News and views on Derbyshire County Cricket Club from a supporter of 58 years standing. Follow me on X/Twitter @Peakfanblog
Friday, 30 September 2022
Five receive county caps
Thursday, 29 September 2022
Derbyshire v. Leicestershire day 4
Wednesday, 28 September 2022
Derbyshire v Leicestershire day 3
Tuesday, 27 September 2022
Derbyshire v Leicestershire day two
Monday, 26 September 2022
Derbyshire v Leicestershire day 1
Sunday, 25 September 2022
Derbyshire v Leicestershire preview
Thoughts on the Strauss Report by David Burrows
Some thoughts on the Strauss review, now that it has finally be formally published and I’ve had a bit more chance to look at it properly.
It is both timely and ironic that the proposals are now due for implementation in 2024. I say this because I think that that year could be very difficult for the two peak outcomes of the ECB – the national team and The Hundred.
For the national team, we have the obvious peak of the Ashes in 2023, but in 2024 tours from West Indies and Sri Lanka are unlikely to generate anything like the same interest. In addition, by 2024 most of the iconic players in the national team are likely to be missing. Jimmy Anderson will surely have settled for pipe and slippers by then, Stuart Broad may have done the same, and sadly Ben Stokes is likely to have finally succumbed to injuries, unless he has a fully bionic knee by then.
As far as the Hundred is concerned, it will have great competition as the nations sporting interest, and in particular that of the BBC, will be concentrated on the Olympics in Paris during August, so free to air cricket will inevitably virtually disappear from the screens.
Within this background there is much to like in the Strauss review, a clearer focus on the inter relationships between the various formats, better focus on player growth and development, focus on matches with meaning etc.
Against this there is the obvious dangers to the smaller counties in particular of a big reduction in playing days, and therefore revenue. This would be exacerbated if knocked out of the One Day Cup early.
I also have problems with the proposals for festival 4-day cricket both during August and if knocked out of the One Day Cup – would non-competitive matches really have much interest/ benefit? Strauss suggests a Roses competition and a London competition. These may work but what about all the other counties – nothing much for them, I think?
What alternatives could there be then, that would still provide more focus, cut down on the overall burden, and make every match matter?
Well – if I had my way:
We would still go to a 3 league system for the Championship. After the 10 matches though, we would look to the example of Scottish football and split the leagues at that stage, with the top and bottom 3 teams playing a further 2 games against each other to determine final positions.
This would make the mid league positions crucial at the 10 game point, with the split between 3rd and 4th place. You could also offer the 1st place the incentive of playing both their final games at home, with 3rd place both away.
The final 2 games would determine the overall champions and the promotion and relegation places.
When would these extra games be played within the structure Strauss proposes?
My answer to this would be to split the Hundred, so that it runs through the whole school summer holidays from the last week in July to the 1st week in September with a 2 week gap in the middle.
This middle gap would be used for a national festival of county and international cricket. It could include matches 9 and 10 of the championship season, together with back to back Test matches.
Splitting the Hundred may not necessarily be detrimental on that competition either. It could give franchises an option to sign players for either a half season or a full season, which may make it more attractive for more of the best players across the globe.
Friday, 23 September 2022
Glamorgan v Derbyshire day 4
Thursday, 22 September 2022
Glamorgan v Derbyshire day 3
Wednesday, 21 September 2022
Glamorgan v Derbyshire day 2
Tuesday, 20 September 2022
Glamorgan v Derbyshire day 1
Monday, 19 September 2022
Glamorgan v Derbyshire preview
Wednesday, 14 September 2022
Next year .
Friday, 9 September 2022
Lawrence Rowe- a major unfulfilled talent
On his debut against Sussex at a freezing County Ground, as far removed from Jamaica as you could be, Rowe stroked a delightful 94 against an attack including his winter adversaries, John Snow and Tony Greig. The innings showed him to be a stylish, elegant batsman with shots all around the wicket. Derby in early season was no place for the faint-hearted. but Rowe, who seemingly was loathe to leave the warmth of the electric fire in the dressing room, impressed everyone watching. This was despite wearing any sweater he could lay his hands on, making him look of far more substantial build than was the case.
I saw him many times that summer, sixteen years old and desperate for a sporting hero. I'd listened to the radio during the previous winter, as commentators waxed lyrical about his strokeplay. Dad and I just grinned at one another, envisaging Rowe leading a Derbyshire resurgence. We saw him play some of the most delightful cameos, thirties and forties of poise, beauty, charm and elegance, then were frustrated as he continually gave it away. Rowe often whistled as he batted - nerves, confidence or just an affectation? If the latter, it needed backing up with runs. If the former, maybe it was a factor in under-achievement.
That May, in a televised game against Gloucestershire played at Bristol, he eased his way to 71 runs, playing every shot in the book in what amounted to a batting masterclass. Deft late-cuts, a square cut like a rapier, a cover drive of genuine elegance, a hook for six when Brian Brain dropped one short. "His defensive technique is the best I've seen on a West Indian" said Dad, who had seen all of their post-war greats. He toyed with David Graveney, before playing around a straight one and departing in a most disappointing manner. It was as if he'd had enough, like watching a world-class tenor fluff the high C at the end of an aria, otherwise sung faultlessly.
Watching Rowe, one was struck by two things - how still he was at the crease and how much time he had to play his shots. The fastest of bowlers appeared to be of little consequence, yet he kept finding ways to get out when he should have been filling his boots.
