County Championship Round 1: Lancashire and Draws

The Drawn Game, so hated by Ben Stokes and the Baz-ballers, creates tension and excitement in Red Ball Cricket. International red ball cricketers would do well to treat draws with more respect.

The first round of the Championship featured 4 Draws on Day 4. The drama came at Taunton and Lords – Worcestershire were 9 wickets down and Lancashire were 8 down. Chelmsford was less dramatic with Surrey only 6 down at the close, and it was comfortable at Edgbaston where Warwickshire just closed down with just 2 wickets lost. Looking at those more exciting finishes, I followed the Lancashire one most closely, and looking at the scorecards, I think this was probably the most exciting game overall. For much of this fixture, all results were possible, but it did not quite get to the last ball – the players shook hands after the penultimate ball because Lancashire were 8 down and so the draw was a certainty. Over at Taunton, Tom Hineley had to come out at number 11 with 8.3 overs left to bat. Every one of those balls would have been an event because Somerset just needed the one wicket, which they failed to get.

In Test Match Cricket, we do not see many draws anymore. Ben Stokes says he believes it is more important to ensure a result than to salvage draws. To be fair to Stokes, he has stuck to this – even at Old Trafford in 2023 when so much of the game was lost to rain, England were not a million miles away from getting a last minute victory (and for this article, I will resist bringing up the issue of so called ‘bad light’ when the floodlights are on). What Stokes conveniently ignores is the fact that securing a draw at that Manchester game in 2023 meant that the Australians were guaranteed to retain The Ashes. Conversely, England’s failure to secure a draw at the same location in 2019 condemned them to not being able to regain those Ashes.

As I sat and watched the last hour or so of the superb livestream from Lords, while also watching the score at Taunton, I was taken back to some amazing Test Match Draws, games which form some of my most memorable and exciting memories of watching cricket. In 1998 against South Africa, England had lost badly in the Second Test Match at Lords and looked to be losing the third at Old Trafford, but Mike Atherton and Alec Stewart started a fightback. Despite a fine 160 by Stewart, it was still left to Angus Fraser batting at number eleven, in combination with a defiant Robert Croft, to block out a final over by the brilliant Allan Donald. That game was more significant than the famous Mike Atherton inspired draw at Johannesburg 3 years before because it changed the entire dynamic of a series that England would go onto claim 2-1. Great days.

In 2009, England won the Ashes, but they were only able to do so because Jimmy Anderson and Monty Panesar batted through 10 overs at Cardiff in the first test match to secure a draw that England did not deserve – they had been hopeless all game. It is extremely unlikely that England would have dominated the following game at Lords if they had lost at Cardiff – and they would not have been able to come back from being 2-0 down. Indeed, that England side would go onto secure two draws in the winter, again against South Africa. One thing I would want to say to Stokes is that England would never have got to number one in the world in 2011 without the ability to dig in and prevent losses on those bad days.

I could go on and on. What about that amazing innings by Ricky Ponting, again at Old Trafford but this time in 2005, which made it just that little bit harder for England to regain the Ashes, thus making the series even more exciting. Or the Brisbane Test Match in 2010/11 when England scored 517/1. Avoiding defeat in that fixure – where England still have not won a game since 1986 – was a huge part of the victory in the entire series.

And of course, these games stick in my memory because they were really exciting. At Old Trafford in 1998, the ground was sparsely populated on Day 5 – a Monday of course – but it filled up more and more as people came out of school and work and the draw became a realistic prospect. You only needed to watch skipper Stewart and coach David Lloyd on the balcony at the point when England could not loose to see how much it meant. At Cardiff it was a full house and nobody left the ground on the last day. Anybody watching would remember the drama around England’s time wasting tactics as gloves and drinks kept being delivered to the middle by the England 12th man.

I do know that endless ‘bore-draws’ is not what we want either. I suspect the other two draws yesterday were lacking excitement. For Surrey, Dom Sibley dug in. Like Paul Collingwood at Cardiff in 2009, the situation dictated someone dig-in. The county fans expect that of the teams they support. Who knows, at the end of the season, that small number of points separating victory and defeat might be the difference between being a championship winner and a runner-up. For Lancashire, it might be that those points make the difference between promotion and staying in Division 2. I would love to see England look a bit more closely at this. Yes, the priority is to win, but if you can not win you should do everything you can to avoid losing. Sometimes a draw will be exiting, but even if not, it might be the difference between winning and losing a series.

