We've played over a month of
cricket by the time our first one-day match of the summer begins on
Sunday. It hasn't been the best of starts, for reasons that are well
documented, certainly on this blog.
Is this the summer when
Derbyshire reverse recent fortunes and show themselves to be a better
one-day than four-day side? If that were the case it would be long
overdue, as we've seldom shown one-day form in anything other than a
sporadic manner in recent years.
I would hope that Shivnarine
Chanderpaul will do what he so often did for the West Indies and open
in the shorter formats. That would at least give us a player who can
pace the innings, always assuming that whatever combination of
bowlers is chosen keeps the opposition within bounds.
For what it is worth, I
think we might see an improved T20 this summer, especially if we can
prevail on Martin Guptill to return for the competition. If he's keen
to get home after a long tour, a batsman of similar power or talent
is a necessity so we can take advantage of the power plays more than
has previously been the case.
With plenty of slow bowlers
to replicate the successful method of the better IPL sides, the
Derbyshire team has the requisite skills to do well, though only if
the players show their best form. I don't see us playing many seamers
in the lucrative T20, where I think we will line up with something
close to this as a first choice side:
Chanderpaul
Guptill
Hughes
Durston
Whiteley
Madsen
Johnson
Burgoyne
Groenewald
Knight
Turner
I'd like to see our two
young spinners given a run in this competition and with Hughes and
Durston to bowl spin too, we have plenty of bowling options. The
batting has potential big guns up top, with the skipper in the engine
room if it goes horribly wrong to work with the tail and produce a
target.
There is an argument for
Hughes to open with Chanderpaul, who could talk him through the
tricky patches, but I'm a firm believer in having your best batsmen
and fastest scorers at the top and with as long to bat as possible.
As for the Yorkshire Bank
Pro 40, it is a competition in its death throes but I think we will
see Derbyshire take it seriously unless they have early reverses, in
which case it will become a blooding ground for young players.
My YB 40 side:
Hughes (C)
Chanderpaul
Madsen
Durston
Redfern
Whiteley
Hughes (A)
Johnson
Clare/Groenewald
Burgoyne/Knight
Turner
Much will depend on the
fitness of the seam attack though. Having already lost Tony Palladino
for several weeks, don't be surprised to see Ali Evans and Alex
Hughes get YB 40 matches under their belt, especially if we need to
wrap the remaining bowlers in cotton wool for the top tier four-day
stuff.
Prospects? We have some good
players and if we get on a roll an improved season is a possibility.
Though if there's one thing that 47 summers of watching Derbyshire
has taught me, it is to expect the unexpected.
But hey...we're playing in
Edinburgh this year. I have a 'home' game to attend at the end of
this month.
Please don't let it rain...
Why pick whitely hes shocking, alex hughes is much better.
ReplyDeleteDave,
Well Dave, Alex is a very good cricketer but Ross has shown himself a real talent over the past couple of summers.
ReplyDeleteI think that hitting a few balls in one-day games will help him and by the time the T20 comes he will be ready to clear the ropes again.
Hughes is capable of forcing his way in though, no doubt about it. You'll have spotted him in by YB40 side?
It looks like Chesney Hughes may be unable to bowl at the moment. He did not bowl in Yorkshire's marathon innings yet Redfern did. Also did not bowl in the New Zealand game.
ReplyDeleteNatwest 81
I,m afraid I have little confidence we will witness much of an improvement in our one day results from previous seasons. We have seriously neglected this format for far too long and our win ratio has been dreadful for long enough. I just don,t see it changing anytime soon. We have too many players who are not suited to this format and will never become effective members of a one day team. We will simply muddle through as usual and finish down amongst the dead men. There has to be a fundamental change in our thinking and planning before we can ever hope to compete with the better one day teams.
ReplyDelete2 4th places and one 3rd place in the past 3 years have been fairly respectable finishes in the limited overs format, and on our day we have shown we can beat anyone, wins over Sussex and Yorkshire being notable examples. But this season I think we will probably go backwards majorly due to the new fielding restrictions.
ReplyDeleteFirstly, they majorly reward teams who keep wickets in hand for the end of their innings. Given that we struggle to do this when we are not looking to score quickly, I don't see this helping us one bit.
Also, the reduction to 4 men outside the ring has made life harder for spinners, especially part time ones, so our reliance on people like Durston and Hughes could be problematic