Monday, 31 July 2023

Gloucestershire v Derbyshire Metro Bank Cup preview

There are two ways that Derbyshire can approach the Metro Bank Cup, that starts tomorrow.

In the absence of any second team cricket this month, they could offer opportunity to some of the promising younger players on the staff, like Potts, Harrison and Wagstaff. Or they could put out the strongest team from the players that are left, after The Hundred and injury has somewhat ravaged the squad.

I suspect that we will go with the latter, given that we won the Second Eleven T20 in fielding the club captain. Doing well in this competition is important, when looking back on the season as a whole.

The arrival of David Lloyd is welcome, especially so if he is able to bowl a few overs of medium pace. Derbyshire could then go with a side reminiscent of India when they won the World Cup in 1983, a combination of spin and medium pace with Sam Conners as our Kapil Dev..

I would like to see Lloyd at three, allowing Haider Ali to move to four. If he is fit to bowl a few overs, it would be possible to accommodate both Wood and Lamb, who themselves can offer spin options. By my calculation that would offer seven or eight bowlers and a very long batting lineup.

Reece
Came
Lloyd
Ali
Wood
Lamb
Guest
Dal
McKiernan
Thomson/Watt
Conners
Also in thirteen: Nick Potts

Gloucestershire are another county not overly affected by losses to that 'other' competition and they have recruited the Irish international Harry Tector to bolster their ranks.

Their 14-man squad:

Akhtar, Bracey, Charlesworth, Dent, Gohar, van Meekeren, Phillips, Singh Dale, Shaw, Smith, Price, Taylor, Tector, Wells

It should make for an excellent game on one of the most scenic grounds, Cheltenham, on the county circuit. I would like to think that Derbyshire have a good chance, both in the game and the competition overall.

Remember, the top sides from each group qualify for the semi-final, and second plays third from the other group to decide their opponents.

Can Derbyshire make at least top three? 

I think so, but it is down to them to prove me correct.

Talks available in the coming months

Following the death of my father, I have been spending more time travelling from our home to support Mum, who still lives at home on the Nottinghamshire/Derbyshire border.

That is likely to continue over the next few months and I have now managed to secure a flexi retirement with my work, so I will only be working two days a week.

I plan to retire at the end of September 2024 and at that point I will also retire from public speaking, having done many talks for cricket clubs and societies over the past few years.

Being down there more often affords opportunity to fit a few extra talks in over the Winter and Spring months, and I am happy to consider any offers that may be out there for negotiable fees. 

If you are involved in a cricket club or society who might be interested in stories of Derbyshire cricket, blogging, meeting heroes, being mistaken for Elton John and being offered players for Derbyshire by overseas agents, please get in touch.

peakfan36@yahoo.co.uk is the email address and I could notionally be available Thursday to Sunday to do a talk for you, other days possible with plenty of notice 

But once I retire from work, that's it. When it's gone, it's gone, as the old advert used to say. 

Hopefully I can catch up with a few blog regulars!

Book Review: Yorkshire Grit - The Life of Ray Illingworth by Mark Peel



I was always likely to enjoy a book on Ray Illingworth.

He never played for Derbyshire, of course, but he was an established part of the county cricket landscape when I first started watching the game in 1967. Indeed, when I bowled my early off spin, it was from a run up modelled on his, even if the results didn't bear comparison! 

In the opinion of many he was the brains of the great Yorkshire side that dominated that decade, the right-hand man to Brian Close, whose attention could sometimes wander, a solid middle order bat and an outstanding off spin bowler.

When Yorkshire astonishingly declined to give him the contract he wanted, he opted to move to Leicestershire, where he led them to the county championship and the highest levels the club has ever seen. Then he went back to Yorkshire, at a time when the club was in chaos and when he was 46, first as manager and then as captain, as the Boycott years caused strife on an unprecedented scale, even in that county.

He was England captain through a very successful period and won the Ashes in Australia in 1970-71. He is still regarded as one of the great captains and I will always remember him being one of the England successes in the unofficial but wonderfully entertaining tour by the Rest of the World in 1970, when the tour, originally scheduled by South Africa fell by the wayside.

He was a regular voice on the airwaves and his sage comments on the cricket commentary always added to the understanding and enjoyment of the viewer.

He later, of course, became Chairman of Selectors for the England national side. His manner could be brusque and abrupt, which didn't go down well with players of the time. Certainly the famous fall out with Devon Malcolm could have been avoided with a little more tact and consideration.

The book makes for a terrific read, given its subject and that the author is the prolific and consistent Mark Peel. It is the latest in a long line from Pitch Publishing, whose contribution to the genre is worthy of special note.

I would have liked a little more detail on the 1950s Yorkshire side - and there cannot be a county with greater discord over its history - but this is a minor point in an excellent read.

What was really nice to see was that Illingworth, after scaling the heights of the game as a player, captain, analyst and administrator was prepared to return to his roots and work as groundsman for his beloved Farsley club for many years. Few cricketers can have given back to the game as he did.

His knowledge of the game was such that I expect time spent in his company would have been memorable and result in your knowledge heightened by the end of it. His manner may not have been to all tastes, but his contribution to the game cannot be denied.

This is definitely one I would recommend.

Yorkshire Grit: The Ray Illingworth Story is written by Mark Peel and published by Pitch Publishing

David Lloyd joins for Metro Bank Cup

Excellent news from the Incora County Ground today, with David Lloyd joining Derbyshire for the duration of the Metro Bank Cup.

I wondered if that might happen, when I saw the Glamorgan squad announced for yesterday's friendly against Herefordshire and he wasn't in it.

It obviously offers considerable quality and depth to our batting, although I am unsure whether we will get the full experience. He only bowled a few overs of gentle off spin, rather than his usual medium pace, in the recently completed Championship match. It suggested that he wasn't yet fit to do so, which may well be the case.

He will certainly take his place in the side and the  question now is who he will replace from the likely first choice side that I named on Saturday.

It could be one of the seamers, or perhaps Matt Lamb, if he isn't fit to play. 

Either way it strengthens the side considerably. 

I am looking forward to seeing him.

Sunday, 30 July 2023

Lincolnshire friendly win

Harry Came continued his current golden run of form with an excellent century for Derbyshire today in a 6 wicket win over Lincolnshire.

He finished on an unbeaten 125 from 118 balls and saw Derbyshire through a tricky patch in which they lost three wickets in five overs in pursuit of a winning total of 251.

At 118-4 the game was in the balance, but captain Brooke Guest joined him in an unbroken stand of 133 in nineteen overs to ease the county to a comfortable win with seven overs to spare. Guest ended unbeaten on a run a ball 59, after earlier taking five catches in the home side's innings. Haider Ali contributed 38, earlier in the innings, though Tom Wood and Matt Lamb failed to get going.

Earlier four Lincolnshire batters managed to do so, including Jordan Cook, formerly on the staff at Nottinghamshire, who made an unbeaten 70 from 58 deliveries.

Sam Conners was the pick of the bowlers with 3-42, while Mattie McKiernan took 2-50 and Nick Potts 2-53.

It was a good workout for the side, who were again without Suranga Lakmal.

Friday, 28 July 2023

Metro Bank 50-over preview

Looking at the available players, I don't have any real concerns about Derbyshire scoring runs in the forthcoming Metro Bank 50-over competition.

The biggest issue would appear to be putting out an eleven that features seam bowling. With Chappell and Scrimshaw away and Aitchison out for the season, we only have Potts, Conners and Lakmal. I am not even sure we have the latter, so there is always the chance of a loan, I guess, if anyone out there has players available. 

With counties down to the bare bones, more likely is a move for someone from Scotland or Ireland, or a pro plucked from local leagues. I think it unlikely in our case, but expect something close to the following side:

Reece
Came
Guest
Ali
Lamb
Wood
Dal
Thomson/Watt
Potts
Conners
Lakmal

I'm hoping that the sight of Matt Lamb doing fielding drills during the Glamorgan game was indicative of his being fit to play, at least for now. McKiernan is another option and Wagstaff could come into the frame with any batting injuries.

The skipper? For me, it's between Dal, Reece and Guest. The former slight favourite, as I haven't thought of Luis looking for such a role. Guest is a good option, but when already keeping and batting three, captaincy would be a big ask on top of that.