A word on Lancashire. As a fan, it feels that this was an ominous start. Lancashire has broken up the one part of the batting order that has worked for a few years, moving Luke Wells down to 6 in a bid to spread the batting experience around. To the same end, overseas signing Marcus Harris is batting at 4. The batting showed some promise but still looks dependent on Keaton Jennings, Harris and Wells. More is expected of Josh Bohannon, at one time spoken of for England. Equally, the bowling shows promise but lacks firepower, with the like of Saqib Mahmood and Luke Wood apparently focussed on the One Day game. It is to be hoped that James Anderson is able to recover from injury and make a contribution. Lancashire had a poor 2024, but in 2023, they played quite well. In both years, Lancashire were often unable to take 20 wickets. They are considered favourites for promotion this year – but they will need to take 20 wickets.

County Cricket: Impossible to follow

Nobody really is thinking about the cricket fans.  All the talk is about player power, franchises and administrators. In the English domestic game, it’s all about counties and county chairs and The Hundred. My experience is that nobody is thinking about the fans and spectators.

I am a Season Ticker Holder at Lancashire. I have done the maths – once I go to a handful of T20 Blast matches and The Hundred, along with the discounted International Tickets, it’s not bad value for money. But my intention was to also go to lots of other games. However, its mid June and I have been to Old Trafford just twice in 2024.

County Championship

The only good thing about the fixture list at the start of the season is that the games started on Fridays and so took in both days of the weekend. And I suppose they did at least come after we changed the clocks.

The first fixture was against champions Surrey and should have been a wonderful fixture, but given that it started on the 4th April, it was almost certainly doomed to be a weather impacted draw. Its been a dismal season weatherwise, but early April in Manchester would be pushing it in the best of summers (though ironically would have been ok in the Covid summer of 2020).  The amateur football season was still in full swing, but despite my son’s fixtures, I was able to get to 2 sessions of this game – until the rain came.

Bizarrely, and frustratingly, we then had 2 away fixtures on the bounce (Essex and Hampshire – so not a realistic option for travel) so the next home fixture was in May, where Lancashire were battered by Kent. It already looked like Lancashire’s 4 day season was going to be grim).

This was followed by another away fixture against Nottinghamshire, before the next home fixture which was at Blackpool. This was actually a rare nice weekend (relatively), and Lancashire play the long form cricket better at the outgrounds. Lancashire played really well and deserved to beat Durham. This game was one I would have travelled to, and I was just unlucky with the diary. Typically, I could have attended the next round – the two consecutive away games cancelled out here by 2 consecutive home fixtures – but it was another rain ruined fixture against Worcestershire.

And that was that for the first part of the championship. Not much fun for fans, and totally pointless from the point of view of England selection.

T20 Blast

You would think it would be a bit easier to follow the T20 fixtures. However……

The first round was on the 30th May. It’s a good job it was half term given the 1900 start time for the men’s game. Lancashire rightly made a lot of fuss about this being a ‘double header’ with the Lancashire Thunder game. Thunder just got past Central Sparks, before Lancashire beat Durham well. The problam was the extremely long waiting time betweem the games – not at all family friendly. County Cricket can learn an easy lesson here from The Hundred.

The next evening, Lancashire were away at Worcestershire, where they lost, but I went to Taunton with my family to see Somerset play. We were on the way to Cornwall. The 1830 start at Taunton made more sense, and Somerset played well to just past Essex – it was a good night. It is worth noting, however, that this was also a double header, so the earlier start time clearly was possible even in the case of the double header. However, it was not a 1830 start everywhere – looking around the country on that night, games started at 1730, 1830 and 1900. I have no idea what time randomiser the ECB use for the fixture list, but the right time for fans is surely 1830.

The following week clashed with our Cornwall holiday. That in itself is fine, but its incredible to see Lancashire having 3 games in that week. Obviously, all three of those games were at different times of day.

What’s next?

Over the next week or so, Lancashire have 3 away fixtures in the T20 cup, before 2 rounds of Championship Cricket. One of these is a home fixture but its being played in Southport, meaning that no men’s cricket will take place at Old Trafford until 7th July when the men play Worcestershire again (they are away at Northamptonshire before this).  They have 3 consecutive home games – 2 in 3 days at one point, before the One Day Cup and Hundred take over.

How on earth fans can be expected to deal with all this is beyond me. I yearn for the days of a game every Friday night which we had in the early days of T20 and – do you know what? – it worked.

What are we to make of The Hundred?

The competition has been around for 3 years now, but I have just had a bit of a Hundred bonanza, attending 3 games in three days. Sunday was the first genuinely thrilling game I have attended.

I am not ‘anti’ The Hundred. I have been to games each year, and I ‘get’ the idea. Mistakes were made, but overall the presentation is slick, and my son loves it. To be fair, my son just loves cricket – and at the end of the day, The Hundred is just that – cricket. But The Hundred has a particular appeal to him – he likes the razmataz. Despite all the special effects, the cricket has often not been that exciting. Both men’s and women’s fixtures have been played on tired pitches in the midst of very busy grounds, running at capacity. This weekend was different. Once we got past the rained off Saturday, I have attended four very good games (two double headers).

