Friday, 29 May 2026

Fine win for Seconds at Repton

There was an exciting win for the second team against Lancashire at Repton today.

The visitors 170-7 in 20 overs was almost entirely due to George Bell, who made an unbeaten 116. Only one other player made 20, as Matt Stewart continued his fine form with 4-24.

Yusuf Bin Naeem made a quick 24 in reply, with three sixes, but the innings subsided to 57-5, then 88-6, but Brooke Guest and Ollie Rayner, who has played both for and against the county this year, added 67, before Brooke was run out with 15 balls to go for an excellent 73.

Sixteen were needed from 15 deliveries, but Rayner saw Derbyshire home with five balls to spare, ending with an unbeaten 44.

An excellent result!

Scorecard and video clips here

Thursday, 28 May 2026

Derbyshire v Nottinghamshire Vitality Blast game 4

There is no change to the Derbyshire 15 for tomorrow's East Midlands Derby against Nottinghamshire at the central co-op County Ground.

So well is the batting unit functioning that I don't see a change to the top seven. There can be no complaints about a line up that has registered 190+ in every game so far.

Which in turn has contributed to the second best net run rate in the section. So often in recent seasons we have played catch up on this after some heavy defeats, but this year has been better by a considerable margin. 

The only possible change I see for tomorrow might be Rory Haydon coming in for Nick Potts. These games are high intensity and after starting well, Nick has taken some stick in the last two games. A breather would do him no harm and hopefully allow him to come back refreshed. He could have had a wicket last night and broken the dangerous stand, had Ben Aitchison held on to a tough chance, but his time will come again.

I don't Akif Javed being dropped. He has landed in a foreign country at short notice and gone straight into matches on pitches that he is unfamiliar with. I suspect Chris Wright has chatted with him about the 'English length' and also a need for mixing up his pace a little. Martin Andersson showed last night, having watched the highlights, how dangerous the 'pace off' man can be in this form of the game. The various outfield catches came as a result of the ball not quite being 'there' and there are other counties with similar exponents of that skill set. 

Nottinghamshire thrived for years on the economical middle overs squeeze applied by the likes of Dan Christian and Steve Mullaney and a bowler who has disguised 'paces' will succeed in short form cricket, where everyone is trying to hit them into a neighbouring county.

The current Nottinghamshire side in this format doesn't compare to the vintage elevens of the past, but there are dangerous individuals within it. They have lost two from two and losing a third tomorrow will make their chances of qualification difficult, especially with a poor Net Run Rate at this stage.

Their squad of 14: 

Clarke, Ahmed, Ali, Hayes, Haynes, Howell, Linde, Martindale, McCann, Moores, Munsey, Pennington, Pocklington, Stone

They have recruited George Munsey from Scotland and, to be honest, I am surprised that at a time when overseas recruitment is proving a challenge, neither Richie Berrington nor Brandon McMullen have been picked up. At the very least, counties would save on airfares and it would promote the game north of the border. 

There are some average–looking overseas around at present and perhaps using glasses rather than binoculars might be beneficial...

Anyway, here's to tomorrow, hot weather, a good crowd and of course a Derbyshire win. 

After the victory last night, albeit against an ordinary-looking Leicestershire side, I am going for home advantage counting and a Derbyshire win. Then again, perhaps Derbyshire just made them look ordinary, in a very polished team effort.

What do you think? 

Wednesday, 27 May 2026

Leicestershire v Derbyshire Vitality Blast game 3

Derbyshire 230-5 (Jewell 58*, Andersson 57, Donald 49)

Leicestershire 145 (Turner53, Cox 34, Andersson 6-23, Aitchison 2-7)

Derbyshire won by 85 runs

What a great win! I'll need to not watch on a more regular basis...

An excellent batting performance, which I will let you fill in the details for, with a final total that was always going to put the other side under pressure. 

Donald and Andersson make her really impressive opening pair and that must have been quite special to watch tonight. Also good to see Caleb in the runs, while Monty was again offering a final flourish. If you discount Amrit Basra's three-ball salvo at the end, of course.

Then a great start with the ball, with three wickets in the first two overs. Jack Morley continuing to impress in this format, while Big Ben Aitchison helped in a perfect start 

Was anyone concerned when Cox and Turner got going, after recent events?

Finally, Martin Andersson, all rounder de luxe! What a performance, following his 57 with 6-23

I'm looking forward to your comments tonight. Please get them in and I will publish as soon as I am able...

Nottinghamshire next. We all feel much better about that one now, don't we? 

Tuesday, 26 May 2026

Leicestershire v Derbyshire Vitality Blast game 3 preview

Harry Came and Rory Haydon are rewarded for their second team efforts this week with a place in the Derbyshire squad for the Blast game at Leicester tomorrow.

I would be surprised if Came can break into the batting line up, as Mickey Arthur will look at the top seven and feel there is little wrong with that side of the team. Only Nye Donald and Wayne Madsen have yet to get going in this competition and I can't see either of them being left out, much the same as you, I assume. He will also consider the attack from which Harry took his runs and probably keep his powder dry on a line up that has scored 190+ in the two games so far. The same goes for Yusuf Bin Naeem, but if tomorrow ends in another defeat Derbyshire would need seven wins from nine games to have a chance of qualification, which would be a very tall order.

Rory Haydon may come in, either in place of Nick Potts or Ben Aitchison, who might benefit from a breather. But I don't otherwise see a change from the side that threw the game away at Headingley on Sunday.

Leicestershire have also lost two from two, so this is a big game for both sides. They have announced the following squad: 

Green, Budinger, Cox, Davey, Eskinazi, Green, Holland, Hull, Kelly, Mike, Patel, Tattersall, Trevaskis, Turner

They also lost to Durham as well as to Worcestershire and their batting has so far struggled to get going.

Derbyshire will need to bowl much better than at the death on Sunday to win this one, or they will need to bat them out of sight. I am not overly confident of either, right now, but perhaps someone will step up and do something special.

