That being the case, at this stage I would deem his tenure a failure.
Like every other supporter, I accept the fact that we are the club with the lowest budget on the circuit. I also cling on to the oft-quoted 'small margins' between winning and losing. Yet the reality is that too often the 'margin' was too great and until the distance narrows between our best and worst, there will be no significant improvement in fortunes.
White ball cricket saw our best, with a handful of memorable performances. We should have made the knockouts in T20 but lost matches to ordinary sides when they were there to be won. We should have breezed the same stage in the one-day cup with the players we had available, but again produced inept performances when it mattered. The mental side of the game remains the issue and apparently a collective one.
With the budgetary inequalities, the Derbyshire side has to be bigger than the sum of its parts. Gloucestershire managed it, so too Glamorgan in both of them winning one-day trophies. They did so with great team spirit and the eleven playing to potential. At the end of the day, personal responsibilities aside, that is the role of the Head of Cricket, getting the best out of players that HE signed. Even when we won it was down to two or three individual performances, rarely a team effort.
The batting, without an overseas bat to lead the way, was worryingly insecure throughout. Once again Wayne Madsen was head and shoulders above the rest, reaching a thousand runs in the last match and averaging 50. He will be 41 when next season starts, but looks good enough to continue for at least another couple of years. He is still safe at slip and reliable anywhere in the one day game. How we eventually replace him is anyone's guess, but time waits for no one.
Only Matt Lamb got close in average, but most of his runs came in one innings in another injury- ruined season and he was forced to retire. The county never saw the best of him with his back problems and that was a shame.
Both Harry Came and Luis Reece did OK, but will realise that sub-thirty red ball averages are not really good enough at this level. With one century and less than a thousand four-day runs between them, a change is likely at the top of the order next season. Neither impressed in the T20, but did better in the one-day cup. Came may drop to three next year, Reece to six, but we need more at the top of the order.
David Lloyd struggled with injury over the season, hand and knee injuries taking their toll. He moved to the middle order to accommodate Came and Reece at the top, but a season-highest of 73 came in the final game and an average of 23 was below expectations. He did better in T20, but will hope for a much more effective 2025. His off spin showed potential and it will be interesting to see if he sticks with it or reverts to his more frequent medium pace next year, after his knee is hopefully sorted.
Nye Donald was another disappointment. It was clear that he strikes and times the ball more cleanly than most, but shot selection was often poor and on the basis of this season he should not be a red ball pick next year. He played some fine innings in the Vitality Blast, but again frustrated with unnecessary shots and a lack of game awareness. He was a safe fielder everywhere, but rarely took the gloves because of Guest's remarkable fitness levels.
Mitch Wagstaff struggled for game time and when he got a belated opportunity he was thrown in at Chesterfield on a pitch made for Yorkshire's seam bowlers. Maybe his leg spin should have afforded greater use, but the weight of runs and wickets at second team level to force his way in were not there.
Ross Whiteley played only a couple of four-day games and was a limited success in white ball cricket. He won a couple of games with trademark innings, but suffered because no one seemed to know the best way to use him. He is a poor starter and that remains a concern, going into the final year of his contract, but he remains a brilliant fielder.
Samit Patel led the white ball side and bowled with customary accuracy most of the time. Yet his batting was much more fallible than in the past and like a few others he suffered from going from 0-70 straight away. Fielding and fitness are not his strong points, so his other skills needed to be more on point than they were. As a captain he made mistakes and will need to do better next year.
Anuj Dal missed more cricket than we would have wanted through injury and personal issues. He struggled at the start of the season but was beginning to show his best form when injury struck. The side is always better with him in it and we must hope for a return to his consistent best in 2025.
Brooke Guest was again reliable behind the stumps and showed remarkable levels of fitness and resilience. He is probably the most effective red ball batter after Madsen, but will likely benefit by dropping down to five next year, as his workload is colossal. He didn't have the best white ball season with the bat and struggled with his timing, but was another who was shunted up and down the order to his detriment.
The bowling was largely a disappointment. Zak Chappell was player of the year by some margin but lacked support. His batting improved and he is now a genuine all-rounder, while his bowling was pacey and probing. If he can repeat that next year and get better support, improved results may follow.
Ben Aitchison was sorely missed and we must hope his back allows him to return next year. Pat Brown was excellent in white ball cricket, but the variations that make him so see him struggle with the red ball. He needs a stock ball, one he can bowl five times an over and make the batter work when they don't HAVE to hit him.