On Sunday we went down to The Oval to see the Invincibles take on Welsh Fire. Invincibles looked a bit complacement and after a dire start with the bat the women were not able to extinguish a rampant Fire. In any form of professional cricket a score of 80 will rarely win, but Marizanne Kapp provided her own flames – she is such a feisty and determined cricketer that the game was still in the balance until near the end. If some of the games I have seen had been a bit slow, I was always able to see the benefits of the Women’s Competition. I always kept an eye on the superstars like Charlotte Edwards and Sarah Taylor, but, truth be told, until 3 years ago I would have struggled to think of seven women for my Fantasy Team outside of the Internationals. That was my fault perhaps – but now my problem is narrowing it down to seven. Undoubtedly that is progress. That progress was even more evident at Old Trafford on Monday where Fi Morris took 5 wickets – the first woman to do so in the competition. What an amazing opportunity for Morris to bowl in tandem with Sophie Ecclestone, who herself took 4 wickets.

The rain once again beat us in Manchester, though the Monday game saw some sunshine.

When it comes to the Men’s Game, I did not think that such progress was needed as was needed in the Women’s Game. Perhaps that impacted my viewing experience – perhaps the men’s games were under more pressure to be exciting. On Sunday, the Men’s game was exciting, with the end result a thrilling tie that kept my son and I interested to the end – we almost missed our train at Euston. A tie is always exiting – unless you are New Zealand perhaps – but the true excitement came from the fact that, again, the London based franchise would have expected an easy stroll based on the Welsh Fire performances in Years 1 and 2. Has Mike Hussey has provided an extra level of determination or has he permitted freedom to perform? Or both? He certainly was a fantastic competitor on the field. Oval Invincibles were architects of their own downfall, until Tom Curran came along – and its good to see Tom getting some limelight again – perhaps an opportunity he would not have had but for this tournament. Back in Manchester on Sunday we saw a good game, not especially close but nothing was certain until Tom Hartley managed to hang on to a Liam Livingstone skier – the ball went up miles.

The Oval has had rain like the rest of the country, but it must be one of the best grounds in the country.

Whilst the weekend’s experience was largely very positive – we even saw some good cricket on Saturday, it was far from perfect. The Hundred is more flexible than the Test Matches, but it is still the case that the Women generally go first and, as a result, have lost more games to the weather, which is not a good look. As is the case with all cricket, the standard of fielding is incredble, but a lot of rather basic catches are dropped as well – it sometime feels like the basics get neglected in the face of the spectacular. This applies even more to the basics of One Day batting – on both days, run chases were made more difficult than they needed to be by a constant desire to play big shots and hit the sixes, when ones and twos might have been more productive. This also applied to the Manchester Originals Men when setting a target – it was very clear that it was not an easy pitch for big shots, yet they kept swinging the bat.

Away from the actual batting, bowling and fielding, a couple of other things must be said. The standard of Umpiring is a concern – this was also the case during The Ashes where a lot of poor decisions were made. This weekend, the concerns related to the Third Umpire and a lack of consistency. To my eye, Jos Buttler should never have been given Run Out (though neither should he be arguing with the on field umpire). Conversely, Tom Curran was clearly Run Out on the last ball at The Oval but escaped with a Not Out and an extra run, creating the tie. These things can always be argued up and down in different directions – but frankly, if Curran was In, Buttler was In too. When the pictures are up on the screen, it undermines the game and leaves it open to questions of integrity – certainly it might have been a different experience for the South London locals if the Fire had won by 1 Run.

Old Trafford – a great ground, but inferior to The Oval

Secondly, I can segway into Spectator Experience. I think part of the problem with the Umpiring comes from a desire to be quick – and we do need quicker decision making. However, it means that sometimes we hear Third Umpires talking before the corresponding replays get onto the big screen which is a bit confusing, and often pointless when you have to wait for Ball Tracking anyway. The point here is about knowing what is going on – and despite massively loud music, often the announcements are not easy to hear – certainly in The Oval Pavillion. And finally, it is annoying for spectators to be told all the time to sit down – often by quite rude Surrey members – when stewards and camera staff wonder around in front of fans all the time. Generally, unless its in front of the sightboard at the relevant end, the distraction is minor, and we need everyone to be relaxed and made to feel welcome.

So, then, what about The Hundred? For all the positives, its hard to escape from the fact that English Cricket has created a bit of a mess. Introducing the tournament has created a lot of damage, and personally, I think the Investment of the Hundred could have been applied to the T20 Blast. If the Women’s Game was not quite ready for 18 counties then it could have been based around the pre-existing Women’s Franchises – but it probably is now ready for 18 counties. The problem is that removing the competition would, now, also be rather damaging.