I am otherwise engaged tomorrow, so might give observations later, or those comments may need to wait until Thursday morning. I will leave the usual place for comments so yours are all in the same place.

Monday, 25 May 2026

Seconds storm to win in T20

Food for thought for Mickey Arthur today in the first match in the Second XI T20 at Sheffield

The home side won the toss and elected to bowl, probably regretting it 20 overs later, as Derbyshire amassed 236-7 in their 20 overs.

Harry Came was star man, making a brilliant 114 from 56 deliveries, with 14 fours and 3 sixes. He was well supported by Luis Reece (40) Yusuf Bin Naeem (31) and Joe Hawkins (21*).

Yorkshire never got close in reply, although Harry Duke, back from his loan spell at Middlesex, made 76. 

He was dismissed by Rory Haydon, who took 3-36 and no one conceded more than 37 in a disciplined bowling display. Yorkshire finished on 182-5 as Derbyshire ran out winners by 54 runs.

Scorecard and video clips here

Derbyshire entertain Lancashire on Friday at Repton

Sunday, 24 May 2026

Yorkshire v Derbyshire Vitality Blast game 2

Derbyshire 194-4 (Andersson 81*, Whiteley 39*, Montgomery 35)

Yorkshire 195-8 (Ali 51, Tye 32*, Hasan 31*, Lyth 31 Morley 4-44, Potts 2-44)

Yorkshire won by 2 wickets

I honestly can't believe how Derbyshire lost that game today.

After a very good batting effort, they had done all the hard work with some fine bowling and fielding and Yorkshire needed 56 from the last four overs, with only two wickets left. 

Yet they got them with three balls to spare.

They looked out of it at 102-6 and 139-8, but dangerous late order hitters Andrew Tye and Hasan Ali took advantage of some average late bowling to steal the win. Moeen Ali had earlier given them hope, with 5 sixes in his half century, but Derbyshire must have fancied their chances when the last four overs came.

Again it was down to small margins. There are two blokes swinging the bat and the smallest man on the side is at cow corner on the boundary. It was the height that did for Jack Morley on that occasion, but that should not detract from a very fine bowling performance. Anyone had him on their bingo card as our star T20 bowler this year? Me neither, but he has bowled beautifully and earlier held two fine catches.

Nick Potts also did well in his first two overs, but took punishment in his last two, while you would expect more from your overseas bowler than we got from Akif on this occasion. Matthew Montgomery also bowled a clever spell to follow a fine innings earlier, but that was very much a game that was thrown away.

Earlier, Martin Andersson batted beautifully (but we must assume is another unfit to bowl) and steered Derbyshire from 63-3 to 194-4. First with Montgomery and then Ross Whiteley, who clubbed in brutal fashion over the last quarter of the innings, he gave Derbyshire a strong total to bowl at. He looked shattered by the end, but batted through the innings in fine style.

The old failings came back today. For all that there is most of a first choice attack missing, the ones that played today delivered a fine performance until the final scene.

Sadly, that was when they fluffed their lines. 

Fair play to Tye and Hasan, both players who I have seen do that a few times. But the discipline that was a feature of the earlier Derbyshire bowling disappeared and there didn't appear anyone in real control out in the field.

It is frustrating, that's all I can say. This could be a long competition and while I accept that the side competed very well and it was another excellent game to watch, the players will be wondering how that one got away.

Just the same as us. 

Postscript: do we really need the interminable crowd shots? Between 'Oblivious cam' and all the other nonsense, deliveries were missed and the editing, for such a big club, was very poor. 

Given a choice between that and a fixed camera at either end, I would have to think long as to my preference...

Yorkshire v. Derbyshire Vitality Blast game 2 preview

I don't see any changes in the Derbyshire side to face Yorkshire at Headingly today.

Realistically, if the team for the game against Durham was deemed the best available, there was little wrong apart from some decision-making in the overall performance. 

Consideration may be given to tweaking the order. Matthew Montgomery looked in very good. nick and could theoretically move up to three. But you don't want Wayne Madsen lower than four so that leaves Caleb Jewell at five. I think a stronger side could see Mohammad Ghazanfar replace Jewell and go with two overseas bowlers in time, with Amrit Basra given a higher opportunity. 

It's difficult and I do feel for Mickey Arthur at the moment. In the close season, he would likely have had Pat Brown, Zak Chappell and Harry Moore in his side. Luis Reece would have given him the all rounder he is missing in Zak's absence.

But in that first game Nick Potts did pretty well, as he did at Lord's, while Ben Aitchison never lets you down. Hopefully Martin Andersson can fulfil some of the fifth bowler duties and Ross Whiteley can focus on his powerful batting.

Ross is mature enough not to let his mauling in the last game affect him. It is one of those things that happens in this format and many will remember Mattie McKiernan's fine spells for us, as well as his maulings at Taunton and Derby on a couple of occasions. You can go from hero to zero in no time at all...

I would also like to see Yusuf bin Naeem given opportunity during the competition. One thing that comes out of adversity is opportunity. If during the course of this competition we can see Nick Potts and Yusuf develop, then I will consider it worthwhile.

As for Yorkshire, they won their opening game against Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge and did it in some style. In Andrew Tye, Moeen Ali, Logan van Beek and Dom Bess they have plenty of experience in their attack, while Jonny Bairstow led the run chase in style. They are unlikely to make changes from this eleven, which will give Derbyshire a stern test:

Lyth, Bairstow, Luxton, Wharton, Ali, Revis, Hill, Bess, Tye, van Beek, Chohan

Predictions? Despite the good record against Yorkshire, it is hard to predict a win until Derbyshire show they can limit a run chase to something 'normal'. I always feel we can chase or set around 180-200, but those extra runs above that are a challenge for most sides, unless boundaries are short and the pitch true.

I think the injury situation will be the deciding factor, but I hope to be proved wrong with someone producing a performance for the ages.

Who can step up and do that? 

