Has Joe Root fallen out of the Fab Four?

Over the last couple of years or so, England’s captain has not quite kept pace with Smith, Kohli and Williamson

Alan Gardner13-Aug-2019Let’s cut to the chase here: Joe Root is in danger of becoming the Fab Four’s Ringo. The grouping of Root, Virat Kohli, Kane Williamson and Steven Smith as the leading talents of their generation has always felt a little arbitrary – what about the claims of AB de Villiers, David Warner or Babar Azam, say? – but no matter, they were locked in. However, just as Smith has taken things to a new level with his Test form, Root has experienced an appreciable dip.Now, we’re not suggesting he should turn in his membership card. Only Kohli comes close to averaging 50 in all three international formats, and Root’s white-ball records are superior to that of both Williamson and Smith. But Root is, for now, the only one of the four to average below 50 in Tests – the format that, for obvious reasons, carries the most weight in the greatness debate. Root slipped below that mark in the Caribbean earlier this year, and currently sits at 48.94 – respectable but just short of exceptional.ALSO READ: Why Steven Smith is the best of the Fab FourIt is actually 50-plus years since an England batsman finished his career with a 50-plus Test average – and there is still time for Root to join what we’ll call the Ken Barrington Club. But what is incontrovertible is that right now Root – England’s leading run scorer on the way to World Cup success last month – is enduring his toughest spell in Test cricket since he made his debut in 2012.Two things stand out as obstacles to the fluid accumulation of his early years: the weight of the Test captaincy, and an unsettled top order that has made Root shuttle between Nos. 3 and 4. Several of his predecessors found their batting form compromised by leading the side – notably fellow Yorkshireman Michael Vaughan, who averaged 36.02 as captain compared to 50.98 in the ranks – but after starting his tenure with an innings of 190 against South Africa, Root’s stats show an increasing disparity.