The endgame, of course, will be results – and that will apply whether or not the Counties approve, irrespective of any residual damage. If the tournament is able to attract some top level players and if it is able to offer returns on investment, the tournament will survive. It will not compete with the IPL, of course, neither should it try to, but I am certain England can accomodate a successful major tournament.

Can we have The Hundred and the T20 Blast? I have certainly seen more exciting T20 games than Hundred games. But it will be money and player power that wins. If both tournaments attract the players and enough money, they will survive. Its up to the counties to make sure it does – they have lots of advantages for sure – after all, The Hundred is not played anywhere else. Counties will need to satisfy both men and women players though. As for the quality of the game? Both tournaments can improve, and must do so. It is going to be survival of the fittest, rather than what the ECB decides.

How do Lancs go one better?

It seems churlish to criticise Lancashire for coming second in every competition in 2022. For much of the season, they were brilliant, but the fact is that Lancashire has not claimed any silverware since winning the T20 Blast in 2015. In a 7 year period, Lancashire ought to be winning something.

I decided to try and rate Lancashire’s performance in recent years, which has certainly included variety. Before we go into this though, a few points need to be made.

Off the field

This type of analysis has limitations. Results are not the only thing for a club like Lancashire. The ground has to function 365 days a year – it has to be used and it has to generate revenue. Lancashire had the extra challenge resulting from the cancellation of the 2021 India test match – and of course, India almost certainly would have thrashed England in 2021 but they ended up losing the rescheduled game (at Edgbaston) to a ‘new’ England team.

Looking after the ground is one thing, but what about the players? Mentioning India reminds us that players have to be recruited, paid and kept at the club – which is an increasing challenge in the modern world of franchises. When a County has the players, they then have to be looked after – physically and mentally.

One thing Lancs have done quite well is encouraging local talent. A quick look at the 2023 Playfair Cricket Annual tells me that Lancashire has a squad of 28 (Gloucestershire have 23, Surrey 33 – so this would appear to be middle ground). Of Lancashire’s 28, 18 are from relatively local areas (Manchester, Lancashire, Cheshire, Cumbria). Nottinghamshire gets a lot of criticism for this – and it must be said that only 12 of the Nottinghamshire squad are ‘ relatively local’ – though at the moment the number who have moved from Leicestershire is low!

We must also mention another obligation for any Cricket Club – but County Cricket especially is under the spotlight now when it comes to inclusivity. Discrimination must not be tolerated – so far Lancashire have not been impacted in the way of Yorkshire and Essex, but it is hard to imagine that stories will not appear at some point about things that might have been tolerated in the past. Improvement is still needed.

On the pitch

For the rest of this piece, we will be talking about results and stats.

All that being said here, I wanted to form a reasoned judgement as to Lancashire’s recent on-field performance, and I chose to do this with a simple RAG (Red, Amber, Green) – based purely on season results:

  • Each tournament would be rated separately for each year
  • In the County Championship, a place in the top three can be considered a good result, and would therefore result in a Green score.
  • Lower-placed Championship results above the Division 1 relegation zone can be considered ‘Acceptable’ and would result in an Amber.
  • For a team with Lancashire’s resources, we have to the Championship Division 2 (and relegation) as a failure, resulting in a Red. This means that 2019 is still considered a failure.
  • When it comes to One Day Cricket, expectations are high due to Lancashire’s pedigree – though the Glory Days of the 90s are long gone. Despite that, we can only say that a campaign has been successful if it has involved an appearance in a Final. It seems harsh – but it takes a Final to get a One Day Green.
  • Reaching the One Day knockouts is Acceptable, no better, and is therefore Amber.
  • Failure to get past the Group Stages must be considered a Fail, and means Red.

County Championship T20 BlastOne Day Cup
20222nd2nd2nd
20212ndQFGroup – 4th
20203rdSF
2019Div 2 1stQFSF
20187th – relegatedQFGroup – 6th
20172ndGroup – 7thGroup – 4th
20167thGroup – 7thGroup – 9th
2015Div 2 2ndWinnersGroup – 5th
That things have improved from 2015 to 2022 is clear from the moment you look at the results. Yes, Lancashire won the T20 Blast in 2015 but was in the Championship Division 2. 2017 shows a ‘blip’ of success but that was followed by Championship failure again. Since 2020, Lancashire has stayed near the top of the Championship, and the One Day results are improving. We are seeing consistency – and in the 2010s we did not see much of that. Now Lancashire has to chalk up some tournament victories, without losing that consistency.

Lancs need to win more games

Yes obviously! But here, I am really talking about the Championship. In 2023 we now have had two rounds of the Championship and Lancashire has two draws. In the first round, Lancashire had to dig in for the draw having been mainly outclassed by Surrey. In the second, they were well-placed to beat Essex, but even with James Anderson playing, were not able to do so. The weather played a part, but Essex was only 4 down at the end.