There are counties far worse affected than Derbyshire with losses - those in our group and the missing players (at the last count!) are as follows:

Warwickshire – 9

Chris Woakes (Birmingham Phoenix), Moeen Ali (Birmingham Phoenix), Chris Benjamin (Birmingham Phoenix), Dan Mousley (Birmingham Phoenix), Henry Brookes (Birmingham Phoenix), Jacob Bethell (Birmingham Phoenix), Danny Briggs (Oval Invincibles), Alex Davies (Southern Brave), Sam Hain (Trent Rockets) 

Somerset – 9

Will Smeed (Birmingham Phoenix), Tom Lammonby (Manchester Originals), Tom Banton (Northern Superchargers), Craig Overton (Southern Brave), Tom Kohler-Cadmore (Trent Rockets), Lewis Gregory (Trent Rockets), Tom Abell (Welsh Fire), Roelof van der Merwe (Welsh Fire), Ben Green (Welsh Fire)

Durham – 8

Mark Wood (London Spirit), Ben Stokes (Northern Superchargers), Brydon Carse (Northern Superchargers), Matthew Potts (Northern Superchargers), Bas De Leede (Northern Superchargers), Ollie Robinson (Northern Superchargers), Nathan Sowter (Oval Invincibles), Ben Raine (Manchester Originals)

Derbyshire – 4

Wayne Madsen (Manchester Originals), Zak Chappell (Oval Invincibles), Leus du Plooy (Southern Brave), George Scrimshaw (Welsh Fire)

Sussex – 3

Ravi Bopara (London Spirit), Tymal Mills (Southern Brave), George Garton (Southern Brave) 

Worcestershire – 3

Josh Tongue (Manchester Originals), Mitchell Stanley (Manchester Originals), Adam Hose (Northern Superchargers)

Glamorgan – 2

Dan Douthwaite (Welsh Fire), Chris Cooke (Welsh Fire)

Gloucestershire – 2

Miles Hammond (Birmingham Phoenix), David Payne (Welsh Fire)

Northamptonshire – 2

Saif Zaib (Northern Superchargers), David Willey (Welsh Fire)

So Warwickshire, Somerset and Durham are effectively playing their second team. The surprise for me is that Glamorgan are only missing two players to Welsh Fire. I would have thought Kiran Carlson and Billy Root certain to be picked up, fine players both.

Anyway, let the show commence! The other competition will go its own sweet way with no interest from yours truly. I did note that Zaman Khan is a late pick for Manchester Originals, but he isn't available to us now anyway.

In closing what is a lengthy piece, I wanted to acknowledge the quick and indeed shrewd move for Mohammad Amir by Mickey Arthur. Especially when one considers that next year's T20 World Cup will be run at the same time as the Vitality Blast. 

By definition, the best players in the world will not be available, unless they have already retired from international cricket, like Amir. I would assume that Mark Watt will therefore be unavailable to Derbyshire next summer for that competition, held in the United States and West Indies.

That might focus recruitment for that competition on a potential fringe, or out of consideration spinner from overseas, as well as being a consideration for player releases.

Not easy, this cricket management malarkey!

Have a good weekend. Let's hope for a stream for the Lincolnshire game tomorrow, even a camera at one end...

Postscript: Guest has now been announced as captain, with Dal as vice-captain.

No complaints there, they seemed the most likely (only?) candidates and Brooke must feel he can handle the additional responsibilities.

Two good people in charge, so we are all set.

Derbyshire v Glamorgan day 4

Glamorgan 521-8

Derbyshire 318 and 360-0 (Reece 201*, Came 141*)

Match drawn

Time for a standing ovation tonight, as Luis Reece and Harry Came broke the Derbyshire first wicket record partnership of 333, which had previously been held by Reece and Billy Godleman.

By the time the captains shook hands, they had extended their partnership to an unbroken 360, with Reece having reached a career-best double century and Came also registering a career-highest score 

Only Chris Rogers has scored more runs in a match for Derbyshire than Reece did here, with both batters amply illustrating why they were offered and thankfully signed two year contracts this week.

Regardless of the flat nature of the pitch, this was a monumental effort by the two of them. You still have to make runs on a track that is very much in your favour and I have seen plenty of Derbyshire sides over the years who might have made a mess of the final day here.

They batted for four sessions and showed tremendous powers of concentration and fitness, as well as considerable style.

I wrote last night that Glamorgan's best chance of a win was to set Derbyshire a total and bowl us out as we went for that. Realistically, I think the odds would have been in Derbyshire's favour in that situation, because it was such a good wicket for batting, throughout.

One thing that today appeared to confirm is that David Lloyd, when he appears in the county colours next year, will need to revert to the middle order, from whence he came. Much of his career has been spent batting at  five or six and he only moved up the order in Glamorgan's hour of need. He has done well in that role, but the resident openers could not have done more to convince. Mickey Arthur that they are the answer to at least one of the problems ahead of next season.

They should be in prime form for the fifty over friendly on Sunday against Lincolnshire, and for the competition that follows it.

Sincere congratulations are due to both of them and I am delighted to report that pieces of the future. Derbyshire jigsaw have been firmly put into place.

I will be back tomorrow with a preview of the one-day cup, which for Derbyshire starts on Tuesday at Cheltenham.

Thursday, 27 July 2023

Derbyshire v Glamorgan day 3

Glamorgan 521-8 declared

Derbyshire 318 (Reece 131, Came 65, du Plooy 41, Van Der Gugten 3-94, Gorvin 2-46, McIlroy 2-48)

and 78-0 (Reece 53*, Came 25*)

Derbyshire trail by 125 runs

If David Lloyd was watching the Derbyshire batting today with a view to where he might fit in next year, he will have come to one conclusion.

The opening berths have solid incumbents, but there are plenty of options in the middle order.

There was no real logic to the Derbyshire first innings capitulation today. To reach 165 with no wickets down, but then be bowled out for 318 was massively disappointing.

Luis Reece made an excellent century, full of the strokes that have become his trademark when in best form, while Harry Came lent dogged but crucial support. The two of them looked to have set Derbyshire up to comfortably match the first innings total of Glamorgan. Yet forty overs later they were all out.

I don't look at the visiting attack in fear. There are some good bowlers and Gorvin impressed me today by attacking the stumps and getting the ball to swing. They put the ball in the right areas and simply waited for the Derbyshire batters to make mistakes. Which they did, frequently.

It was anaemic fare. A succession of players dangling their bats out, or making rash attempts at sweeping, topped off with a farcical run out of the last man, who appeared to be dreaming when called for a single. They were not in some cases, to be perfectly honest, the innings of players who might be playing for their futures.

Reece and Came set a standard the others failed to match. Luis was back to his best, which you can always tell by his foot movement, while Harry is my kind of opener - play straight, take no risks but put away the bad ball. He doesn't get fazed by not scoring for a while and looks a proper player.

I stand by my assertion but there is very little in the pitch, which was emphasised by Reece and Came batting with minimal alarms - again - to the close. Yet the visitors could still win this game tomorrow if Derbyshire bat as poorly as they largely did today. 

Truth be told, I thought their hopes of winning might have been better served by batting again and setting Derbyshire a target on the last day. The bowlers will have been tired after 105 overs in the field and I thought it asked a lot of them to go out and do it all again.

Maybe it will ultimately be successful, but I wouldn't have made that decision.

In closing tonight, congratulations to Leus du Plooy, who passed the thousand run mark  for the season in the course of his innings, doing so in the second least number of innings in the club's history. Only Shan Masood, last year, has done it quicker.

Hopefully he doesn't have to add too many more to save this game tomorrow.

Wednesday, 26 July 2023

Derbyshire v Glamorgan day 2

Glamorgan 521-8 Dec

Derbyshire 95-0 (Reece 52*, Came 37*)

Derbyshire trail by 426 runs

Any concerns that Derbyshire might fall apart in reply to a 500 and counting Glamorgan total were allayed this afternoon, by a professional, common sense reply by Harry Came and Luis Reece.

They had added an unbroken 95 for the first wicket, before rain ruled out any further play for the day. They are still 426 runs behind the Welsh county, but I find it hard to believe that they could bowl us out twice on this wicket.

They bowled with far greater discipline than we managed and there were less opportunities for the Derbyshire batters to let the ball go. Equally, there were very few deliveries that moved or discomforted the two openers and it is hard to think that will change markedly tomorrow.

Both offered sound technique and common sense, eschewing most risks. The biggest scare was an inside edge to fine leg by Reece, which narrowly missed the stumps a second time as he came back for a second run.

All of the Glamorgan batters made double figures, including number ten Swepson, who is either the best in that position in the country or a strong indicator of a blameless track.

The forecasts that I have seen suggest there won't be much cricket tomorrow morning, but they may get onto the pitch in the afternoon. Either way, it is hard to see anything other than a draw in this fixture and it will not live long in the memory.

Tuesday, 25 July 2023

Derbyshire v Glamorgan day one

Glamorgan 408-6 (Ingram 136, ul-Hassan 69, Carlson 57, Root 52 Reece 2-64, Chappell 2-70)

v Derbyshire

When I look back on what is now 56 years of watching Derbyshire play cricket, the highlight of that period was definitely the years when Kim Barnett was captain.

It wasn't the time that I saw as much cricket, because I was in Scotland at that stage and only able to go to games occasionally. I didn't drive, so I got the train down to my parents and once there Dad and I would go to a few days, especially when I was single and with no attachments and commitments to worry about.

The thing was, you were guaranteed a really good day at the cricket. Regardless of whether we did well or not, there was a great battle between bat and ball on sporting wickets. If you were good enough to score runs, you could make them. If you were a good bowler, there was something there for you. Opponents hated coming to Derby, because they knew our battery of seamers and quick bowlers would make life very difficult and it would be very much to the detriment of their average. 