Friday, 22 May 2026

Derbyshire v. Durham Vitality Blast game 1

Durham 203-8 (Lees 54, Robinson 48, Ackerman 36, Morley 3-35, Aitchison 2-31, Potts 2-34)

Derbyshire 197-8 (Montgomery 74*, Whiteley 45, Parkinson 3-38, Raine 2-32)

Durham won by six runs

Derbyshire gave a good account of themselves tonight, but eventually fell up short by six runs against Durham.

None of the bowlers were really collared, with the exception of Ross Whiteley, who went for 27 runs from his only over. He looked rusty and I spent a fair part of the innings wondering why Martin Andersson didn't bowl. Perhaps he has a niggle and they didn't want to risk him, but he would surely have got at least two overs, were he fit.

Jack Morley bowled very well, Nick Potts continued his recent good form and Ben Aitchison bowled as he has all season. We seemed a bowler light, but the batting looked short too. For all his fine century at Lord's, Aitchison is a good number nine but eight is too high for him, as it is for Potts.

What Durham did well was to ride on the back of good knocks from Lees, Ackerman and Robinson. The former got them off to a flyer, while the others kept them ticking over nicely through the middle overs.

In contrast, the Derbyshire batters flickered into life with fine shots, but surrendered their wickets too frequently. They stayed around the required rate for a long time, but were never quite ahead of it sufficiently to take their foot off the gas and just knock it around.

A partnership of 70 in seven overs between Whiteley and Montgomery offered hope, full of fine strokes from both players. But it needed something special, with 37 needed from the last three overs. 

Montgomery reached a splendid half century, full of improvisation as well as classical chipped strokes over the off side. He got them to within range and then made his only mistake, in trying a reverse sweep from a free hit when Matthew Potts overstepped. The Durham seamer had a poor match with the ball and in the field, but while the ball was probably there for the drive Montgomery missed with the unorthodox and then couldn't hit the required six from the final ball to make the tie.

Nonetheless, his was an outstanding innings that promised a lot. 

For Durham, Ben Raine was as canny as ever, while Callum Parkinson dismissed both Whiteley and Basra after earlier halting the charge of Nye Donald in his first over. 

There was a first sighting of Akif, who settled pretty well after only landing in the UK two days ago. His first over wasn't quite there, but afterwards I thought he did pretty well. 

At the end of it all, everyone saw a fine game of cricket. As I wrote last night, these matches change on one ball, or one over. 

Tonight the Whiteley over, together with Montgomery missing out on a free hit, was the difference between the two sides.

Thursday, 21 May 2026

Derbyshire v Durham T20 Blast preview

The Blast is here and after an underwhelming start to the summer, Derbyshire go into it on the back of two red ball wins, followed by a convincing victory over Cheshire in a warm-up match. 

I don't think the side for tomorrow night will show too many changes from that which did well against Cheshire on Wednesday. Akif Javed has arrived and will take his place in the side, but there is no news on the fitness of Zak Chappell. So in his absence, it might be that the final place is between Jack Morley and Nick Potts, as Derbyshire go with this side:

Donald, Andersson, Jewell, Madsen, Montgomery, Whiteley, Basra, Bin Naeem, Aitchison, Javed, Potts/Morley

There is a good vitality in that side and it should be a better fielding unit than in recent years. So much can happen in this form of the game and they can turn on a moment of brilliance in the field, which in turn puts pressure on an incoming batter. 

The side also bats deep with boundary clearers, but as I have written before, much will rest on the ability of the Derbyshire attack to limit opponents better than they managed last year. We cannot chase 200-plus on a regular basis and hope to progress.

Durham turn up at what is likely to be a red hot Central Co-op County Ground with a squad of fourteen, as follows:

Ackerman, Aldridge, Bedingham, Clark, Lees, Minto, Mustard, Parkinson, Potts, Raine, Rhodes, L Robinson, O Robinson, Sowter

Bedingham and Ackerman can take games away from opponents very quickly, so Mickey Arthur's side will hope to make early inroads when they bowl.

The result? I couldn't call this one and it depends on which team delivers their best game on the night.

It will make for fascinating viewing.

Postscript: no Zak Chappell in the late-announced squad, so I suspect the team will be as given above. Harry Came and Mitch Wagstaff are also in the squad 

Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Derbyshire win Cheshire friendly

Derbyshire 233-8 (Jewell 93 retired, Montgomery 45 retired, Andersson 31, Bin Naeem 27* Young 4-26)

Cheshire 142 (Reddy 56, Dobson 45*, Morley 4-8,  Montgomery 2-36, Potts 2-38, Whiteley 1-7)

Derbyshire won by 91 runs

Derbyshire enjoyed a good run out and easy win against Cheshire in a T20 friendly at Nantwich  today.

The home side won the toss and asked Derbyshire to bat. They gained an early success when Nye Donald was dismissed for one in the first over. Then Martin Andersson was joined by Caleb Jewell and they added 47 in five overs before Andersson went for 31 from just 16 deliveries. 

Jewell went on to a superb 93 from just 44 deliveries before retiring, including 8 fours and 6 sixes. He added 111 in just eight overs with Matt Montgomery, after an early dismissal for Wayne Madsen. Montgomery made 45 before he too retired, out and between them they took 30 from the only over of Gennaro Reddy, who trialled recently for Derbyshire.

Ross Whiteley hit two sixes in six balls faced, while Yusuf Bin Naeem staked his claim for a place on Friday with 27 from just ten deliveries, including 3 sixes and a four. 

Derbyshire finished on 233-8 in their 20 overs, with left arm seamer Luke Young, who also trialled for the county in 2023, returning the excellent figures of 4-26 in his four overs.

Reddy made up for his earlier mauling with 56 for the hosts, but Montgomery took two wickets in his first over to set them back and they never recovered. Jack Morley ripped out the middle order in returning the superb figures of 4-1-8-4, while Nick Potts finished things off with two wickets and a run out. Cheshire were all out for 142 and Derbyshire won by 91 runs.

