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Sprinklergate
More sprinkler issues at Trent Bridge, as one is dammed, another springs into life. The crowd wait (im)patiently.
Love early season enthusiasm – here was one of yesterday’s centurions, Sussex left-hander Tom Clark.
“It’s our first time in Division One for about ten years and we are very excited as a group to see what we can do at this level. If can do what we did last year and bring the same energy and skills and intent than we could do well and it’s been a good first day.
“It was a tough start with the ball doing a bit in the morning but me and Colesy knew we just had to get through to lunch and then hopefully cash in when the bowlers came on for the second and third spells. It’s the first time I have properly batted with John Simpson and he is unbelievable. He makes it look so easy. He scores so freely and takes all the pressure off you and it is great to bat with him because the scoreboard is always ticking over.
“When you come into Division One you want to prove to yourself and others that you can do it so I am probably proudest of that century. I had to fight my way through at times and took a lot of balls on the thighpad and people round the ground probably thought it wasn’t the best innings in the world but I was proud of the way I fought. Maybe at times in the past I would have given that away for 30 or 40.”
It makes you remember how important promotion is on an individual basis, it gives players the chance to test themselves against the best.
There’s no rain to delay proceedings but cricket does what cricket does and a misbehaving sprinkler at Trent Bridge has temporarily started the start.
And an espresso hit to start the day as Critchley slides the first ball away for four.
And good morning to Tim Maitland!
“A miserable, wet, wintery day in Hong Kong left me enough time ponder how Yorkshire managed to collapse for 121, while also playing some delightful shots.
”The answer, as is blindingly obvious from a scorecard showing the top six all getting into double figures and none bettering Dawid Malan’s 31, is that they were mostly the architects of their own downfall. Lyth, Wharton and Bairstow all went with negligible footwork - the skipper’s square cut perhaps the most glaring offence - and by the time Malan set off for an ill-judged single the rot had set in.
”Still, with Hampshire five down, they could conceivably keep the first innings deficit down below a hundred and tell themselves they’re still in it at the changeover. Then again, as they say in “God’s own county” pigs might fly.”
Not so many here today, I’m knowledgeably told that’s because everyone is off to see Millwall, Ipswich, Leyton Orient, West Ham and Colchester.
Scores on the doors
DIVISION ONE
Chelmsford: Essex 356-4 v Surrey
Southampton: Hampshire 164-5 v Yorkshire 121
Trent Bridge: Nottinghamshire v Durham 370-9
Taunton: Somerset 187-4 v Worcestershire 154
Edgbaston: Warwickshire v Sussex 386-5
DIVISION TWO
The County Ground: Derbyshire 127-2 v Gloucestershire 222
Sophia Gardens: Glamorgan 229 v Leicestershire 65-1
Lord’s: Middlesex 260 v Lancashire 68-0
Wantage Road: Northamptonshire 118-7 v Kent 231
Friday's round-up
The first day of the cricket season in early April isn’t supposed to feel like this. T-shirts, ice-creams, arm-crispingly warm. At Chelmsford, where nearly 2,500 came through the turnstiles, feet in the queue before half past nine, the champions were in town.
But Surrey, seeking their fourth title on the bounce, didn’t have things their way against Essex. They lost the toss on a flat pitch, and first Paul Walter, then Jordan Cox, batted with a bounce and a song. Cox, who was due to make his Test debut in the winter at Christchurch only to be thwarted by a broken thumb, played with bellicose beauty. He drove Dan Lawrence into the boundary boards with a thud to reach his century, watched with purring admiration by Graham Gooch. When he was finally out for 117, including 21 fours, Chelmsford rose. As they did for Walter, the stand-in opener while Dean Elgar is on paternity leave, who fell five short of a hundred – a first Surrey wicket for Matt Fisher. The home side ended the day on 356 for four.
Things weren’t going so well for England’s Zak Crawley, who lost his stumps in spectacular style to the Northamptonshire new boy Liam Guthrie, out for one. Tawanda Muyeye’s 72 then helped Kent to a respectable 231, before Northants were fleeced to 118 for seven.
At the Rose Bowl, Jonny Bairstow’s first day as Yorkshire captain didn’t unfold entirely as planned as they were skittled for 121 by Hampshire. Shadow in the corner Liam Dawson snaffled three for eight, and there was a first wicket for Sonny Baker, who had Bairstow caught flaming to third man, bothered by an insect. In reply Hampshire were 165 for five at the close of play.
It was shaping up to be Ethan Bamber’s day at Edgbaston when Warwickshire’s winter signing from Middlesex burst out of the traps with three new ball strikes. But bar a wicket on debut for the 18-year-old leg-spinner Tazeem Ali, things took a downward turn for the hosts thereafter as a succulent career-best 140 from Tom Clark, and a pugnacious 116 not out from the captain, John Simpson, bent the script the way of Sussex, who finished on 386 for five. A statement day for the Division One newcomers; a slightly concerning one for the more established hosts without the injured Oliver Hannon-Dalby and Chris Rushworth.
Colin Ackermann had some birthday luck on his way to the first century of the year, bowled for 80 only for the bails to settle back in their groove. Durham ploughed on towards 400 despite four wickets for Nottinghamshire’s Australian Fergus O’Neill.
At Taunton, Kasey Aldridge’s five wickets ruined a good Worcestershire start as they lost nine for 52 and were all out for 154. Half centuries from the Toms Abell and Banton then rescued Somerset from a precarious 39 for three to finish on 187 for four.
The big name Division Two game at Lord’s swung merrily; Sam Robson and Max Holden easing Middlesex to 127 for one before the Lancashire debutant Ollie Sutton (two for 57) and Tom Aspinwall (four for 32) took charge. Leicestershire bowled out Glamorgan for 229, the on loan Shoaib Bashir bowled by Rehan Ahmed for 20 while Derbyshire’s Luis Reece grabbed six for 52 against Gloucestershire before Caleb Jewell’s 61 from 48 balls showed why he was in Mickey Arthur’s little black book.
Preamble
Hello! Welcome to day two. It’s beautiful – again. Unseasonably so perhaps, my friend at Whalley Range CC in Manchester tells me that they’re watering the pitch today - unheard of at this time of year. But climate apocalypse aside, yesterday was a warm hug of a reintroduction to the season.
I’ve been won over by Chelmsford this morning, who knew it had a gorgeous airy cathedral? Also a town centre with real shops, cycle routes everywhere, an old fashioned park with a lake and a cafe serving homemade pilchard cake to lucky pooches.
Hope your Saturday mornings have been as contented. Play starts at 11am, do join us.