They moaned about it, but if they won the toss and put Derbyshire in, their arguments didn't really hold up when Kim Barnett, Chris Adams or John Morris had scored almost a century or more before lunch. We backed our players to be better than the opposition and often they delivered.

Fast forward forty years and I am finding it very dull. The cricket remains of a good standard, but it is all fine and dandy if you want to watch a runfest. You just know that in the ordinary run of things there will be two large first innings totals, a bit of rain and no chance to generate a positive result. Which will likely happen in the current game and is why we haven't won a four-day game at Derby since 2019. It is all well and good for 20- over cricket, when people want to see fours and sixes, but not remotely enjoyable for the longer format.

Here's a question for you, asked of me by a friend, earlier today. Do you think the current points system is conducive to entertaining cricket? What we find happening is that each side bats for maximum bonus points, in the hope they can ultimately win the game (16 points) take another five for their batting after making 450 and then bowl out the other side for the final three and a maximum of 24 from the game.

Would it not be more entertaining if the spoils for winning the game were 24 points, regardless of how many runs you made in the first innings? The best games of cricket are where 200 plays 200 through the game and the best side comes out on top. So if you were bowled out for 249 but went on to win the game, you reaped the reward of the maximum points, supporters enjoyed a fine game and groundstaff were encouraged to produce result pitches.

If team A makes 450 plus, team B sets its stall out to do the same and suddenly you are in the evening session of day three with not a lot happening. 

Yet looking around the country, most clubs have wickets that are more sporting. Sixteen wickets went down today at Southampton, twenty-two at Edgbaston, both of them international grounds.

So why can't we? I think it is a justifiable question for the forthcoming members forum. This isn't a go at Neil Godrich, a very good groundsman, but a question for the head of cricket who is presumably requesting anodyne tracks for batting on.

Today made for hard viewing. So much so that I went out to clean two cars and then took the dogs for a walk, because what was happening was patently clear after the first hour of the day. If Mohammad Amir was watching the ball do very little all day from home, he would realise that he is in for some very hard work, unless something is done.

David Lloyd looked like the sort of player we will enjoy watching, albeit in a brief display, but then Colin Ingram and Zain-ul-Hassan batted very well, the former making a classy hundred, the latter a more circumspect maiden half century.

When both were eventually dismissed, Root and Carlson pushed the score along and Glamorgan went comfortably past 400 before the end of the day's play.

Zak Chappell was the pick of the bowlers, but there was little joy to be had. Some of it was pretty awful and I felt sorry for Brooke Guest, who had 25 byes against his name at the end of the day, with little that he could do about most of them.

There was something rather unedifying about watching George Scrimshaw, on the first day of a championship game, bowling short with no slips and three men on the leg side boundary.

It spoke volumes for the kind of day and the kind of wicket we have, yet again.

While your opinion may be different if you are watching the action from Wales, I suspect that most people will have forgotten today's action very quickly.

Which is all rather sad really.

Postscript: hopefully Anuj Dal is OK after an awkward fall in his delivery stride near the end of the day. I am not sure if it is his knee or his ankle, but as the likely captain for the fifty over competition, we can scarce afford to lose him.

Mohammad Amir signs for first half of 2024!


Well, the news was true - at least to some extent.

Mohammad Amir has been announced as one of Derbyshire's overseas players for next season. He will play the first half of the summer, including red ball and T20 cricket.

It is quite a coup. He is a very special cricketer, combining pace and swing to good effect, often devastating if you are at the other end with a bat in your hand. At 31 he should be in his prime, hasn't been flogged into the ground and is certainly a player very much in demand, for T20 cricket especially, around the globe.

I have no interest in his earlier indiscretions. Most people make mistakes in their younger days and Amir paid for his. He is now a married man with a family and from all the reports I have read appears to want to settle down in this country.

So it could still be that the player continues to play for us thereafter as a local, as a number of media outlets were reporting over the weekend. On the face of it, this move allows time for him to qualify, while retaining his services for all cricket, potentially in the medium term.

That is for another time, but one assumes that his signing means that Zaman Khan will not be returning. This would allow the focus to move to another area of need, perhaps a spin bowling all rounder. Although Amir and Zaman opening the bowling would indeed be a worthy spectacle...

I expect there to be announcements of more comings and goings in the coming weeks. On the face of it, if we assume David Lloyd is a replacement for Billy Godleman and Pat Brown for (I suspect) George Scrimshaw, Amir is a partial replacement for Suranga Lakmal and there is then the money for du Plooy and any other departures nominally in the budget, as well as anything that can be raised from off-field activities.

The loss of du Plooy is a big one, probably one that Mickey Arthur was neither wanting nor expecting. But he said on Radio Derby last night that a 'top batter' was pretty much there

Change is needed and it is important that, as supporters, we sit back, watch what happens and then get behind the Head of Cricket and his squad.

Welcome to Derbyshire, Mohammad. We all know there is nothing like the sight of a world class fast bowler running in.

In this fella we have secured one.

Here he is in action - hopefully we support him better in the field!

Monday, 24 July 2023

Derbyshire Glamorgan preview

Mickey Arthur has named a 13 man squad for the game against Glamorgan that starts at the Incora County Ground tomorrow.

Tom Wood comes into the squad in place of Wayne Madsen and looks likely to take his place in the side. The final place would appear to be between George Scrimshaw and Nick Potts and I suspect the former may get the nod this time. That would leave the following side:

Came, Reece, Guest, Wood, du Plooy, Ali, Dal, Thomson, Chappell, Conners, Scrimshaw (Wagstaff, Potts also in squad)

Our visitors are one of five sides in the mix for promotion and will be keen to get a result in some way from this game. 

They will be captained by David Lloyd, who, in the light of today's news on Leus du Plooy, I expect will be the Derbyshire captain next year.

Their squad:

Lloyd, Carlson, Root, Harris, Gorvin, Northeast, Morris, Swepson, ul Hassan, McIlroy, Ingram, Cooke, Van Der Gugten, Lewis

Although they have had a solid season, only one win so far highlights the issue they have had in bowling sides out. They have a good batting side, like Derbyshire, but with rain forecast on most if not all of the days, it is hard to see past another draw here.

Especially on Derby wickets that have hardly been conducive to batting collapses...

As always, I would appreciate your thoughts!

Madsen watching

I had hoped to pop through to Edinburgh today, to see Wayne Madsen v Mark Watt. A chat with my boss regarding my return to work put the kybosh on that, but I watched the stream afterwards.

Wayne batted very well and held a blinding catch yesterday, as his Italian side beat Jersey. It was a typically breezy fifty, ended only by an excellent catch on the boundary, while he also held a catch that a man twenty years younger would have enjoyed and celebrated.

Today was a different story, against the Scottish team which was very impressive. He was out third ball, playing too soon and hitting to mid on, after dropping a catch during the early part of the Scots innings that he would hold the other 99 times in a hundred.

It illustrated again what a great leveller cricket is. Scotland steamrollered the Italy side that looked decent on paper. Opening bat Ollie Hairs made a memorable and bucolic century, that belied his previous average of 13 in the format, but the style of the innings, with 98% of his shots pulled or slogged through midwicket, suggested it might just be one of those days when it all went right.

Brandon McMullen again looked a class act, scoring 96 and showing himself as a team player when caught out on the boundary in the penultimate over. Some might have nudged a single to retain strike and almost guarantee it in the last over, but it didn't detract from a very fine innings of 96 from 50 balls

Hairs will rightly get the headlines, but the manner of the runs didn't suggest he would do that against a higher level of opposition. McMullen, with reverse sweeps, powerful drives and rapier like cuts, looked the talent that he undoubtedly is.

It does need to be said, however, that aside from Grant Stewart of Kent, the Italian bowling was very ordinary. His four overs for 22 were excellent 8n a total of 245-2, akin to the figures of George Scrimshaw at Taunton in the carnage of last season.

For Scotland there will be tougher matches, for sure.  Hopefully Wayne gets a chance to shine later in the tournament.

du Plooy departure confirmed

With it effectively being announced on the commentary during the last county championship match, it seemed inevitable that the departure of Leus du Plooy to Middlesex would be confirmed sometime this week.

No real surprise then, when it was announced this morning.

There is always sadness with the departure of a player who has served the county well. Leus has done that and more.

Nor can anyone blame him for going. A 5-year deal is impossible to turn down in a short career and he will no doubt have been handsomely rewarded for his signature.

Nor can Derbyshire be blamed. They will have made the best offer possible to retain a player who is capable of winning matches. Yet the reality is that his chances of playing international cricket have increased by moving to the 'home of cricket'. He will be seen and his efforts commented on far more, even if it seems likely at this stage that he has swapped one second division side for another.