Akif Javed was arriving today, so presumably he comes into the side on Friday, perhaps at the expense of Nick Potts, but they had a good run out today, which should see them start the Blast in decent fettle.

Derbyshire side: Donald, Andersson, Jewell, Madsen, Montgomery, Whiteley, Basra, Bin Naeem, Potts, Aitchison, Morley

Scorecard here

Monday, 18 May 2026

Middlesex v Derbyshire day 4

I didn't see any of today's play, travelling to our our holiday, but I was delighted to arrive and find we were within sight of victory.

I am delighted for Nick Potts, who had a good game here and can be proud of his efforts with bat and ball. The same goes for Wayne Madsen and it looks like Matthew Montgomery battled hard to get us across the line this afternoon. 

With only fourteen points separating second place from seventh, Derbyshire are very much in the mix for promotion, as we break from the red ball game to move seamlessly into white ball cricket.

When two of the seam bowlers in the side have played just fourteen red ball games between them, a win at Lord's was a terrific effort. Six bowlers missing and they still managed to take twenty wickets. Not bad...

The challenge now will be recruiting someone for the run in. After his success against Bangladesh, Mohammad Abbas is surely going to be selected for the Pakistan tour of England, so an alternative will be needed, especially if the injury crisis among the domestic players does not ease. 

Hopefully we will hear something about that in the coming weeks. 

Now to turn our attention to the white ball game and hope for a good start after the positivity that has surrounded our last two matches.

More from me as the week progresses.

Sunday, 17 May 2026

Middlesex v Derbyshire day 3

Middlesex 177 and 278-8 (du Plooy 95, Falconer 48, Aitchison 3-53, Haydon 2-58)

Derbyshire 376

Middlesex lead by 79 runs 

There didn't appear to be as much in the pitch today at Lord's. 

The swing and lateral movement that highlighted the first two days was still there, but it was less pronounced and batting appeared easier than it had been on the first two days. 

Derbyshire made good inroads and had three wickets down, before Leus du Plooy and the impressive Caleb Falconer shared in a fourth wicket stand of 107 to hold them up. 

The bowling continued to be impressive, but du Plooy always seemed likely to make Derbyshire pay for his first innings failure and he batted very well here, looking in little trouble. We know him well, of course and in this form he is a hard man to dismiss. 

Falconer, who has starred in English age group cricket, looked like a young man worth keeping an eye on as they quickly caught up with the Derbyshire lead. 

Perhaps a lot of supporters were expecting a walk in the park today, but cricket has a habit of delivering the unexpected, which is why it is the greatest of sports. At tea, Derbyshire looked like facing a potentially tricky run chase on the last day. 

Aitchison and Haydon again bowled well, as did Bashir, but the home side realised they had to keep them at bay and wait for the changes. Potts and Andersson gave their all, but it wasn't there for them today.

At least until du Plooy drove uppishly at Andersson and was brilliantly caught by Bashir at extra cover, diving to his left. He had looked in little trouble and deserved a century, his slow trudge to the pavilion telling a tale. 

In the next over, Potts had Falconer driving at a wide one, which moved away enough to take the edge through to Guest. Middlesex were five down and still eight runs behind. Higgins and Duke took them ahead and shared an important partnership, before the introduction of Montgomery saw him bowl Higgins, pulling a ball that kept low, with three overs until the second new ball. 

When Gohar slashed recklessly at Aitchison and then Bosch was leg before to Haydon, Derbyshire might have hoped to finish things off tonight, but bad light and rain brought an early end to proceedings

I won't see the final day's play, because we are away on holiday again tomorrow and won't be home until Friday. As usual, I will create a page for your comments on that. 

Hopefully the weather is kind, Derbyshire can wrap things up quickly and then handle the run chase professionally.

Saturday, 16 May 2026

Middlesex v Derbyshire day 2

Middlesex 177 and 13-1 (Aitchison 1-7)

Derbyshire 376 (Madsen 119, Aitchison 112, Higgins 4-98, Bosch 3-82)

Derbyshire lead by 186 runs

A magnificent double century partnership between Wayne Madsen and Ben Aitchison, during the course of which they both reached centuries, was the standout feature of the second day at Lord's.

This was the 51st time that the Derbyshire captain has reached three figures for the county, but the first time that Aitchison has done so. Both batted superbly, as you had to do to make runs on a pitch that continued to help the bowlers. 

Aitchison rode his luck and had several lives, but he capitalised on his good fortune and played a quite remarkable hand for his side. His stroke play through the covers was very impressive, this being far removed from the innings of a bloke who just slogged it around. His judgement of the balls to leave was excellent and he was quick to punish any aberration in length.

Referencing offspin, the former Derbyshire bat and coach, Denis Smith, told his namesake Edwin that 'if you bowl it, you should be able to play it.'

Simplistic perhaps, but he would have been proud with the way that first Nick Potts and then Ben went about their work last night and today.

Theirs was not one of the great partnerships, but the 40 runs they added were crucial in ensuring the Derbyshire innings was stabilised. Potts showed himself better than a mere tail ender, while Aitchison must now be regarded as a potential all rounder. It put overs into the ball and they showed that with application and a little good fortune, runs could come.

Conditions were far from easy for batting, the ball swinging and cutting off the pitch. I'm not sure how Potts could have played the ball that eventually bowled him, which reminded me of the type of delivery once purveyed by Ian Buxton. Sharma had previously bowled one to him that fizzed back like a brisk off-spinner and the challenge was clear. 

Madsen came in at number 7, perhaps the lowest he has batted for the county and immediately took the attack to Middlesex. Rightly so in the conditions and he used his feet well, while being unafraid to play his shots. Some of them were risky, but the pair ate into the home side's lead, then Derbyshire moved ahead, before building an eventual advantage of 199 runs. It was clear when he reached three figures what it meant to him and at 42 he remains a quite wonderful player to watch. 