Back to my 2023 Playfair, and immediately you see some strange statistics. Lancashire, like Surrey, only lost 1 Championship fixture but with 6 Draws, one more than Surrey, drew more than anyone except Northamptonshire, who lost 5 games. You might be tempted to assume that the issue is that Lancashire did not take enough wickets, but the strange thing is that they scored 39 bonus bowling points.

No doubt, the Manchester rain cost key opportunities to win games and perhaps added to the Draw tally – and that might also explain why Hampshire came third despite winning even more games than Surrey – perhaps not so many weather-impacted draws on the South Coast.

Whatever the reason for the draws, if Lancashire had managed to convert a couple of high scoring draws (Yorkshire comes to mind) into wins they would have beaten Surrey and won the Championship.

A word about pitches – some people might note that Old Trafford always supplies great pitches, and those people might wonder if that leads to Draws. Good pitches have not led to many draws involving England recently – and we will move on to talking about the batters.

Players need to Kick On

Can some of the individuals in the team kick on? Looking at the first class fixtures for 2022, only 5 batters have an average of 40 or more. The openers, Keaton Jennings and Luke Wells, formed an impressive partnership (average 72 and 52 respectively), but these are the only 2 with batting averages over 50. If we compare this again to Surrey, but for consistency restrict it to players who scored over 300 runs, Surrey have 6 batters, but more notable is that 3 of those have averages over 70. One of those 2 is Ollie Pope. Lancashire’s Pope equivalent is obviously Josh Bohannon, whose 2022 figures are fine, but over a quarter of his season’s runs came in his 231 against Gloucestershire.

Bowling is a similar story. Hassan Ali and Anderson have good statistics but only played a small number of matches. Only Tom Bailey took more than 50 wickets, and Matt Parkinson just 33 – and Old Trafford’s great pitches are good for bowlers and batters.

For Lancashire to take a trophy in any tournament, a couple of players are going to have to have an absolutely stellar season. Keaton Jennings this year will have the added pressure of Captaincy, so at least one of Bohannon, Steven Croft and Dane Vilas will need to make a lot of runs. Bohannon might also need to look at his strike rate – his 231 came off 467 balls, which was ok when Lancashire only had to bat once. Perhaps the problem is not so much the bowlers, as the time left in the game?

Saying that, another good season for Bailey will need to be backed up by Will Williams, Luke Wood and Parkinson. Parkinson has slipped off England’s radar – but a few 5 wicket hauls would change all that.

Under pressure?

It is hard to throw this one at the Lancashire team, who only lost 1 Championship Game and made the Final of two knockout tournaments. However, when we consider the One Day finals, it is something Lancashire need to think about. How could they approach the high-pressure scenarios a bit better?

In the One Day Cup against Kent, Lancashire chasing were 126/2 off 21 overs, and had 8 balls left when they were bowled out for 285 – they only needed another 21 runs. In the T20 Blast final it was also a chase, and it was 104/4 in the 13th over. Several big shots were attempted which failed, and also we saw 2 run-outs. The striking thing is that all of Jennings, Croft, Vilas and Luke Wells got past 20 – just one of them needed to be around at the end.

I would not want this to be overthought – Kent and Hampshire deserved to win these games. But at times, a lack of experience showed, and some poor decisions were made too. We cannot use the lack of experience excuse again this year.

Summary

Writing the summary is a lot easier than putting it into practice. Lancashire were impressive in 2022 and the players should be applauded. It is not easy to keep a high standard, particularly on cold days in April and September.

To win the Championship is going to need a couple of players to have spectacular seasons. To win the One Day tournaments needs the consistency of 2022, plus some slightly better decision-making in the finals.

It is harsh. Lancs had a great 2022. But the fans want to see some silverware.

T20 Blast 2022

The problem with English Cricket fans now is that they are divided by The Hundred. Hundred fans want to constantly ‘ram it down everyone else’s throats’ – every fixture last year was combined with endless ‘this is the most exciting cricket ever’ messages on social media, which ‘really wound up’ the ‘anti-hundred’. Now the message says ‘The Hundred could never be as good as the Blast’. Once again we have two hopeless extremes.

This year I have so far been to two T20 fixtures at Old Trafford, watched a couple on Sky and also looked at various Live Streams (why are Sky not showing more?). I have seen some exciting moments including a Roses tie at Old Trafford. But I have also seen some periods of dull cricket and some pretty poor presentation. That abysmal effort by Leicestershire against Derbyshire did little to defend the case of County Cricket against the apparently ‘Perfect Franchise’ – Leicester and Derby are sides that need to justify their existence more than ever.

