. I've captained the team for seven years and I'm more than happy with the side I've got.

"In the semi-final against Notts we played at our best. That was a very good unit playing at its best. People don't want to be playing against us when we are playing at our best.

"But it is about on the day and anyone can turn up and win. People say we've lost three semi-finals in the last three years but if you play in as many as we have then you are going to lose some."

© CricInfo Ltd.


Teams England.
First Class Teams Surrey.
Players/Umpires Keith Medlycott, Adam Hollioake.
Season English Domestic Season
Grounds Lord's, London

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