We listened to the cricket scores on the radio and it was always the same. "Lawrence Rowe made a stylish 38/45/56/72" - whatever, yet he never bettered that debut score. We saw him against Yorkshire at Chesterfield, again in the John Player League and he opened with Tony Borrington.
So why didn't it work out for Lawrence Rowe? He was unlucky with niggling injuries, though there were suggestions in some quarters of hypochondria. John Wright's autobiography records a team mate telling him of Rowe undergoing a fitness test in the nets, batting on a wicket that was pretty poor. He never missed a ball, looked in a different league to anyone else and then to general incredulity, professed himself unfit to play. He suffered badly from hay fever, specifically an allergy to grass. In a 2007 interview, he said that his eyes were "constantly itching...sometimes I would go in to bat and I could hardly see". It explained a lot.
He signed off with 26 against Northamptonshire at Derby, yet another innings that promised much but ended in disappointment. If we had known more about the seriousness of the eye problem we might have been more understanding, but Rowe was to remain a talent largely unfulfilled. A century in World Series Cricket, 175 against a fit and flying Lillee and Thomson, is still regarded as one of the finest innings played in Australia. There was another brilliant century in South Africa on the rebel tour too, but the good days for Lawrence Rowe became more sporadic. His career finished with a Test average of 43 and a first-class one of 38. His talent was enough for both of those figures to have been at least ten runs higher.
For a man who, when he batted, looked at least the equal of Viv Richards it was not enough. It just shows that all the talent in the world still needs a little luck.
Thoughts on the Strauss Report
Thursday, 8 September 2022
Derbyshire v. Durham day 4
Wednesday, 7 September 2022
Derbyshire v Durham day 3
Tuesday, 6 September 2022
Derbyshire v Durham day 2
Monday, 5 September 2022
Derbyshire v Durham day 1
Sunday, 4 September 2022
Random thoughts..
Derbyshire v Durham preview
Thursday, 1 September 2022
From a long time supporter
'Like many of your readers, I attended a state school in the 1950s. My school in North Staffordshire was quite small and attended by about 330 pupils per year on average aged 11 to 18. We had first and second elevens that played regularly against other schools in the area. The colts team played less frequently. All the senior schools in the area had cricket teams. As far as I am aware none of the schools, we played against has a cricket team today. Despite being part of a minor county North Staffordshire produced several England players including Ken Higgs, Bob Taylor, David Steele, Rob Bailey, Kim Barnett and Dominic Cork. This is not a complete list. Many others played county cricket with distinction.
Questions
- Would many of the players listed above even have played cricket if they had not played at school?
- How many of those people who played and enjoyed cricket at school and club level would be passionately interested in cricket today if they had not played cricket at school?
- Utopia is just a dream. But should we just give up and do nothing to bring back at least some school cricket in state schools where it is no longer played?
I appreciate that no firm answers can be given other than to say the percentages would be quite high. But it makes you realise what we have lost.
State Schools
Many schools where cricket used to be played no longer have space available and no incentive to promote cricket. Yet by doing so it would improve the health of young people. A stated aim, as far as I am aware, of all political parties. After all, cricket is our main national summer sport and has been badly let down over the years. Government need not pour vast amounts of money into school cricket but they could attach conditions to the money they do invest in the sport and pay to schools.
Private Schools
Do an excellent job in providing cricketers for county and international cricket despite educating only about six per cent of children of school age. Yet they provide a high proportion of players to the current England teams
Questions
- Where would cricket be today without private schools?
- How much stronger would county and international cricket be if state schools were also producing quality players?
Facilities
Near where I live in Derbyshire, several all-weather cricket pitches have been installed in parks. I assume the same applies in other parts of the country. Perhaps I have been unlucky but I have rarely seen them used and when they have been it has almost exclusively been by young Asian players who have organised games amongst themselves. After all, it is their national game. We cannot just leave it to Ace, Greenhouse Sports and Freddie Flintoff to revive and provide opportunities in cricket for young people. The ECB has taken several initiatives but little has been done to promote school cricket.
Questions
- Why cannot inter-school games be organised and all-weather pitches booked for matches for groups of younger boys and girls
- For senior age groups, grass pitches could be cut in parks and at those cricket clubs anxious to promote youth cricket.
Finance
The ECB’s stated aim is to promote cricket at all levels in this country and they now have vast amounts of additional income coming in annually from Television companies. They have the opportunity to at least make an impact on a regional north/south basis. The ECB could not do this all on its own and would need strong inter-government support to improve the health of children and back our national summer sport. They would need to prove the plan worked.
The Future
Any plan to considerably increase the amount of school cricket would have to be carefully drawn up and debated by those involved - but not endlessly. Regional trials perhaps in the north and south would need to be set up. Many reasons will be put forward not to attempt a scheme like this but when they are set against the perceived benefits they may not be seen as unsurmountable. As always, the success of any project depends a great deal on the persons running it. Get the right people in charge and they may well be able to recruit enthusiastic volunteers to help with the day-to-day running of the project.
Questions
- Would not the position of those who want to reduce the number of counties and as a consequence diminish the stature of the game be less relevant?
- If a whole new generation of cricketers was produced would that not increase the number of spectators at matches and revive the sport?
- Would not county cricket benefit and come under less pressure to be diminished in size and status?'