Saturday, 28 March 2026

Derbyshire v Leeds/Bradford UCCE

Leeds/Bradford UCCE 147-5 (Tangirala 41, Lloyd 30, Dal 2-22, Reece 2-23) 

v Derbyshire

Amid the many showers, there was an attritional day of batting and some good work outs for the Derbyshire bowlers. By the close, the visitors had reached 147-5.

Rahul Tangirala, who spent his winter in Australian grade cricket, was the major resistance, his organised and solid defence keeping an end going for 137 deliveries and 41 stoic runs. Later, Harry Pearson from Yorkshire and Jack Carney, erstwhile of Lancashire (and Derbyshire Seconds in recent summers) added an unbroken 39 in 20 overs.

The Derbyshire bowling was steady, accurate and probing. There weren't too many loose deliveries and the ball frequently beat the bat. No one bowled badly, though the pick were Anuj Dal and Luis Reece, each with two wickets and great control. Rory Haydon bowled well at the top, while later there was a first opportunity to watch Shoaib Bashir twirling away on home turf.

All in all, the rain notwithstanding, a handy day for all concerned.

Hopefully it will be the same for the Derbyshire batters tomorrow.

6 comments:

  1. It was cold, nothing to he gained from this game.

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    Replies
    1. There's always something to be gained from time in the middle.

      It might not be much warmer next weekend...

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  2. Disagree in regards to this particular game. It was very low key yesterday, no intensity shown from the players, that is not a criticism by the way, what you don't want is anyone to get injured. It felt like the coldest I have ever been there.

    That been said it was good to be back for a few hours.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Honestly don't think I have ever seen 'intensity' in a warm up match! It is a chance to find rhythm before going flat out. And when it is that cold, no one is going to bowl flat out, or anything close to it.

      Delete
    2. Ian from Suffolk29 March 2026 at 13:35

      Although watching cricket in the cold is far from ideal at least we have a fairly full red ball season to look forward to. Anyone interested in the general demise of red ball cricket should look at the West Indies soon to be held 4 day regional competition. The 6 islands will only be playing a maximum of 5 games for the top 3 teams and the bottom 3 teams will only play 3 matches in the entire season. That might possibly explain why the poor West Indies are hopeless at test cricket now . Whilst just 3 countries hoard all the money

      Delete
  3. I've been watching the stream and noticed the new screen is up replacing the old scoreboard.

    Michael

    ReplyDelete

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