Aitchison looked almost incredulous when he passed the century mark, celebrated with a double fist pump that verged on the demonstrative for the unassuming giant. The giant smiles on the faces of he and his captain spoke of mutual respect, while the reactions of their teammates on the players balcony were a joy to see. There is an undeniable strong spirit in the squad.

The eventual partnership of 208 was the highest-ever for Derbyshire at Lord's, while Aitchison was just the fifteenth Derbyshire player to score a century and take five wickets in an innings in the same match (courtesy David Griffin) 

The Middlesex fielding was extremely average. Besides the missed chances, half chances, overthrows and club standard misfields, you could see the shoulders drop by early afternoon, as Derbyshire forged ahead. Eathan Bosch took late wickets, but seemed oddly out of sorts, there being a marked reduction in the intensity when Higgins and Roland-Jones were out of the attack. 

The former, as I wrote in the game preview, is a fine player and bowled far better than even his figures suggest. I wrote before that he would be my fantasy pick if I could add any player to the Derbyshire squad and he remains so.

Bad light delayed an early resumption after tea, but it gave Aitchison further opportunity to rest his weary limbs after his efforts in this match.

He was soon back in the wickets, Robson edging to the safe hands of Madsen at slip - as if they hadn't already done enough together during the day. Soon afterwards they were off again - this time for rain and for good.

But boy, oh boy. This had been a special day of Derbyshire cricket. For Ben Aitchison, who missed two years of cricket through injury, this must have been one he dreamed of through the dark hours, while wondering if he would get on a cricket pitch again.

Today the dream came true and he has every right to be floating on air tonight.

Friday, 15 May 2026

Middlesex v Derbyshire day 1

Middlesex 177 (Robson 31, Bosch 29, Aitchison 5-47, Haydon 2-60)

Derbyshire 106-4 (Jewell 24, Montgomery 23, Reece 21, Potts 17* Higgins 2-28)

Derbyshire trail by 71 runs

A superb spell of seam bowling from Ben Aitchison put Derbyshire in early control of the game against Middlesex at Lord's today. 

The ball moved around all day, both in the air and off the seam and the tall Derbyshire seamer took full advantage in excellent spells to take 5-47 in 20 overs of quality, probing bowling. He is the first Derbyshire seamer to take five wickets in an innings at Lord's since Andrew Harris in 1999 (courtesy David Griffin). He looks a bowler of the very highest class now, his confidence in his body restored. His dismissal of the dangerous and prolific Leus du Plooy, soon after lunch, was the catalyst for the collapse and he can be very proud of his efforts today.

He was well supported by Rory Haydon, who until Eathan Bosch decided the late long handle approach was more likely to be effective, had excellent figures and still finished with 2-60. 

It cannot just be me who notices the Derbyshire attack is bowing with greater control this year. Before lunch, Middlesex scored only four boundaries as Sam Robson dug in, but the post-lunch bowling from the opening pair was as good as you would wish to see. The over that Haydon bowled to Higgins, a very good cricketer was quite something, the player walking even before the umpire's finger went up for the routine catch behind by Guest, almost waving a figurative white flag as he went on his way. 

The discipline of most of the day dissipated a little at the end of the innings, when first Aitchison and then Guest spilled catches they would hold nine times in ten. It was not unduly costly, as Montgomery held a sharp chance from Bashir's fifth delivery and the home side was all out for 177.

It was also good to see Nick Potts bowl steadily today and take a wicket with a BIG outswinger. None of us know what the future holds, but the young man has taken a first-class wicket at the home of the game, something most of us can only dream about. He deserved it today and I hope he does equally well, if not better, in the second innings. His place in the side came about because of a groin injury for Zak Chappell, perhaps rested as a precaution ahead of the Blast.

Of course, the expectation was that the experienced Middlesex opening pair of Roland-Jones and Higgins would be every bit as dangerous when their turn came. In much the same fashion as in the home innings, the movement began as the effects of the roller wore off.

Came and Reece started well, but then Came again pushed at one when his front foot was not quite there and was caught behind by Harry Duke, on loan from Yorkshire. Time was when such cooperation between north and south was as likely as finding snowdrops in the Kalahari, but such is the modern game.

When Reece was squared up by Bosch and edged to slip, the signs were ominous for Derbyshire. Any expectation that a change of bowling might lessen the intensity came to naught and I was especially impressed by young Middlesex seamer Navyaan Sharma. Montgomery played a delightful stroke through the covers for four, but otherwise struggled with his timing, while Jewell, after his fine innings in the last match, was quickly into his stride with two trademark strokes through the covers. 

Bosch confirmed his reputation as a whole-hearted cricketer with some good balls that deserved better luck, but the third wicket pair batted with good sense until Montgomery, after some lovely off side shots, missed one playing across the line and was leg before. Worse was to follow as Jewell, who had looked in little trouble, went across too far to Higgins and was bowled behind his legs and off his thigh. 86-2 had become 90-4 and Derbyshire had two night watchmen, Potts and Aitchison, at the crease.

They survived to the close, Potts showing good technique and playing some nice shots, as befits someone who has opened for the second team. In doing so they kept back Madsen, Andersson and Guest and took their side to the end of the day at 106-4, trailing by 71 runs.

This was a good day of county cricket. A day, in fact, that confirmed that regardless of what the England selectors might believe, there are some very fine bowlers in the county game, bowling below express pace but challenging the techniques of very good players. 

The game advanced well and the weather remarkably allowed a full day. 

There should be a positive result here. 

At this stage, your guess is as good as mine as to which way it goes. 

Thursday, 14 May 2026

Middlesex v Derbyshire preview

I don't expect any changes to the Derbyshire side that beat Northamptonshire this week, as they make the trip down to Lord's and a red ball fixture against Middlesex, starting tomorrow. 

If it ain't broke, don't fix it. That old adage is pertinent here and in the likely continued absence of Luis Reece from the bowling ranks, I also expect the batting order to remain the same. 