I wish him well. He has given good value to the club and its supporters since he arrived in 2019. His ability to take the best of bowlers apart will be remembered and still enjoyed, even if from a distance 

It does challenge the assertion of Mickey Arthur that Derbyshire will be the 'county of choice', but perhaps a greater gauge of the accuracy of that statement will be in how the county go about replacing him. Money will always talk, and some have more of it than others.

For many supporters, including myself, the club is all. The players, regardless of the sport, are only transient, albeit of varying longevity.

But they are remembered. Many of us will recall plenty of times when Leus looked a million dollars and one of the best batters ever to wear the county colours.

Which I think he has been. While there were times when his footwork, early in the innings, could be ponderous, there were plenty of others when the boundary looked way too small and the fielders about half a dozen short.

I wish him the very best in his future endeavours.

Sunday, 23 July 2023

Random weekend thoughts

I don't think it will be long now before we hear of departures from Derbyshire. 

With players coming in, there have to be others going out and I would expect news to break this week of the departure of Leus du Plooy. While we may hang on in some parts to lingering hopes he will stay, it seems like the Middlesex move is a done deal. 

I think his replacement is already at the club. Matt Lamb has had a frustrating season with back issues and I understand surgery is possible for the close season. If he can get back to fitness he is a very good, classy and powerful middle order bat. It is unrealistic to expect the weight of runs made by Leus this year, but as a solid bat, useful leg spinner and safe pair of hands he has much to offer next season and beyond.

It wouldn't surprise me if Worcestershire made a big play for George Scrimshaw, who came up through their academy system. Having lost three seam bowlers so far, they will have money to spend and there won't be many with the potential that big George has. He may not want to play all formats, of course and may not want to return to a club that released him after a run of injuries, but it would surprise me if he was at the club next year. Not least because when Pat Brown signed the other seamers at the club were mentioned in the press release, but not George.

Reading too much into it? We will see.

As for developmental Derbyshire, I was pleased to read in the week that both Yousaf bin Naeem and Harry Moore have impressed in the ECB Super Fours. 

Yousaf, from the video clips, seems a diminutive but organised player who times the ball very well. He is only just 17, so the first eleven is likely beyond him right now, but he is one to watch, for sure. 

So too is Harry, whose father was an outstanding bowler for many years in local cricket. Tall and slim, he is still only 16 but seems to have something, not least control of the ball, as he seems to return economical figures in whatever class of cricket he plays.

Next, after giving it thought I wouldn't be too upset if Haider Ali was to return next year.

Let's be honest, he was thrown in at the deep end by being asked to open, but since dropping to his normal middle order role has looked more at home. He has almost 800 runs in all cricket with plenty to add, having done better in the four-day game than Azhar Ali at Worcestershire, a very experienced player. He also did better than Shan Masood in the T20, so they aren't bad benchmarks.

He is 22, playing in England for the first time and has conducted himself impeccably. He has held some blinding catches and fielded very well. Yes, he has given his wicket away a few times, but how many perfectly crafted 22 year olds are there in any career?

There are plenty of worse options out there. I still feel a spin bowling all rounder would be my first pick, because a top seven of Lloyd, Came, Guest, Madsen, Lamb, Reece and Dal looks pretty solid, as well as containing four bowlers.

That's why the Samit Patel story makes some sense, but I would be surprised if it was much more than an agent playing games.

He is out of contract at Nottinghamshire and they will be considering options. What they would want least is for him to ship up down the road and do well, so his agent may be playing canny and trying for another, improved deal at the club he has served so well.

Which could rebound, of course...

But there is certainly plenty to occupy our thoughts right now!

Saturday, 22 July 2023

Breaking news from The Telegraph

'The former Pakistan fast bowler Mohammad Amir is set to join Derbyshire as a local player next season.

Amir, 31, retired from international cricket in 2020 and is seeking British citizenship – his wife is a British citizen – ahead of signing a deal with Derbyshire.

Amir earned infamy in 2010 as an 18-year-old when he was one of two bowlers (the other being the more experienced Mohammad Asif) to deliberately bowl no-balls during a Test tour of England.

That led to Amir being banned for five years by the International Cricket Council and serving half of a six-month custodial sentence in young offenders institutes in Feltham and Dorset. Asif and the captain Salman Butt were also jailed and handed bans by the ICC.

Amir returned to international cricket in 2016, but retired during the pandemic. Since, he has been a travelling freelancer, playing in Pakistan, England, Bangladesh and the Caribbean. At times, he was a world-class player in all three formats, picking up 259 wickets for Pakistan, including 119 in Tests.

Amir has experience of playing county cricket, mainly for Essex, but also Gloucestershire. He also played the first season of the Hundred for Lord’s-based London Spirit. If he becomes a British citizen, he would be able to play in the Hundred as a local, too.

Derbyshire have an unusual link with Pakistan as their head coach, Mickey Arthur, is also director of cricket for Pakistan, mainly operating remotely in the English season. South African Arthur has been full-time head coach of four countries, including Pakistan when Amir was a key member of their attack been 2016 and 2019.

Arthur is looking to rebuild Derbyshire, who regularly find themselves in the lower reaches of the County Championship. He has signed Pat Brown from Worcestershire and is also thought to be keen on picking up the former England all-rounder Samit Patel from Nottinghamshire. However, Derbyshire could lose their captain Leus du Plooy, whose suitors include Middlesex.'

All very interesting! Amir made mistakes as a young man, but has paid for them and is a very good cricketer. 

Were he to play as a local, that is a serious statement of intent and would allow overseas recruitment too.

Patel is interesting too. He probably has a couple of good years in him and, although no athlete, is a very good cricketer who could and should play more than T20, which is all he gets at Trent Bridge.

Interesting. Very interesting!

But let's see what develops

Thanks to Dean for alerting me to this story.

.


Derbyshire v Durham day 4

There isn't much to say about today, other than that the expected result happened.

I suspect that even without the rain the result would have been the same. Any realistic hope of Durham taking the win points on this surface would have been in chasing a total on the final afternoon.

On a pitch which didn't offer a great deal to bowlers, bowling Derbyshire out was ambitious, as a plan.

You would have to say that Derbyshire acquitted themselves well against the team that is top of the table. There didn't appear that much between the sides and from that alone, considering the players that were missing, Derbyshire can take a lot of heart.

Yet the search for that first win goes on.

Friday, 21 July 2023

Derbyshire v. Durham day 3

Derbyshire 443 and 89-0 (Reece 54*, Came 27*)

Durham 575 (Carse 80, Potts 64, Conners 5-115)

Derbyshire trail by 43 runs

A five wicket haul for Sam Conners and an unbeaten half century for Luis Reece were the highlights of the third day at Derby today.

Yet the game is destined for what I can only call a bore draw, with rain forecast for much of tomorrow.

Play was halted for a while while a mysterious object was removed from the wicket. It turned out to be an old eyelet from the covers, but to be quite honest, an unexploded World War II bomb wouldn't have made much of a difference.

The wickets at Derby are simply too good, certainly for batters. Four day cricket is all well and good, but these tracks do no one any favours, certainly not a home side trying to get their first four day win at the ground since 2019. I don't think it would make a great deal of difference if we signed prime time Michael Holding and Les Jackson over the winter, unless something is done to make the battle between bat and ball more even.

If winning four-day cricket is not our raison d'etre and we just want to be a team that is hard to beat, that's fine. But realistically, we will not mount a challenge to be promoted in this format unless the wickets are more conducive to results being achieved. As a spectacle it is pretty dull.

I switched over in the afternoon and watched Scotland v Jersey on BBC iPlayer. Jersey fielded brilliantly and had the Scots in a spot of bother, before an unbeaten 31 from Mark Watt took them to 149-7.

He then opened with a wicket maiden en route to figures of 4-21 as the home side won without too many alarms.

I bet he had more fun bowling at The Grange than he would have had at Derby today...

Thursday, 20 July 2023

Derbyshire v. Durham day 2

Derbyshire 443 (Guest 197, Borthwick 4-25, Raine 3-80)

Durham 364-4 (Lees 171, Bedingham 138, Conners 3-62)

Durham trail by 79 runs

The same old issue came back to bite Derbyshire at the Incora County Ground today. Having posted a respectable first innings score, our own attack was unable to find the requisite line and length against two very good opposition batters, who punished them severely.

Alex Lees has been a perennial thorn in Derbyshire sides since his Yorkshire days and today added another century to his excellent record against us. Meanwhile, at the other end David Bedingham highlighted his credentials with a beautiful innings. He really is a player of great class, eminently capable of playing international cricket and no doubt coveted by South African selectors.

The two of them put Derbyshire's attack to the sword, with only Sam Conners coming out of the day with his reputation intact. He took three of the four wickets to fall and bowled well. Indeed, when he took two early it looked like being a day of upset, but that partnership of 305 between the two Durham batters changed the game.

Both had gone before the close, to give Derbyshire something ahead of tomorrow, but the dangerous Pretorius was looking good at the close, with the visitors only 79 runs behind.