Presentation

I am not ‘anti-hundred’. I did enjoy The Hundred fixtures I attended last year, and my (then 5-year old) son loved it. The Hundred did not get it all right, but it did show some of the potential in terms of presentation, most obviously in the graphics and stage management – yes, I did not like The Hundred graphics but the idea of consistency at ground and game is obvious.

That being said, I wish we had just added these values to the existing T20, rather than created a new type of game. However, I suspect The Hundred is here to stay. The best way to safeguard the future of County Cricket is to make the ‘product’ better than The Hundred, and it is the counties that will have to do this, not the ECB.

To that end, ‘the Blast’ lacks ‘pizzazz’. At Old Trafford, the music played between the overs is sometimes the same as it was 20 years ago. At Old Trafford, we could not hear the interviews and announcements where we were sat in the first game – the PA system was not up to it, but this was better in the second fixture. The ‘countdown’ and entry of the players and teams is a bit of a damp squib. Things are a bit slow-moving. So much of this could be easily fixed.

The idea of the bands performing within the arena during breaks is slightly galling to the traditional fan – I yearn for quietness between overs – but it is good for budding bands and provides some more for young children to be entertained by.

Can we take the best bits of both competitions and make 1 perfect tournament? That would take the ECB and Counties to work together. Now that’s a thought.

What about the Cricket itself?

It is hard as a fan. Your views on what is going on are impacted by your own team’s performance. And the fact is that whatever the format, whatever the game, you will have passages of ‘less interesting sport’. The two ‘Lancs’ games I have attended were of similar formats in that Lancashire batted first, set a target that could have been 5-10 runs higher and then looked like a beaten team until a late collapse. Yorkshire collapsed but scraped the tie, Worcestershire fell away to some good bowling by Richard Gleeson.

Both of these games featured a period around the tenth over where the chasing team appeared to be coasting to victory. It was a bit dull. I am not quite sure what the answer to this is, but perhaps we need a little more imagination around bowling quotas and field restrictions to avoid that feeling of a team ‘coasting’. That being said, Lancashire are quite good at strangling a team. As soon as the batting team needed runs slightly more quickly, a collapse came. However, I cannot escape a feeling that the cricket still could be better quality. It needs to be ‘live’ for longer.

What about Lancs

Lancashire seem to be getting going as the season goes on. With Phil Salt, Liam Livingstone and Tim David they have ‘serious’ batting power. Perhaps the concern is the backup to these guys – though Keaton Jennings is able to find ways to score quickly at the start, Steven Croft and Dane Vilas have struggled a bit to keep things moving. However, Lancashire have posted scores around 180, so I do not think we need to worry about the batting.

Lancashire at times look short of a bowler. Teams so far have slightly milked Matt Parkinson, avoiding too many risks. Richard Gleeson has looked good, as had Luke Wood at times. It remains to be seen if the loss of Saqib Mahmood hurts Lancashire in the later stages.

So far though, they are unbeaten and look capable of beating most sides.

Lanky is never far away

The Hundred

The hyperbole was awful, but my 5 year old knows who all the teams were and who the key players were – men and women – for all the teams. It was on BBC TV. Surely its all good?

Was it the worst thing of all time, the death knell of English cricket? Or was it the best quality of cricket since Kerry Packer? Was it even cricket? Were the counties treated with contempt? Before the tournament it seemed that people were deciding which camp to sit in and were refusing to accept any other possible point of view. It seemed to me that those against the tournament had the louder voice, but then one of the franchises talked of proving the ‘haters’ wrong. The PR was a mess. The sponsor was not ideal.

Once the tournament started this polarisation reduced, but those emotions never went away and some people did indeed refuse to watch the tournament. The cricket media certainly did not help. We had commentators and pundits endlessly proclaiming the brilliance of the tournament (Michael Vaughan and Kevin Pietersen spring to mind). Then we had awful articles that were obsessed with the sponsors more than the cricket. Matthew Engel in The Guardian clearly does not approve of the sponsor – so it seems strange that he mentioned the sponsors more than the actual team names!. Was Mike Atherton the only pundit who sat in the middle ground (though I did not hear him commentate on a game)?

So lets firstly consider the perspective of the aforementioned 5 year old – Henry. Covid has meant that Henry did not get to many T20 games this year, but he has been to a few Lancashire games before Covid. However, the concept of County Cricket is not something he really understands, and so neither does he grasp the impact of The Hundred on the counties. Of course, we live in Cheshire, not Lancashire, but the issue is keeping up with all the different formats and the varying key players. Bringing in an extra format seems counter intuitive to this last point. But the ‘short and sharp’ format with (relatively) consistent players makes it much easier for him to follow the tournament. He is now a Manchester Originals fan without a doubt – despite the fact that the Originals had a poor tournament and Old Trafford put out some dull pitches. As for the intricacies of the format…100 balls rather than 120, timouts, new batter always on strike….Henry could not care less. The runs and balls graphics and countdowns are good though – Henry gets that.