Sam Conners struggled throughout and it was no surprise to see him depart before the end of the summer. Seven wickets at 75 each was a worrying decline from the heights of two years ago, but perhaps a new coach and environment at Durham will be the making of him.
Harry Moore emerged late in the summer and looked a real prospect. Yet at 17 we must not overburden him with expectation. He will need to work hard and stay fit, but the signs are there that he could become a serious cricketer, with bat and ball. He can be proud of his early efforts in the first class game.
Alex Thomson started the season with twelve wickets in the first game, but only took a dozen more over the rest of the summer. He again suffered from injury, but his batting declined and he didn't appear to have the confidence of the Head of Cricket, despite being given a two-year deal of the end of the previous summer. Next year will be a big one for him, as well as several others.
Jack Morley arrived on loan from Lancashire and looks set to join on a permanent basis for next year. He showed promise in red ball cricket and will likely benefit from working with Samit Patel, but he will need to improve his batting to maintain a place in the side over Thomson and force a way into the white ball eleven in due course.
Nick Potts looked very talented two years back but is another who has failed to progress. He had only one first-class match, but like Wagstaff failed to produce the returns at second team level to force his way into the side.
Overseas recruitment was very poor. Blair Tickner had his challenges away from the game and suffered from more dropped catches than most, but eight wickets at 61 was way below the expected return from a key position in any county side. Meanwhile Daryn Dupavillon was often overlooked when he was fit enough to play, a sad enough indictment. He managed only fifteen wickets and two overseas bowlers taking so few wickets at around fifty runs each was simply not good enough.
The decision to recruit two one-dimensional bowlers was flawed and supporters awaited in vain an admission from the Head of Cricket that he got it wrong.
In short? It was a summer of disappointment. Recruitment had focused on white ball cricket but it was largely underwhelming, while red ball saw the county bottom of the pile for good reason. We played too much poor cricket.
Is there any expectation that 2025 can be better? Caleb Jewell is a sound recruit for the top of the order and his availability for the entire summer will be useful. Martin Andersson will be an all round asset and Jack Morley probably a better spinner than Alex Thomson on initial showings.
But again that second overseas role will be crucial. Logically, it needs split between red and white ball, but the fact remains that the coaching staff have to get more from the players. They need greater clarity of their role and when things occasionally worked it seemed by accident, rather than design.
After three years at the helm, Mickey Arthur hasn't taken the club forward and for all his end of season positivity and jingoism, the buck stops with him. Other clubs have shown what is possible with the right man in charge and the board's apparent decision to stick with the expensive South African does not inspire many among the fan base.
The jury is still out, but he has one year left on his contract to prove if he can cut it, or if all the bravado and talk are simply empty words. Next year I can certainly live without 'sexy cricket' and 'entertainment machines'. Let the performances do the talking and hold back on the embarrassing soundbites would be my advice.
The clock is ticking. Despite the above, I would be thrilled if Derbyshire were transformed in 2025. I really want Mickey Arthur to be successful, because I am a fan.
But there is so much work to do.
Agree with almost all of what you say. I think MA might be reluctant to drop Donald and also I am not sure Morley is the top class spinner to bowl teams out. I think we are still a quality middle order batsman and pace bowler short. Thanks for you posts over the season, always informative and fun to read. From Grant in Telford.
ReplyDeleteGreat article Peakfan and very succinctly sums up our season.
ReplyDeleteHere’s a left field suggestion that might be a disaster ??! Donald undoubtedly has ability but as you say makes the wrong shot selection far too often. Is this because coming in at 6 he feels the need to force the play and becomes too aggressive? Might putting him up the order to say 3 make him think more about a longer innings and thus pace himself better ? Just a thought ?
Paul
The simple statistics do not lie:
ReplyDeleteIn the championship our batsmen scored 5100 runs and were out 201 times. Our bowlers conceded 6500 and took 159 wickets. That is a huge gulf.
In the T20 we scored 1944 runs at 8.5 per over. We conceded 2102 runs at 8.6.
In the One Day cup we scored 1649 runs at 5.2 per over. We conceded 1883 at 5.4.
So considerably nearer in the white ball game, but in every competition we were out batted and out bowled.
The only players who will consider (or should consider) that they had a decent season were Madsen, Chappell, Moore and probably Brown.
Most of the batting averages were lower numbers than most of the bowling averages.