Well as they played, they were given too many loose deliveries and too much width. Contrast that with Ben Raine, who was again in the wickets because he makes batters play. It is simple, old-fashioned but unsurprisingly effective.

Earlier, Brooke Guest took his innings to 197, the second highest ever by a Derbyshire wicket keeper, before holing out on the boundary. It was a magnificent knock and the morning session was also enlivened by tonkage of high quality by Sam Conners. 

I don't understand the modern fixation with bowling short at tailenders, especially one who plays the pull and hook well, like Conners. 

Indeed, one over from Carse consisted of six short balls to he and Guest, which must have raised a critical brow, Roger Moore-style, from George Scrimshaw, after the events at Hove.

I still feel that for Derbyshire to really push on next year we need to get Derby wickets more like Chesterfield ones. They are very good for batting and I hope that Pat Brown was given assurances that they will be different when he comes next season. Well as Derbyshire batted, they could easily be 150 to 200 behind on first innings by this time tomorrow, then battling against defeat.

Speaking of next season, I watched David Lloyd play a lovely innings for Glamorgan today, which confirmed that he will be a fine asset to us and a big loss for the Welsh county.

I look forward to him batting in similar style in our colours.

Wednesday, 19 July 2023

Derbyshire v. Durham day one

Derbyshire 317-6 (Guest 145*, Madsen 62, Ali 38, Borthwick 2-12, Raine 2-51, Potts 2-57)

v Durham

A magnificent, unbeaten, career best century by Brooke Guest steered Derbyshire to a position slightly in the ascendancy at the end of the first day at Derby.

The ball did something for the bowlers all day, with movement off the pitch for seam and spin alike. Ben Raine especially was a handful and if I could import any non-international county player into this Derbyshire side, he would likely be in the mix. He is a very good, accurate and probing bowler, worth his weight in gold to Durham.

It was hard going for the openers, as Potts also bowled well early. Luis Reece never looked comfortable, but looking ahead to next year I see him as an all rounder down the order. Harry Came was not at his most fluent, but the value of occupying the crease can never be underestimated in this form of the game. Much as Paul Borrington went under the radar when we won this division in 2012, seeing the shine off the ball and putting overs into the legs of the bowlers, so Harry did here. 

He went before lunch, but could do little about the ball that bowled him, an absolute peach by Potts. Madsen came in and could easily have been dismissed 3 or 4 times himself before the interval, but survived.

After lunch it was a different story. He batted well, with trademark strokes, but the day was primarily about Guest, who went to a second successive century with a sweep. There were strokes all around the wicket and he really is a player to enjoy when in this kind of form. His cover driving today was a joy to behold.

The running was good too and Derbyshire were completely on top when Ali, after playing with restraint and considerable class, had a brain freeze, walked out of his crease and was stumped. It was the second time this season that he has been dismissed in such a fashion, once being unfortunate, twice being careless, at best.

Then du Plooy hit a poor ball from Borthwick straight to cover and the game was even. I felt sorry for Parkinson at this point, who had bowled pretty well without success, yet saw the part time legspin of his captain take two wickets that were barely deserved. Borthwick's elevated arm after every delivery suggests he has bowled a grenade, rather than cricket ball, but he did a job for his side on this occasion.

Dal helped to steer the score towards calmer waters, before he lost his off bail to another fine delivery, this time by Raine. Yet Thomson batted with good common sense until the close, when Guest was one blow from 150.

The Derbyshire wicket keeper is a very special cricketer. Despite a slow start to the season with the bat, he now averages 40 and is a massively important player in this side.

Today, not for the first time, I don't know what we would have done without him. Only Bill Storer, with twelve, has made more centuries as wicket keeper for Derbyshire. Brooke has seven and will likely forge onwards to top that list in the years ahead.

All in all it was a very good, enjoyable day's cricket. Hopefully we can add more runs tomorrow, then our bowlers can follow up with Raine-like discipline in due course.

Tuesday, 18 July 2023

Derbyshire v Durham preview

Mickey Arthur has named a 14 man squad for the county championship game that starts against Durham tomorrow at the Incora County Ground.

There is no Suranga Lakmal, this time with a groin strain, but Zak Chappell is back to lead the attack with Sam Conners. I would expect George Scrimshaw to play too, after taking his first five-wicket haul in the last match. Wayne Madsen is in the squad, but will miss the next game on international duty for Italy 

Likely team

Reece, Came, Guest, Madsen, du Plooy, Ali, Dal, Thomson, Chappell, Scrimshaw, Conners (Potts, Wood, Wagstaff in squad)

Durham are top of the table and are a very good side. Ben Raine has taken over the mantle of Chris Rushworth and is a very good bowler, as are Matt Potts and Brydon Carse. South African all rounder Migael Pretorius is in the squad of thirteeen

Their squad:

Borthwick, Bedingham, Carse, Clarke, de Leede, Drissell, Jones, Lees, Parkinson, Potts, Pretorius, Raine, Robinson

Clarke and Drissell likely to miss out for me

It will be a tough game, but the main difference between the two sides is that Durham have strung together total team performances, In that they have batted well then followed it up by bowling as a unit. We haven't, so the table doesn't lie.

The first 3 days look like the weather should not be a problem, but there is some rain about on day 4. Both sides will look to press on and it will be interesting to compare Derbyshire's performance with the team that has looked the best in the division this year.

I think we are good enough to get a draw, but with missing bowlers the win may be beyond us.

What do you think?


Reece and Came sign new deals

More good news coming from the Incora County Ground this morning, with Harry Came and Luis Reece announced as both having signed new two-year contracts.

I was a little worried for Luis, because his statistics have fallen over the past couple of years. He isn't scoring as prolifically, nor as quickly as he was when he was selected in the first year of the new competition. 

He has done okay in four-day cricket, where most of his runs have come when he was batting down the order. Perhaps that is his niche from now on, an experienced bat offering depth against the second new ball if we do well, perhaps being moved up against the swinging ball if things are more challenging.

He remains a wicket taker in the longer form, but I hope he can find the line and length to become an option in the shorter forms of the game. There are plenty of nagging bowlers at medium pace doing well in the Vitality Blast and Luis, offering a more rare left arm variant, has it in him to be as good as any of them. Yet he was barely used this year and went for plenty when he was, so there is something to work on there. So too on his scoring rate in twenty-over cricket, when a quick start can often dictate the course of the game. It has declined over the last three years, but the talent is there to see it return to former glories.

Let's face it, when Mickey Arthur was looking around to see who could do that all rounder role better, there was no one in the list that I published yesterday who would have guaranteed that, as well as offering important variation.

As for Harry Came, he has come on in leaps and bounds over the past season and a half. There was a time when I was on the point of dismissing him as merely a top order slogger. Yet in the second half of last season, elevated to opening the batting, he played some fine innings. He has continued to do that this year, recording his maiden century in the county championship, as well as producing some fine knocks when he was eventually asked to open in the Vitality Blast.

He possesses a sound defence and a good range of shots, especially strong on the pull and hook. He is compact, organised and looks set for a long county career.

For me, today's news suggests that Lloyd, Came and Reece will be our opening options next season and perhaps there will be a change of emphasis with overseas recruitment.

An attack leader would be one very good option, but I also hope that Mickey Arthur can identify a spin bowling all rounder as another option. There are plenty such players in Pakistan, which is where I expect us to recruit from, because the Head of Cricket can incentivise the position, effectively saying 'come over, impress me, force yourself into my thoughts for the national side'.

Interesting times like ahead. 

I suspect 2024 will be very much worth watching.

To Luis and Harry, well done! We look forward to watching your efforts at least until the end of 2025.

Monday, 17 July 2023

Pat Brown signing confirmed


You have to be pleased with today's news that Derbyshire have confirmed rumours and the signing of England seam bowler Pat Brown from Worcestershire.

He is a very good cricketer. At 24 he is not remotely close to his peak, but he has the opportunity to develop alongside a talented, equally young attack. 

While he has made his name as a 20 over player, he is keen to play more cricket in the longer formats. He crossed my mind earlier in the season, when he bowled very well for the Worcestershire second team against that of Derbyshire in a 4-day game, looking to be far too good a player to languish in second team cricket.

A three-year deal is perfect, giving security to both player and club. He is an outstanding fielder and will obviously be a strong addition to the club's seam bowling strength.

Should we read anything into the club's publicity regarding the signing, where Sam Conners, Ben Aitchison, Zak Chappell and Nick Potts were mentioned but George Scrimshaw wasn't? I have previously written that I would be surprised if George was at the club next season, because I don't think the club can justify format specialists on full contracts. Notwithstanding his five wickets against Sussex last week, my gut feeling is that George sees himself as a short format player to preserve and extend his career. 

Time will tell on that, but for Mickey Arthur to transform the fortunes of the county, as he said he planned to do, there need to be changes and there will be casualties of that change.

What is clear is that he is working quickly to bring in the players he most wants at the club, those with experience and a winning mentality.

David Lloyd was a solid recruit whose value might be better seen when the cricket starts next year. I suspect that he will be captain and his experience and cricketing nous will be of great value to the club.