So Derbyshire should lineup:

Reece, Came, Montgomery, Jewell, Madsen, Andersson, Guest, Chappell, Aitchison, Haydon, Bashir (Morley and Wagstaff also in squad).

The team should be bubbling with confidence after their win, together with Shoaib Bashir's selection in the England squad for the first Test of the summer. It is a reward for his performance and attitude so far and while the county would miss both, I'm sure everyone would like to see him included in the final eleven for the national side.

Middlesex have also named thirteen for the game and they currently sit second in the table. So tight are things in the division, however, that only 15 points separate that position with second bottom, where Derbyshire currently sit. There is much to play for and this should be a very good game. 

Both teams have only one overseas player - South African Eathan Bosch having arrived to play for Middlesex. Their success so far has been down to the batting of Leus du Plooy and the excellence with the new ball of Ryan Higgins and Toby Roland-Jones. The former is one of the best all-round cricketers in the country and has been for a few years now, while the latter, at 38, is still producing figures worthy of a man in his prime. Which he could well be, if following in the footsteps of Tim Murtagh...

Interestingly, they recalled Tom Helm from his loan spell with Leicestershire this week, yet he hasn't made the squad for this game. Perhaps they are covering the bases in case one of the first choice seamers breaks down mid-match.

Young bowlers Naavya Sharma and Seb Morgan have made encouraging starts in the county game and the home attack, especially in conditions that often favour them, will be a challenge. 

The Middlesex squad: 

Du Plooy, Bosch, Duke, Falconer, Geddes, Gohar, Higgins, Holden, Hollman, Morgan, Robson, Roland-Jones, Sharma.

The weather forecast for the four days is not good at this stage and it is hard to predict anything other than a draw, unless conditions favour the bowling lineups sufficiently for the game to be completed in what looks more likely to be three days of cricket at best.

Tomorrow certainly looks set to be truncated and we will have a better idea of prospects for the remainder of the game at that stage.

What do you think

Postscript: from conversations around the ground earlier in the week, I know that several Derbyshire supporters are making the trip for this weekend game. 

I hope that you all enjoy it! 

Moqim out as Javed comes in


Sufyan Moqim is the latest to join the fairly lengthy 'signed but never played' list of overseas players for Derbyshire, after the Pakistan Board revoked his No Objection Certificate.

The player is needed for the forthcoming white ball series against Australia and so will not travel to England to take up his contract with Derbyshire for the T20 Blast.

It is the latest blow for Mickey Arthur, in a season that has not been short of them so far. 

The county has moved with admirable speed to secure instead the services of 25-year old left arm seamer Akif Javed. While Arthur is on record with his preference for a mystery spinner in 20-over cricket, the second best thing is probably a left arm seam bowler who offers a variation in angle. 

Javed has played three one-day internationals for Pakistan and has taken seven wickets, while he has most recently played for the Multan Sultans in the PSL. He also played for Rangpur Riders in the Bangladesh Premier League, where his coach was the Derbyshire Head of Cricket, so he clearly knows his capabilities. He goes for around eight an over in T20, which if maintained would be an improvement for the county on last year. 

Disappointed? Of course, when we had the leading wicket taker in the PSL ready to go. Yet again, it highlights the challenges in securing an overseas player these days. It is akin to VAR in football - just as you cannot celebrate a goal until they have finished their checks, you really can't get overly excited at an overseas player, until he walks onto the pitch for his first game. 

I am old enough to remember Denis Lillee, who was lined up then got a stress fracture, as well as the likes of Jacques Rudolph and Saeed Anwar. None of them appeared after being lined up in what were high profile deals at the time, but these days it must be a nightmare for county clubs. There are so many short notice tours and franchise tournaments which reduce the available worthwhile options.

Again though, it highlights the merits of Mickey Arthur keeping his finger on the pulse with winter coaching gigs. Such a 'networking' has highlighted the talents of Javed, who will make for interesting viewing.

As for Moqim, the club have clearly established a connection and it may happen another year, depending on his commitments.

Anyway, welcome to Derbyshire, Akif. I wish you well, as we all do and you can make yourself a local hero in the next few weeks

Here is a clip of him in action in this year's PSL

Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Thoughts on the imminent T20

 I have been giving some thought to the likely first choice Blast side, after being asked my opinion around the ground last week and in all honesty it could go in one of several ways. 

The crux to it all will be in the suggestion by Mickey Arthur in a recent interview that he may go with two overseas spinners. The original idea was that Sufyan Moqim would play the first half of the competition until the arrival of Mohammad Ghazanfar, but I assume the latter may now arrive early, after Mumbai Indians wretched IPL competition.

The first question is who opens with Nye Donald. I had assumed it would be Caleb Jewell, but after his success in the middle order against Northamptonshire, perhaps he stays there to knock it around when the time comes - IF he plays. One alternative could be Martin Andersson at the top, where I think he could do considerable damage with his ability to knock bowlers off a length. He did that with success at Middlesex in his last season there. 

Or there is the more wild card option of Yusuf Bin Naeem, which is why I am so interested in the current Second XI T20. At 19 he is a real talent, thankfully recovered from an injury-hit 2025 and he has been in sparkling form this year. 

In yesterday's game at Leicester, he outscored Donald, which is no mean feat. They added 72 from the first five overs against Trevaskis, Wood and Mike, experienced bowlers all, as he made 47 from 21 balls. In playing him, you are offering opportunity at the right time - when he is in form - while youth in the field is never a bad thing. 

So the team could go:

Donald, Naeem, Montgomery, Madsen, Basra, Andersson, Whiteley, Chappell, Aitchison, Ghazanfar, Moqim.

It was interesting to see Ross Whiteley bowling a couple of overs yesterday, as he could share fifth bowler duties with Andersson and Montgomery. Basra is another option and he will surely play, partly because of his dynamism and also because he was the poster boy for the T20 kit. So it would be silly were he then not in the side...