This season has proved that being a Test ground county is not a pre-requisite for success, but we seem to have missed the bus. We can only hope for yet another reset in time for next season.
On a different note, thank you Steve for hosting this forum through the season. We can feel your frustration shining through at times, and it must be difficult to keep finding different ways to say "That was very disappointing." Rest assured though that I, and I am sure all your readership, appreciate and are grateful for your efforts.
Thank you again for the excellent coverage and intelligent, constructive perspectives on a season that would have had many a lesser man chucking his laptop against a wall. Yours in sport.
ReplyDeleteTotally Agree
DeleteAs always, Steve, an excellent analysis.
ReplyDeleteFor me, the most frustrating aspect of our performances in the CC were the batting collapses. I’d be watching a game on the live stream and we’d be, say 55-0. I’d go to the shops in the high street and when I returned home half an hour later, we’d be 61-3. Collapses were so predictable.
It’s interesting to note that in 2022, Mickey’s first season, we clocked up 18 centuries and 36 half centuries in the CC. This season we managed four centuries and 31 half centuries. We’ve gone backwards, as has the form of some players.
Caleb Jewell should strengthen our batting, but I’d like to see us sign another batsman or batting all-rounder.
I think our biggest problem is the collective mindset of the team. Confidence seems to ebb and flow. This has to be a problem for Mickey and the coaches to solve.
A number of things to address for next season, some easier than others:
ReplyDeleteSound, long-term business plan that recognise we are a cricket club first and foremost rather than necessarily need to make a profit (good if we can achieve it, but we have failed on the field)
On- and off-field harmony, primarily, but not limited to, that between coaching staff and players
Overseas recruitment, whether from Mickey’s supposedly outstanding contact book or not
Address the balance of the side (e.g. we have a number of all rounders that can provide valuable lower order runs)
Change the batting order, and be more flexible if things are not working (e.g. promising signs from last game of the season – but was only done the last game of the season! Also Guest could have batted higher in T20 to act as some glue rather than us going all guns blazing regardless)
Targeted recruitment, if budget allows – round pegs into round holes
Have the best membership and fan experience – starting with no outbursts at members forums
We are undoubtedly going to need another batter. Would Stoneman be interested? Yes, he's 37, but we need to win some 4 day games now, not in 3 years time. I'm not so worried about the white ball stuff, we'll be competitive again. Kris
ReplyDeleteHe possibly would, likely to be near his family up north. He would certainly get better value properties up north! But I don't know where the money comes from. And for him to play, logically you are leaving out the captain. Unless someone accepted a job offer outside of the game, like Pettman more recently, is it hard to see where there is money in the playing budget. Unless they save it elsewhere, of course...
DeleteMcKerr and Geddes have been released by Surrey - better long term multi format players hungry for regular cricket than Stoneman in my opinion. Andy
DeleteMcKerr has signed for Notts and Geddes is going to Middlesex, Andy
DeleteMany thanks for your excellent season review Steve. This was the first season for many years that I haven't seen Derbyshire play. I had tickets for each day's play at Chrsterfield but had to miss the first day of our CC match v Yorkshire and subsequently our performance was so dire that I couldn't be bothered to attend. On the day of the Sunday fixture the rain was lashing down in the High Peak and the Met Office forecast for Chesterfield showed something similar. That's the last time I rely on them! For the rest of the season I decided that our team's performance would be unlikely to justify a 90.mile roumd trip to Derby and - in the case of all our CC games bar one - that was certainly the case. On a separate matter, in my dentist's waiting room the other day was a 2022 edition of Derbyshire Life (not my usual choice of reading!) and inside was an interview with M.A. As the receptionist invited me to keep the glossy magazine, I brought it home. I shall read the article again and see if some of our esteemed leader's statements were correct or - more likely- now have a hollow ring to them.
ReplyDeleteI was told Wagstaff has been offered 2 years by Yorks. No idea if true. If it is, then Lamb, Conners and Wagstaff are off the wage bill. If Aitchison is back, I'd rather invest that money in another batter. Kris
ReplyDeleteI would be very surprised, Kris. He can't get in a bottom placed division 2 side but is signed by a division 1 outfit? I am not saying it's impossible, but certainly seems unlikely to me.
DeleteI don't know if he is looking for certain guarantees at Derbyshire. If he is, there is no way they can be given on his form this year. But I don't think Yorkies could do that either, or would do.