Pat Brown is the next piece in the jigsaw. It gives Derbyshire a crop of talented young bowlers. If we can get a genuine attack leader, one of experience who can translate that into wickets on the field, that will make us a much stronger side.

Good work. I approve.

Sunday, 16 July 2023

Interesting...

This was sent to me yesterday and I thought it might be of interest to you. I would credit who did the work but don't know who it was.

Players out of contract at the end of this year and next: not totally accurate and there are one or two anomalies I have spotted. 

Anyone in there of (realistic) interest? Apologies that the images result in some duplication.
Although Surrey have plenty out of contract, I agree that fee will leave. 

Most interesting to me? Tom Taylor  - could he be persuaded back to Derbyshire? Rob Jones at Lancashire, Amar Virdi at Surrey...I have always thought Will Fraine at Yorkshire had something and is still young enough to develop. Lewis Goldsworthy at Somerset needs regular cricket and is a good all rounder.

I also rate Delroy Rawlins, who has left Sussex by mutual consent and is especially a very good one day player. I suspect he will not lack offers down south, however.

Ethan Brookes at Warwickshire is another with a lot of all round talent. He trialled at Derbyshire a couple of weeks back, but whether he impressed is anyone's guess. One would expect Ian Bell to be well aware of his merits.

But of course, as we know ourselves, they don't have to be out of contract in some cases...

It crossed my mind yesterday what our side might be like with Critchley, Whiteley, Slater and Taylor in it, not to mention Parkinson.

So it is not accurate to say that Derbyshire don't produce young players. 

We have a problem in retaining them, in some cases.

Thursday, 13 July 2023

Sussex v. Derbyshire day 4

Derbyshire made a remarkable attempt on the highest successful run chase in the club's history today, but eventually called time on the pursuit.

I felt it was a tall order and a very cautious declaration by the home side and said so on Twitter. They were obviously wary of the powerful Derbyshire middle order and it nearly managed to secure a remarkable win. Yet with no fielding restrictions in four day cricket and no penalty on leg side wides, finding and clearing the boundary became increasingly difficult as Sussex latterly had everyone on the boundary, bar for bowler and wicket keeper.

It was the knowledge of such things that caused me to declare the run chase unlikely, but Derbyshire can be proud of their efforts on the last day.

Leus du Plooy was again magnificent. Had he stayed for another two or three overs, the game would have been won. It was a superb century, scored at better than a run a ball and this season he has elevated himself from a very good player to one of international class.

In my humble opinion, the two best uncapped  batters  outside the England team are Sam Hain and the Derbyshire captain. It will be interesting to see which selectors try for his services first, as he could easily play for his native South Africa and would certainly enhance their side. That would of course limit his availability for a county side, who would have to recruit him as an overseas player. Yet in his form this season, most would consider that a very good move.

Madsen and du Plooy gave Derbyshire impetus, but it was during the partnership with Haider Ali that they took the initiative. The Pakistan player was in brilliant touch and batting gets little better than the partnership between the two, which added 145 in 20 overs. The timing and placement was a joy to behold and it was only when Ali was well held by Haines at mid off that the game changed.

Dal gave good support, but it was clear that the boundaries had to come from the captain, who perished trying to hit another six, to go with the three he already had. Ali managed four, but thereafter, with the fielders back, the rate got too high.

At the end of it all, it made for an engrossing final day, but the wait for four day victory goes on.

Magnificent entertainment though!

In other news, a century from Mitch Wagstaff and a half century from Yousaf Bin Naeem helped the second eleven to victory by three wickets over Nottinghamshire at Belper.

Good to see two young lads from our academy doing well. I hope and expect Mitch will get an opportunity to shine in the Royal London Cup

Wednesday, 12 July 2023

Sussex v. Derbyshire day 3

It was another day when I didn't see much of the cricket, but Derbyshire made a good fist of the first two sessions, before Sussex fought back in the evening.

What was your take on the day? And on George Scrimshaw being banned from bowling for the rest of the innings?

I should be home for lunch tomorrow, so I should see what will hopefully be an exciting afternoon run chase.

Predictions?

Tuesday, 11 July 2023

Sussex v Derbyshire day 2

Sussex 402 (Clark 96, Haines 86, Hudson-Prentice 63*, Carter 56, Scrimshaw 5-49)

Derbyshire 212-3 (Guest 80*, Madsen 51, du Plooy 32*)

Derbyshire trail by 190 runs

A better day for Derbyshire today, with George Scrimshaw blowing away the Sussex tail to take a maiden five-wicket haul, then the Derbyshire batters doing a good job to work a promising position by the close.

After Harry Came and Luis Reece fell, Brooke Guest, partnered in turn by Wayne Madsen and Leus du Plooy took Derbyhire to 212-3 in reply to Sussex' 402 all out.

It sets the game up nicely and there could be a good finish if the weather allows it.

Certainly better prospects than looked likely at lunch yesterday...

Monday, 10 July 2023

Sussex v Derbyshire day 1

I must confess to not seeing any of today's play, as I was travelling to see Mum and spent the day doing stuff for her.

It sounded like a pretty awful morning session, especially after winning the toss and choosing to bowl.

A decent come back in the afternoon in the evening, but with Fynn Hudson-Prentice still at the crease, Sussex could do more damage tomorrow morning.

Please let me know what you thought of the day in the usual manner. Hopefully tomorrow might be less manic and I might be able to watch some of it myself.

Fingers crossed our batters make a decent fist of things.

Always assuming that the weather allows them to do so...

Sunday, 9 July 2023

Sussex v. Derbyshire preview

Back to the red ball tomorrow, as Derbyshire travel down to Sussex by the sea, to quote the old song.

A thirteen-man squad has been named, which includes Tom Wood. We are getting to the stage of the season where the fit ones are effectively the squad and with Ben Aitchison ruled out for the summer with a stress fracture, it is good to see Suranga Lakmal return.

He will want to make an impression in the second half of the summer and takes his place in this squad:

Came, Reece, Guest, Madsen, Ali, du Plooy, Dal, Thomson, Potts, Scrimshaw, Lakmal, Conners, Wood.

I expect Wood and either Scrimshaw or Potts to miss out, though all three are deserving of opportunity in the format.

Sussex have also named thirteen, although there is no Cheteshwar Pujara in the squad. Another former Derbyshire man, Fynn Hudson-Prentice, is likely to play in a side that has some exciting young talent. I am a big admirer of Tom Haines and Ali Orr, though neither has been in the form they would have hoped for so far.

Their squad:

Alsop, Carson, Carter, Clark, Coles, Currie, Haines, Hudson-Prentice, Ibrahim, Karvelas, Lenham, McAndrew, Shipley.

Skipper Tom Alsop has been in fine form for them, while Aussie Nathan McAndrew has had a very good all round summer, averaging thirty with the bat while taking 30 wickets at 21.

Having looked at the weather forecast, I'm going for a draw here. Rain looks set to take sizeable chunks from the second and third days, so unless the captain's contrive a last afternoon run chase, I can't see a positive result in this one.

As always, I welcome your thoughts!

Friday, 7 July 2023

Overseas and over here ..

It is quite telling that none of the sides from the supposed very strong Northern group made it through to finals day this year.

Essex, Hampshire, Surrey and Somerset all came out on top in their games and will make for an interesting, but not necessarily involved, from my point of view, big day out at Edgbaston.

I will be rooting for Essex and Somerset, as clubs who do not have Test ground riches at their disposal. Surrey look strong, with all of their England men back, while Somerset have played brilliantly but are essentially a young side that might buckle. Hampshire looked a decent outfit, albeit against a dramatically sub-par Worcestershire, while Essex fielded well and have two good overseas players.

Which set me thinking. How much is qualification to the knockout stage dependent on overseas contributions?

Not all that much, really. In fact, a look at Derbyshire and the eight sides who progressed shows that our overseas players did as well as anyone.

Zaman Khan was a standout against most, even in comparison to Shaheen Afridi at Nottinghamshire. Sams and Harmer were a potent duo for Essex, while Hampshire and Nottinghamshire got good value from their recruits.

But Birmingham will have hoped for better returned from Glenn Maxwell and Lancashire, while doing well with Daryl Mitchell, got very little from Colin de Grandhomme.

Matt Henry did a good job for Somerset, who really only had him for most of the competition, but Worcestershire pulled out two gems in Santner and Mir. 

The surprise, for me, was Surrey. Abbott had one. unbelievable innings but did little else with bat or ball, while Narine did a decent, if not spectacular job. But the strength in depth of their squad, rather like Lancashire, managed to get around that.

I present the figures below for your interest, the figures in brackets being the runs per 100 balls and runs conceded per over.

But hopefully it illustrates that Derbyshire actually had two good overseas players. Had Haider Ali not opened at the start, maybe his figures would have been better still.

I wonder who we will get next year?