I have left out Rory Haydon, as he has made such a fine start to his red ball career and I would hate to see his confidence knocked by being smeared around. Having said that, he wouldn't let you down if needed.

If Jewell plays, I would open with Andersson and while the batting is then long, the bowling might be more of a concern:

Donald, Naeem, Montgomery, Madsen, Jewell, Basra, Andersson, Whiteley, Chappell, Aitchison, Ghazanfar/Moqim

With this side, you need eight overs from a combination of Andersson, Whiteley, Montgomery and perhaps Basra.

What we don't know is when or if Pat Brown might be available. At his best he comes into the side as a specialist, but he needs cricket AND the confidence that his twice-operated shoulder is right. As an excellent fielder, he strengthens that department too, but there has to be a question mark, at this stage. 

Mickey Arthur could still play two spinners, with the inclusion of either Shoaib Bashir or Jack Morley, but I think that a less likely scenario when he potentially has two overseas spinners available. Unless we go full on India, circa early 1970s, of course...

One final option, with a nod to the second team, might see Matt Stewart given a game or two. It would depend on performance, but he is another young man doing very well this year and if Chappell or Aitchison needed a break (or heaven forbid, were injured) then his height and regular ability to take wickets could be useful. 

Stewart can be loose at times, which is not uncommon in young bowlers, but he is coming up hard on the rails, in horse racing parlance. His inclusion is less likely at this stage, but not impossible. 

Hopefully you can see from all of that the selection dilemmas faced by Mickey Arthur. He needs to get it right, because we can ill-afford to make a slow start and spend the rest of the competition either playing catch up or simply making up the numbers. 

Finally, if we are playing two spinners, we need to support them with the pitches at home. Because you can bet the contents of your piggy bank on the fact that we won't turn up at away grounds with Ghazanfar and Moqim, to find pitches worthy of Multan and Rawalpindi.

It would be nice though, eh? 

Prospects? I am less confident than I was about the red ball season, because of injuries. Last year we batted pretty well, but seemed to be chasing 200-plus all the time, which is simply not feasible. There were reasons for this, not least Samit Patel's insistence on batting high in the order, which wasn't always effective and certainly killed the running between the wickets. 

Someone has to prove they can limit damage in the Powerplays too, where we at times haemorrhaged runs last year. I thought Patel, with his experience would do that, but he opted for the middle overs, by which time we were considering a white flag.

If Nye Donald can reproduce his sparkling form AND go on once he has reached fifty, there are few in the country can outscore him. There is considerable power in the batting, with the arrival of Basra a major plus. 

For me, it comes down to the bowling unit being more thrifty than in 2025. If they can do that, we will be competitive. I won't offer anything more bullish at this stage.

It won't be long until we find out.

As always, I welcome your thoughts on all of the above! 

Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Seconds start T20 in style!

There were some telling individual performances today, as the county second team easily beat Leicestershire at Uptonsteel Grace Road, in the first game of the Second XI T20 competition 

Nye Donald won the toss and asked the home team to bat first. After a brief rain interruption, the game was restricted to 19 overs per side and after removing Scottish international Jamie Dunk, Jack Morley returned the excellent figures of 2-17 in his four overs. Matt Stewart also had fine figures of 1-11 in his three overs, while Trodd, Whiteley and Hawkins took a wicket each, as the home side was restricted to 138-7, Maddy top-scoring with an unbeaten 41.

The result was never in doubt after Donald and Yusuf Bin Naeem brought up the fifty in just 20 deliveries!  When the latter, who has been in fine form this summer, was out in the fifth over, Derbyshire were on 72 and he had made 47 from 21 balls, with 5 fours and 4 sixes. Food for thought for Mickey Arthur, ahead of The Blast, perhaps?

Donald was out three balls later for 25 from just ten deliveries, but any home thoughts of getting back into the game were dispelled by Amrit Basra, who made an unbeaten 32 from 21 deliveries, with 2 sixes and 2 fours. 

Ross Whiteley made 27 from 15, including 3 fours and a six, as Derbyshire eased over the line with 40 deliveries to spare, to win by 5 wickets.

Basra scored the winning runs with a straight six from the bowling of Trevaskis. 

The two sides were well-matched in experience, with Trevaskis, Wood and Mike in the home ranks, all of them receiving fierce punishment.

Attention now turns to the Central Co-op County Ground tomorrow, when Derbyshire 
entertain Yorkshire, starting at 1pm.

Hopefully, there might be a fixed camera stream of that one! 

Well done guys, let the good times keep rolling..

Scorecard and video clips here

Sympathy for the devil

There's an old joke about a cricket match between heaven and hell, with God and Lucifer discussing the prospects 

'We're bound to win' said God. 'I've got a team for the ages. Trumper, Hobbs, Bradman, Ranji, Woolley..such a strong squad'.

The Devil smiled

'That may well be' he said. 'But I have all the umpires...'

I have no intention of offending any of the worthy men that used to wear long white coats and are now more snazzily attired, nor am I suggesting that this was the rationale behind the Rolling Stones track of the same title as this article.

But as the years pass, I have more sympathy for umpires and especially at county level, where they don't have the benefit of replays yet are under increasing pressure. Not least from too many players for who an erstwhile quizzical 'Howzat' is now replaced by an insistent and often unbecoming street party, akin to those at the end of World Wars.  

Old George could have done with replays years ago, when he gave me out caught down the leg side in the first over, when I had barely moved from my stance. It was a red hot day and I fancied a few runs on a lovely pitch. It was down the leg side, a clear wide and only the bowler appealed, perhaps attempting to inject a little humour into proceedings. He looked embarrassed when the finger went up, though I wasn't recalled.

Later I asked George how he came to his decision. 

'I thought I heard something'

'But did you see I had barely moved and it should in fact have been a wide?'

'To be honest, I wasn't looking, I was checking for the ball counter in me pocket...can I buy you a beer?'

