Accidental designer eyes Mongoose bat revolution

LONDON, (Reuters) – Twenty20 has made a virtue of  challenging cricket convention and if an English inventor is  right the next thing to be abandoned will be the long-standing  design of the bat itself.

Marcus Codrington Fernandez, inspired by a 30-year-old video  clip of former England batsman Geoff Boycott, has come up with a  new design very much in tune with the devil-may-care attitude of  the Twenty20 game.
The result is a bat that looks rather like a hefty brick on  the end of a very long stick.

There is little in the way of shoulder — the bit you need  to play those defensive shots against the quicks — but a much  larger “sweet” section that can help even mistimed strokes race  towards the boundary.

Those who remember Boycott as an excruciatingly slow-scoring  batsman may consider him an unlikely inspiration for a bat  designed for all-out attack but if the Mongoose is a success   the Yorkshireman may go down as the patron saint of big hitting.

“I got into bat design completely by accident,” Codrington  Fernandez said as he demonstrated the bat for Reuters at a  public pitch in East London.

“I worked in the media for 20 years and then three years ago  I had a stroke, which took me out of civilised life for a year.
“It was at that point I was watching Geoff Boycott batting  on YouTube and it struck me that the bat he was using was  identical to the one being used today in Twenty20 games, where  the objective is to hit the ball out of the park every time, not  to do what Boycott was doing all those years ago.

“So the game seemed to have moved on and was fundamentally  different but the equipment was identical.”
He added: “This bat is designed for Twenty20.”

NEW IDEAS
There have been attempts to introduce new bats before but  they have tended to focus on the use of new materials, notably  the aluminium bat used by Dennis Lillee in 1979 and ultimately  rejected by the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), the sport’s  guardians.

The difference here is that the Mongoose is made with the  same materials as any other bat and the MCC have therefore given  it their blessing.

“The MCC were extremely encouraging and supportive. They  were open-minded and forward thinking in a way many wouldn’t  have expected,” the inventor said.

While the big-hitting Australian Stuart Law has given the  bat enthusiastic backing, and already used it to some effect,  Codrington Fernandez concedes that the World Twenty20 starting  today has probably come too soon for the Mongoose, with the  major players already signed up to bat contracts.

The buzz surrounding the bat suggests a lot more players  will be trying it soon, however, and not just the sluggers.
“Interestingly, lots of the pro players who want to use this  bat are the opening batsmen who aren’t renowned for hitting the  ball very hard,” Codrington Fernandez said.

“They’re looking to hit it harder, to get into the one-day  squad, the Twenty20 squad in their teams and they see this as a  route forward.”

Using the bat, you certainly do feel that you are middling  the ball more often.
“I’m not the most powerful of batsmen so it gives me an  advantage,” said Ben Sanders, vice-captain of the London Fields  cricket club, after testing the bat for Reuters.
“You can mis-time it but it still races away.”

His team mate Paul Teasdale added: “It plays really nice.  It’s just all middle so you can toe it and it can still go.”
A quick look around the web shows that the makers have  chosen a name that is a headline writer’s dream, not surprising  given the inventor’s media background.

“We call it the Mongoose because this bat is small and it’s  ferocious,” he said.
“It’s also an underdog. We’re up against 240 years of  tradition since the last bat was designed.”