Birmingham
Maxwell 248 runs at 17.71 (151) and 10 wkts at 25.8 (7.81)

Derbyshire
Ali 335 at 25.76 (138)
Khan 25 wickets at 16.5 (8.28)

Essex
Sams 345 at 29 (174) and 23 wkts at 19 (8.25)
Harmer 107 at 12 (124) and 19 at 22 (9.3)

Lancashire
Mitchell 409 at 40 (162), 12 wkts at 19 (8)
De Grandhomme 61 at 12 (103), 7 wkts at 22 (8.8)

Surrey
Abbott 167 at 41 (190), 5 wkts at 61 (10.83)
Narine 201 at 22 (161) 19 wkts at 22 (7.7)

Somerset
Henry 25 at 12.5 (156) 23 wkts at 14 (8.31)

Nottinghamshire
Munro 323 at 29 (156)
Afridi 76 at 11 (152) and 22 wkts at 20 (8.4)

Hampshire
McDermott 378 at 31(142)
Ellis 29 at 14 (152) and 18 wkts at 19 (7.46)

Worcestershire 
Santner 391 at 35 (152) and 11 wkts at 29 (7.3)
Mir 93 at 46 (197) and 17 wkts at 17 (7.52)

Transfer fees or compensation needed?

Broadly speaking, I lost much of my interest in club football when the massively rich overseas investors started to get involved.

There was a time when local business men (which they were) took over as chairman of their local club and ran it. Some were richer than others, but broadly speaking it was a level playing field.

Now the inequalities are obvious. It is unlikely that we will see a lesser light win the FA Cup, while Leicester's winning of the Premiership may  be the last of its kind, even if they had the backing of a pretty wealthy man themselves.

The same thing is happening in cricket.

Let me give you these names:

Loten, Ball, Fletcher, Broad, Hayes, Hutton, James, Paterson, Pettman, Stone.

Now Tongue and Pennington.

Those are the seamers or seam bowling all rounders currently on the staff at Nottinghamshire, a list that doesn't include those between the academy (they do have one) and second eleven.

While accepting one of those is an England regular and another an overseas, how do you keep 12 players happy? Why do you need 12 similar bowlers? I know that injuries hit and I am sure that Nottinghamshire will pay well, but the gap between rich and poorer is ridiculous.

Derbyshire are a very well run county and have made profits for a number of years, but are unable to spend silly money. 

We currently have Aitchison, Lakmal, Chappell, Conners and Potts as seam bowlers. The first two are injured, the third has been nursing an injury, the fourth is just coming back from one, the fifth is a youngster, not long out of the academy. There is also Scrimshaw, but a history of injury means he is largely saved for T20 cricket.

Nottinghamshire could point to that scenario and say that is why they need so many, but young players with any ambition at all, like Hayes, Pettman and Loten must look at the recent signings of Tongue and Pennington in dismay. Their chances of senior cricket look increasingly slim. Maybe in that situation you sit tight and see out your contract. Yet it cannot be a lot of fun to be playing second team cricket with little expectation of elevation to the senior side.

I really feel for Worcestershire. Losing those two to Nottinghamshire and, according to reports, Pat Brown to Derbyshire for next season is a massive hole to fill.

There is a similar situation at Lancashire. A huge staff of very talented cricketers, but some of them have very little chance of playing senior cricket on anything like a regular basis.

Something needs to be done. Whether that is a limit on the sizes of staff, transfer fees to be paid or compensation given to the clubs that did all of the development, the imbalance between rich and poor is very much to the detriment of the game.

How it is sorted is one for broader discussion, but it cannot be good for the future of our game to have the Test ground counties hoovering up the better players on the circuit. Quite often it is because those with international aspirations want to play division one cricket, as they see their chances limited by being in a second division side.

Yet how does a second division side look to get promoted, if their best players leave every season? 

Wednesday, 5 July 2023

Lloyd signing offers balance

The signing of David Lloyd on a three-year contract appears to have been met with universal approval, at least from those on my Twitter timeline.

It marks the signing of a quality, senior professional, a man with captaincy experience if required and able to bat at the top of the order, which I think will be his niche, or in the middle order if needed.

What it particularly offers is balance to whoever the captain is next season. The thinking money still appears to be on Leus du Plooy leaving, so Lloyd would appear the most likely successor, unless we are bringing in an overseas player or another English player with that enticement.

An experienced opening bat will be a great help to Harry Came, as he looks to build further on some good innings at the end of last year, as well as some positive displays this year.

Assuming that both are still on the staff, Anuj Dal and Luis Reece could bat six and seven, meaning there are three genuine bowlers in the top seven, Lloyd's medium pace more than useful. 

That allows for plenty of flexibility in the bottom four in the order. We could opt for an extra batsman, or we could play two spinners and two seamers, or one and three. 

I would certainly love to see an overseas player who can handle a bat and  bowl some quality spin, or bring in a spinner of quality to inject mystery to the attack. It may be that the overseas roles are split between four day and T20 players, but my ideal would be the return of Khan for T20, plus a hard hitting spinning all rounder and a good seamer for four day cricket. 

Those key roles will depend on who else Mickey Arthur can attract from this country, but this could be a notional 'nucleus' side to start 2024:

Lloyd
Came
Guest
Madsen
Lamb
Dal
Reece
X
Chappell
X
Conners

I haven't included Pat Brown, as we don't know the story there, nor Ben Aitchison, who I understand is likely to miss the rest of the summer with a back injury. It is a major blow for club and player, especially as we are running low on seam bowlers. Nor does it include overseas players.

The weeks ahead will be fascinating and it will be interesting to watch players who might become available in the Royal London Cup. 

I expect changes and surprises at Derbyshire, some bigger than others. But 2024 is a big season for Derbyshire, for Mickey Arthur and for his reputation.

David Lloyd signs three-year deal


If anyone is going to know the ability of David Lloyd, then Mickey Arthur and his Derbyshire players will be high among them.

After all, it is not a year since the Glamorgan all rounder posted the second-highest score in Glamorgan history, in making 313 against us at Cardiff.

He is a solid, experienced, professional cricketer. The type that Derbyshire needs if we are losing Leus du Plooy as well as Billy Godleman and Suranga Lakmal. 

He has been captain at Glamorgan, but there is no suggestion at this stage that he will fill a similar role at Derbyshire. Logically, if du Plooy leaves he is the standout candidate and he can offer good runs at the top of the order or in the middle, depending on our greater need.

He can obviously bat for a long time, but is also a quick scorer in limited overs cricket. An additional asset is his medium pace bowling, which can be effective in all formats.

At 31 he is coming into what should be his peak seasons. While his career averages are not remarkable, they suggest a solid cricketer of the kind that Derbyshire's young squad needs to aid their development.

For the record, I see him as a replacement for Billy Godleman, not du Plooy and not Luis Reece. I still see a role for the latter, even if his statistics in the last couple of seasons have suggested a decline. Let's face it, having all rounders at 6 and 7 in Dal and Reece, with another at the top of the order in Lloyd, offers Derbyshire flexibility on the makeup of the rest of the side, in all formats.

In other news, a report in yesterday's Telegraph suggested that Pat Brown of Worcestershire is coming to Derbyshire.

If this is true, then I would be very happy, because he is a very talented young bowler and a brilliant fielder, as he amply illustrated with the catch that removed Wayne Madsen last Sunday.

Yet the time to get excited about this will be when it is announced by the club, assuming that it does happen, of course.

It is the time of year when clubs can speak to players coming to the end of contracts and it is highly likely, as happens in all sports, that agents can generate 'interest' to stir up rival bids for the services of their client.

Brown coming to Derbyshire would be great, as he has played T20 cricket for England and presumably wants to play more than one format. I am not sure, if the story is true, how Worcestershire look to replace him, as well as Dillon Pennington and Josh Tongue, who the same story said were going to Nottinghamshire.

That would appear likely, but again poses the question as to what point there is of Nottinghamshire having an academy, when they go out and buy the finished talents of others.

Perhaps Derbyshire might be a beneficiary of an unsettled player from those parts, as we look to revamp our side this winter.

Time will tell. 

But for now, the first piece of the 2024 jigsaw is in place and I think David Lloyd will prove to be a shrewd acquisition over the next three seasons.

He is also, to my knowledge, the first Derbyshire player to come from Glamorgan, unless we consider Bill Bestwick, who played there briefly between his two stints with us either side of the first world war.

Welcome to Derbyshire, David!

Tuesday, 4 July 2023

A word on Scotland - and a reminder

Thank you for your continued involvement in the blog.

I will say that I have declined to post a couple of recent comments, because they were critical of other contributors and/or players and did not have a name appended.

Please remember that everyone is entitled to an opinion, but as long as that opinion is neither personal nor unfairly critical I will publish it. But moving forward, I will only publish comments where the person has logged into Google OR has appended a name, regardless of the length of that comment.

It is only fair that people do this. My name and my face are there for all to see and I'm happy to justify any comments that I make, or that appear on here. Please consider, before posting, if you would be prepared to say what you write to a person, especially a player, standing in front of them.