Cheers, George. Anyway, the reason for this piece is that there have been a few contentious decisions in recent games. Loud shouts for caught behind, insistence from bowlers and fielders alike on lbws (including those at square leg and we all know they have the best view..) I have seen a few given and a few not given. Some have been right, some have been wrong. 

But the only way you can confirm what's what is if quality replays and Hawkeye were introduced to the county game. Would we really want that and the delays that it brings? I am no fan of VAR in football and firmly believe that if they cannot disprove a goal in the ten seconds from when it goes in, it should stand. It kills the game and ruins celebration of goals at club level. If someone is clearly offside it will show up, but if it is the hem of a shirt, it makes a mockery of the sport.

Umpiring is a really tough gig and I applaud those who do it at county standard and above, as they really are the creme de la creme. Yet they are human and as humans they are fallible. It takes a lot of courage to say 'no' when eleven people are screaming 'yes', the bowler already at short third man in his 'celebrappeal' (which I hate, by the way). Not having a go at anyone, but what if the umpire had thought differently when George Scrimshaw finally missed one yesterday? You see it countless times and on most occasions it makes an unedifying spectacle. 

It is a thing that irks me with the modern game. How can square leg and point seriously appeal for lbw? You genuinely have no idea, but it applies pressure. I recall asking an opposition skipper if he wanted guard from behind the stumps or mid on, where he had spent our innings appealing for anything that travelled 22 yards and didn't hit the bat. It was one of those games, perhaps a little petty, but it offended my sense of fair play in the sport.

It is easy to watch the slowed down replays on streams and say that he/she got that one wrong. Yet viewing a ball bowled at maybe 80/90mph and gauging the point of impact with the naked eye, while all the time considering the nuances of the laws of the game can never be an exact science.

I tend to take the view that things normally even out over the course of the season. Maybe the umpire realises later that he made a mistake and he gives you the benefit the next time. Or perhaps he just has an off day in an otherwise flawless summer. Maybe, as Bill Bestwick did with the young Denis Compton, he gave him out because he was in urgent need of the toilet...

Anyway, they deserve credit and respect for a tough job done to the best of their ability. It is easy to call foul on seeing the replay and realise it pitched outside the line, or was sliding down leg. You will perhaps lose a game on a bad decision, but you will almost certainly win them too. When you have watched and played it for sixty years, you might have a sizeable file of examples.

Accept the rough with the smooth and the stress won't kill you and your enjoyment level will increase. 

Mind you, try as I might I don't recall Old George ever giving me the benefit.

We were never convinced he could see 22 yards, anyway.

Monday, 11 May 2026

Derbyshire v Northamptonshire day 4

Derbyshire 604-7d

Northamptonshire 228 and 263 (Bartlett 65*, McSweeney 62, Chappell 4-53, Bashir 3-70) 

Derbyshire won by an innings and 113 runs

As I had told a few people I would do yesterday, I left Derby at 4am this morning and walked into our house exactly five hours later. My new claim to fame may be in having circumnavigated Pentagon Island without stopping. Easy, when there is nothing else on the road and the lights keep changing.

Just time for a nap before watching a final day that shredded nerves but ultimately saw Derbyshire triumph by an innings and 113 runs after an excellent bowling display that matched a team display that was impossible to fault.

I don't think I have seen Zak Chappell bowl better this season than he did in this game. He has always been a willing workhorse and the workload has perhaps sometimes got the better of him, but here there was added hostility as he ran in hard, bristled with aggression and got his just reward with four wickets.

At the other end, Shoaib Bashir again showed his international credentials. While it appears likely that he will be overlooked for the first Test of the summer (according to reports) he is benefiting from the bowling that he gets in this Derbyshire attack, while the county reaps the rewards of him being in it. You don't often see spinners who offer similar aggression to their pace counterparts, but Bashir does and it is a welcome sight in a Derbyshire side that could often be accused of being too 'nice'.

Yet this was an all-round effort. Aitchison got the first wicket of the day, while Haydon went for one run an over, always challenging. There were times when an eventual win seemed unlikely, especially when McSweeney and Bartlett battled together for 25 overs, but you couldn't fault the effort, the focus and the desire to win. 

It was hard to believe that this was the same side that lost to Kent and Gloucestershire. The visitors were second in the table before this game, having played some very good cricket. Here, they were comprehensively outplayed from a Derbyshire side that was 'on it' from start to finish. 

McSweeney played well for Northamptonshire, even if at times seeming intent to use every bat in the dressing room. After a shaky start he looked a good player, but he will have been disappointed to have been 'strangled' down the leg side for the second time in the game.

Bartlett also battled hard. He was courted by Derbyshire before he signed a three-year deal in Northampton and might have had greater opportunity had he chosen differently, but he did a wonderful job for his side here in resisting for 175 balls.

Unexpected and final resistance came from George Scrimshaw, never someone with pretensions to batting feats, but twenty overs and several bowling changes later he was still there, playing straight and using his reach to resist what was thrown at him. As the final twenty overs ticked by, shots of the crowd showed the tension, likely replicated in myriad watching living rooms around the world. Were Derbyshire, as in the Worcestershire game, to be thwarted by a rearguard action? 

Was that a sharp chance put down by Guest off Bashir? Then one just past Jewell's outstretched hand at the other end. I messaged a good friend.
Eleven overs to go. Andersson is on, runs in, goes wide on the crease and arrows it in to the front pad of Scrimshaw. Leg before after 55 balls of resistance. Fair play, George, that was a fine effort. Peakfan's prophecy, or Psychic Steve? Either way, we'll take it and credit the skipper for the right call.

A terrific game of cricket which I loved seeing in the flesh for three days. I think I was probably warmer than most who were there on the fourth AND I had two dogs lying at my feet as I watched.

The first win of the season. Let's go down to Lord's and do it again. 

Middlesex are second now. You've got previous on second-placed teams, lads...😉

I look forward to your comments tonight. Get them coming in

PS to my Essex friends who I met in Derby, your journey home tonight will be on air!