Now for my perspective – and I am a lifelong Lancs fan. I remember all those B&H and NatWest finals from the 90s. The 1996 Roses Semi Final was one of the mot exciting games I have ever seen. Richie Benaud described the last ball, saying ‘and now we have a little finish’. Those days seem to have gone sadly, and the one day final has been a secondary event for years. The Hundred fixtures were watched by big crowds. That is just a fact.

I am one of the lucky people who has been able to afford Sky for many years, so the loss of terrestrial coverage was not noticeable. However, those finals in the 90s were always on the BBC (and the semis and quarters – often switching between multiple games on the same day). So I am delighted to see the BBC giving such enthusiasm to covering The Hundred, even if Vaughan and Phil Tufnell rather struggled to avoid the jargon (it seemed almost like they were trying so hard to avoid jargon they ended up using more!). Of course, some would proffer the argument that the BBC thought they were signing up to a T20 tournament. But again, the simple fact is that county cricket has not been on the BBC and The Hundred has.

What about the format? In honesty it does seem unnecessary. It is so subtly different to T20 that it makes it hard for existing fans. I do think some of the graphics will be easier for new cricket viewers, but I am not sure you needed a new format to fix that.

The franchises? I think it is easier if the franchises are city and town based, but I do not think that means that you need to have a small number of teams. A well defined structure of leagues with promotion and relegation would seem to be possible (akin to football). But why not use the city names? I am not sure Henry would have grasped ‘Southern Brave’ or ‘Northern Superchargers’. ‘Manchester’ was clear to him. So why not Cardiff, Leeds, Nottingham? Why not 2 London teams? Why not Leicester, Northampton, Taunton? I do not see this as a malicious attempt to damage the counties (some disagree) but rather I see an obsession with franchises. The Hundred is surely lost on places like Bristol, Taunton and Durham.

As for damaging English cricket? Well, the fixture list has been a pile of poo for years. Confusing. Hard to keep up with. But read the accounts of Simon Hughes and Derek Pringle of county cricket in the 80s and you will see that fixture planning has been a problem for many decades (consider the 4 day game between Notts and Midlesex at Trent Bridge which sandwiched a Sunday league game between the same teams at Lords – thats a whole load of miles on the M1 but doubled!) But it does seem odd that in 2021 I cannot see any games at Old Trafford in the last 3 weeks of August.

The lack of investment in long form cricket? That has been a problem since 2015. The Hundred just worsens an existing probem. Stamping all over the counties? Undoubtedly, but if the county product was that good then The Hundred would never have been spawned. If this forces the counties to sort themselves out with more national consensus…well that would be no bad thnig.

So where does that leave me? Well, I thought the tournament was great. I think something new and different was needed, but I think a city based T20 series of leagues would work. The Hundred does nothing for England Cricket – but that’s nothing new.

I suspect the real test of The Hundred will be next year.

What is going on with the fixture list?

So I intended to write regularly about the 2021 Cricket Season for Lancashire. Life gets in the way too much, but I have managed to come up with the occasional article. I won’t be writing much about Lancashire in August though.

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Look at the Fixture List. Its rubbish. School holidays start quite late in July for Stockport Primaries, and then we are on holiday for a week. I went online to look at the options for taking my older son to some cricket at Old Trafford after August 8th. To say the options are sparse does not cut it. Just look at it!

Screenshot from the LCCC website

OK so we have tickets for a couple of The Hundred games. But as far as I can see, no cricket is taking place at Old Trafford between the 13th August and 10th September. What is more, Lancashire first eleven do not even have fixtures after 13th August?

Am I missing something? What is going on? How on Earth am I meant to get my kids into Cricket with hardly any cricket to take them to in August? Something does not make sense.

Diary of a Season: 3

So what can we make of the county season so far? We start with some extreme scores.

Big scores and little scores. We have seen 612/5, with 231 for James Vince (but off 220 balls). We have seen an even bigger 672/8; this time Ollie Pope was relatively slow in scoring 245 off 272 balls. Surrey again scored 560/7 including a Hashim Amla 215 with a more normal strike rate of 59. We even have some people talking about whether anyone will score 1000 runs before the end of May.

But then we have some truly dreadful scorecards. Middlesex 79. Essex 96 all out but they won that game because Durham flopped for 123. Essex crashed to defeat this week after being bowled out for 99. After another good score (470) Hampshire have been dismissed for 92 and 79. Kent were bowled out for 138 and 74 in a game. Warwickshire were bowled out 87. Sussex for 106.