Moving on, I am delighted that Scotland are now one game away from the Cricket World Cup. A win over the Netherlands will take them to it, alongside Sri Lanka.

It is fully deserved. They have batted well enough to set totals, fielded tigerishly and bowled with intelligence and skill.

A couple of people have messaged me to say how impressed they have been with Brandon McMullen and I have been too. He has looked a class apart as a bat, while he has bowled cleverly with both the new ball and as first change.

At 23 he looks like a player who would do a very good job at a first class county, a statement backed up by an international batting average around 40 and a bowling one at 18. 

Born in Durban, South Africa, he has lived in Scotland for four years and is qualified to play for them by residence. I'm not sure how that works with his eligibility to play county cricket as a local, but it seems only a matter of time before someone offers him an opportunity.

Derbyshire need players and I would hope that Mark Watt might put a word in, as he would appear perfect for our needs. 

5-34 against Ireland, 69 and 3-32 against the West Indies, 34 and 2-31 against Zimbabwe today, not forgetting 136 against Oman. These are serious figures and there is much to like in such a cricketer. Upright at the crease, his timing and placement are excellent and there is a wide enough range of shots to suggest he could go further.

One to keep an eye on, whether for Derbyshire or anyone else, as he appears a very talented lad.

Anyway, well done to Scotland and to Mark Watt, who has also had a terrific tournament with bat and ball. 

Good luck on Thursday, at Bulawayo!

Monday, 3 July 2023

Brooke Guest

It is only a short time since there were grumblings in some quarters about our signing a young wicketkeeper from Lancashire, presumably as understudy to local hero, Harvey Hosein. 'Waste of money when we haven't got much' was the most common comment.

For that first summer, Harvey and Brooke Guest shared the role and between them did OK. The former was an organised batter and solid wicketkeeper, the latter something of an unknown quantity and perhaps less experienced behind the sticks. With Hosein not really an aggressive batsman, he tended to play the long format, with the new man performing solidly, if not, spectacularly, in the shorter game.

Fast forward two years and Hosein is sadly out of first-class cricket after episodes of concussion, while Guest is established as a wicket-keeper bat of genuine talent. He maintains a high standard with the gloves, not yet Bob Taylor or Karl Krikken, but getting better all the time. He is not an especially demonstrative  player and doesn't often have to put in the dives that others do, tribute both to his fitness and his footwork.

I liked him from the start and especially enjoy how he martials the field, keeps people on their toes and is as energetic in the final session of a long day as the first. 

I have no idea how he handles batting three, after sometimes keeping for several sessions. Quite often he has come in early and effectively been an opener, yet he is a calming and reassuring presence at the crease.

He hasn't been as prolific in four day cricket this year as last, but has made up for it with punishing displays and a position at the top of the averages in the Vitality Blast. He was missed when a strain ruled him out at the start of the tournament and welcomed back with open arms on his return to fitness. After playing every game last season, the surprise was that a seemingly indestructible could pick up an injury, tribute to how well he takes the ball from a lively (and not always accurate) set of seam bowlers.

Some supporters might have been surprised at how easily he finds and clears the boundary, as he is not powerfully built like Tom Wood. His timing is key, however and while he can have a tendency to perish on the hook and pull, he also scores a lot of runs with those strokes.

With respect to Harvey, he wasn't a player who could play the type of knock that Brooke has produced this year. The only county keeper that could in my memory was James Pipe, though he was not as prolific. 

He averages just under thirty in all formats, figures that will likely head northwards in the years ahead. I would prefer to see him bat lower in the longer form, higher in the T20, where his speed between the wickets would be especially valuable. Certainly his partnerships with Anuj Dal are akin to Speedy Gonzalez meeting the Road Runner and such ability can frustrate any fielding side.

One of our successful imports from Lancashire, he is one of the few players in the eleven whose place is under no debate. He could easily be first choice for the next decade, the reassurance for Derbyshire being that counties can only have one wicket keeper and most have at least one good one.

Time will tell if Brooke is good enough to play for England, but he has the talent and the mental toughness to do so.

He is also an engaging young man with a ready smile and a friendly chirpiness that will serve him well through life. 

If Karl Krikken can recommend another two or three to Derbyshire of similar standard from Lancashire, no one will have any complaints.

Thoughts on the Vitality Blast and the way forward

When all is done and dusted, with Yorkshire docked the expected points from their T20 season, Derbyshire will have finished 5th in the strong Northern group of the Vitality Blast.

Not a bad effort, though not good enough, of course. I have mentioned a time or two over the last few weeks that the anaemic displays against Northamptonshire at home and Durham away would likely cost us and so it transpired. Had both of those games been won, we would have gone through in fourth place, pipping Nottinghamshire..

We know that the talent is there. Birmingham strolled the group, losing only three games. Two of them were to Derbyshire. Why we can do that, yet implode twice against Nottinghamshire is a mystery. How do you rationalise the performance against Yorkshire at Headingley with the one against the same opponents at Chesterfield? 

It is frustrating, being a Derbyshire fan. When a side is capable of brilliance, which they showed against Birmingham, you might expect a drop just to 'good' on the bad days. Yet the gap between our best and worst is currently too big. 

Perhaps the fixtures didn't help. You can generally afford to lose six matches but still progress. When we produced the poor display against Northamptonshire, on the back of defeats to a strong Lancashire and Nottinghamshire, we had lost three from three, effectively needing eight wins from eleven and adding pressure.

A look at the averages is interesting. The slowest scorers of our top order batters were Haider Ali, at 137 and Luis Reece at 118. The fastest were Leus du Plooy, at 168, followed by Tom Wood at 161, yet the former scored only half of the runs made by Wayne Madsen, while the latter wasn't even in the side, until later in the competition.

He and Harry Came did very well, but played only 13 games between them. Poor team selection was definitely a contributor to our mixed performance. So too were slow starts. A minimum of fifty is really needed from the Powerplay, but too often we didn't get close to that.

The bowlers did pretty well, though only Zaman Khan and Mark Watt conceded less than nine an over through the tournament.  Zaman's value will have increased dramatically and I suspect he will be out of our range next year. 

Part of the issue was that we only had five bowlers. Madsen's bowling days appear behind him, so only Wood's off spin 'darts' were an option outside the five. Alex Hughes was missed, as were genuine all rounders.

For me, that has to be a focus of winter recruitment. Can Anuj Dal become a Hughes, or Steven Mullaney? Can we find a Mitchell Santner of our own, who averaged 36, scoring at 152, as well as bowling his overs at under eight for Worcestershire? 

If Mickey Arthur is to continue to use Pakistan as a source of overseas players, we need all rounders ourselves. Khushdil Shah or Kamran Ghulam would be exciting options, powerful stroke players and canny slow left arm bowlers both. Perhaps Mohammad Wasim Jr, as a quick seam bowling option who can hit a long ball? 

I think you need overseas players to offer more than one dimension, as Ali and Khan did. The former was a qualified success, the latter a total one, but, as a former player said to me today, how many games did either win outright? Both were livewires in the field, but that should be an expectation, not an added bonus.

Haider could be a top player, but too often attempts to go from 0-70 inside a couple of balls. I hope he has learned how to approach an innings from Wayne Madsen, or watches some videos of Dean Jones. The latter was rarely expansive early, but ticked the score over with ones or twos while he came to terms with conditions. THEN put the foot down.

I was surprised that Matt Lamb didn't make the side at all. I thought his impact on Derbyshire might have been the same as Hose had at Worcestershire, but he never appeared in the side after a back spasm ruled him out at the start. Perhaps he comes into the middle order if du Plooy leaves?

The side for next season will be much different, with question marks against most of them. Madsen, Guest, Came, Chappell, Lamb and Dal gives a strong nucleus, but at this stage, who will be alongside them is a moot point. Maybe Wood, who needs to use the Royal London to emphasise his credentials. Maybe one of the spinners, but I would be surprised if we can justify all three being on the staff. Watt appears best-placed, but he will always miss matches on Scotland duty. The others had good days, but it depends on who else is out there as to whether they are retained.

The decline in Luis Reece has been sad to see. His strike rate in 2021 was 171, but it dropped to 132 last year and 118 this season. There was a time when he was crucial to the side, but his bowling appears to not be trusted in this format and his top level batting game is missed. Can he get back to his earlier days?

Much to consider then. Can we finance a staff where several players are effectively single-format only? If not, then the claims of Wood, McKiernan, Thomson and Scrimshaw are not strong. Good players all, but for Derbyshire to be one of the top four in a strong Northern group, is the finance in place to enable better, more versatile players to come in? Can Ben Aitchison and Sam Conners develop their white ball games, as well as remaining injury-free?

Or do we just content ourselves with being a team that will challenge, but often frustrate in equal measure?

Can Mickey Arthur being in players to reinforce his mantra of Derbyshire being the county of choice? His overseas recruitment has to be right, as we have had next to no return on Suranga Lakmal.

As always, I would love to hear your thoughts.