Don’t get me wrong, some difficult conditions will have been involved as well as some great bowling. Apparently Kemar Roach was simply brilliant in Surrey’s destruction of Hampshire, but batting performances of 92 and 179 cause one to ask questions about the batting.

I wanted to compare that to England’s recent shambles in India. England’s scores ranged from 578 and 81. And you head back to England in the Trevor Bayliss era. 67 all out in the Ben Stokes Headingley test match. 85 all out against Ireland. I could go on with the low scores. But as well as 3 big scores in 2021 built entirely around Joe Root, you can point to some 600-ish scores in the Bayliss years.

England have tried to correct this tendency for high paced scoring – resulting in scores ranging from 67 to 600. They have looked to build. This has to be the way. I know it failed in India, but it is the right approach. With the types of scores we are seeing in the 2021 county season…it is little wonder we have seen an England side often unable to dig in and battle it out. Hopefully this change in approach from the top will effect the county game too, and we will not see so many big scores and little scores. Hampshire take note!

Diary of a Season: 2

What I wanted to do with this column is show how difficult it is to follow County Cricket. Particularly the first class games. We are up to Round 5 and the season has included big scores and big collapses. And I have been working on strategies to keep up with the season.

Firstly, I need to get the fixtures in to my calendar or diary. For a while I have not been subscribing to The Cricketer, preferring instead to buy it ‘ad-hoc’ every so often. So I missed the wall chart edition. However, the ECB have partnered with Ecal to provide a service to synchronise the fixture list with your online calendar – Google in my case. You can find it here ECB.

I rather foolishly started by adding every single fixture into my diary. This is where madness lies. I mean, at least all the games start on a Thursday. For now. But we have a different number of games every week, with difficult to follow variations. For example, loads of fixtures start Thursday 20th May, but Hampshire v Leicestershire fixture starts on the Wednesday. Then the T20 kicks in in June with a couple of games every day and no Championship. I know that TV rules – and Sky has done a lot for the game – but I long for the old days of the Sunday League.

So, lesson learned, I now have (just) all the England International Fixtures (male and female) and all the Lancashire games in my diary.

This led onto my second lesson. I have now worked out that you can view short highlights of every first class fixture. But most days I cannot hope to watch it all and take it in (though some days will). So I am better just following Lancashire most of the time. That led me to Youtube – and I now subscribe to the Lancashire Youtube channel. One can only wonder if Jimmy Anderson could have got Marnus Labuschagne out in the 2019 Ashes, but he got him out against Glamorgan.

So, I will assiduously follow these sources, plus various newspapers and the The Cricketer website. And I have resumed my subscription (I went for the digital and magazine version because I like to get the magazine ‘proper’ but am often in places where the digital format is really useful so it seemed to make sense to pay an extra few pounds). I will let you know how it goes.

Diary of a season: 1

In 2021 I started with high ambitions. I was going to follow the domestic cricket season much more closely. On the 24th April, Lancashire have just completed the 11th day of the first class season. Two games are already completed. And the first game only started 16 days ago on the 8th. This is bonkers. And I have not even thought about how I will go about supporting Manchester Originals when The 100 starts.

What I am finding is that it is pretty difficult to follow first class cricket unless you have the luxury of time. Lots of it. When you have 2 children under the age of 5 and a full time job, you cannot spend 4 days watching a First Class game. The live streams and radio broadcasts are of limited use. The newspapers no longer have whole pages devoted to yesterday’s county fixtures (when I was a kid I loved to get hold of a Telegraph just so I could read all the reports). The Cricketer Magazine is great of course, but monthly.

Don’t get me wrong, you can do lots of things to simply find out the scores. There’s some really good journalists writing about the game. Tanya Aldred’s County roundup in The Guardian is a good tool. Elizabeth Ammon keeps us up to date on Twitter and in The Times. And I could mention many other journalists. Speaking of The Cricketer, they have lots of content freely available online relating to the county game.

The problem is not finding out that Joe Root has got 2 low scores against Sussex. The problem is that I have no idea if Root ‘looked a million dollars’ and was unlucky to get out, or if he is dreadfully out of form. My team, Lancashire, constructed a massive 525 down at Canterbury thanks in no small part to centuries from Wood and Lamb down at 8 and 9. Are they brilliant allrounders, or did Kent bowl dreadfully?

The problem is I just do not get chance to see the action, and it is not televised – at least, not much of it is. So what about highlights? Well, I can watch back many of the ‘key moments’ via the Lancs website (in the case of the current match, Kent are providing a live stream and the highlights are from that). But with no sound and no commentary, and you have to select each highlight. The ECB website carries highlights of 3 games.

As Elizabeth Ammon pointed out recently on Twitter, the answer is a Match of the Day type of program. Otherwise, how will anyone get into First Class cricket – and therefore how will Test Matches survive?

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