20 May, 2025

Notts CCC News: Moores Stars in his eyes

 


20/05





The Melbourne Stars are pleased to announce that BBL Coach Peter Moores has signed a new two-year deal with the club.



Moores, who took over the side in BBL|13, recently led the Stars to their first finals appearance in five years after winning five consecutive games to finish the regular season.

A two-time coach of England and with experience coaching all over the world, Moores will continue in his role until at least the end of BBL|16.

“I’m absolutely thrilled to sign on for another two years,” Moores said.

“I’ve already experienced some incredible moments with the club and there was no better place to be last summer than the MCG when we got on a roll.

“It was a great reminder of what this club and our members and fans are capable of.

“I was so impressed with Marcus’ leadership last year, and I expect he will only grow in that role again in BBL|15.

“Our list is in a really good place, and we’ve got a great opportunity to strengthen a couple of key areas in the upcoming draft.

“I’m not putting a limit on what we can all achieve together.”

Melbourne Stars General Manager Max Abbott said Moores was the right person to take the Stars forward.

“The feedback from all parts of the organisation has been overwhelmingly positive in the way Peter led the group as coach over the last two seasons.

“You don’t come back from a 0-5 start to make the finals without leadership in the dressing room and that is a testament to the way Peter was able to maintain camaraderie and belief within the playing group to turn the season around.

“Peter is a world-class coach and by maintaining continuity, we’re confident the club can build on the momentum generated in the back-half of the season to hit the ground running in BBL|15.”





28/04

Amidst the Telegraphs Will Macpherson's talking-up of Notts he writes:


This season represents the end of an era at Notts, with CEO Lisa Pursehouse leaving, and long-time head coach Peter Moores expected to follow. It is possible both hoped, rather than expected, a title charge in their final year. Notts last won the title in 2010, and have been a sleeping giant ever since, spending too much time in Division Two or, as last season, underachieving towards the bottom of Division One whilst being held up as a very well-run Test venue.




England’s most dynamic spinner is 17 – the cupboard is bare

Jack Leach and Shoaib Bashir highlight limitations in specialist area, as teenager Farhan Ahmed shines for Nottinghamshire


Scyld Berry 26/04


After the retirements of Graeme Swann and Monty Panesar, England’s cupboard had never been so empty of quality spinners. But Moeen Ali, a batsman who bowled a bit of off-spin, stepped into the breach and tidied England over for a decade with 204 Test wickets.

This cupboard now seems emptier still, to the point where England will have to plan on selecting no specialist spinner at all at home this summer against India and in Australia this winter.

There is always Jack Leach, steadiness personified, but he was taken down in Australia last time, and while the accuracy remains – he has been doing another tidy job for Somerset against Surrey at the Oval – the flight and guile have yet to blossom. Worcestershire have sunk to the bottom of Division One, after losing to Durham in two days, making three defeats in four games, yet they managed to draw against Somerset by blocking out for 200 overs in their second innings at Leach’s own Taunton.

Shoaib Bashir was England’s spinner the whole of last winter, and took his haul to 49 wickets in 15 Tests, but the limitations are becoming ever more apparent. Bashir can take wickets on turners, in other words in Asia, but he cannot contain on flat pitches, which is what a four-man pace attack such as England’s needs. He does not have the know-how, simply does not have the experience, to hang in and turn 0-70 from 20 overs into decent figures like 3-90 or 4-120.

Bashir’s three championship matches for Glamorgan this season, when on loan from Somerset, have resulted in two wickets at 152 runs each and, perhaps more relevantly, a run-rate above four runs an over. Even against left-handed batsmen, that amazing accuracy which first attracted Ben Stokes – on seeing Bashir keep Sir Alastair Cook tied down – has been receding as he tinkers with his bowling action and loses that exacting line.

If England are faced with a raging turner in the fifth Test in Sydney – and such pitches were seen there in the 1980s – they might have to call in someone, but for the most part Australia is now offering seamers’ pitches, and two part-timers in Joe Root and Jacob Bethell will surely have to suffice. Which makes it all the more of a waste that Bethell has not played a game in the Indian Premier League, when he could have been plying his left-arm spin for Warwickshire – and he has a good wristy action which gets revolutions on the ball – and learning how to make red-ball hundreds, something he has yet to do.

But England will have to have one specialist spinner on call in Australia, just in case. Until recently Rehan Ahmed has been the reserve, but so far this season his batting has gone forwards, and his wrist-spin has gone backwards from the point where he took 22 wickets in his five Tests, all in Asia. This season he has moved into Leicestershire’s top three batsmen, where he has all the strokes, but he has been trusted to bowl so little by their captain Peter Handscomb that he has taken one first-class wicket this season.

In Leicestershire’s current game against Gloucestershire, Rehan came out at the tea interval on day two, wearing a cap to practise a few of his spinners, and that has been it for his bowling so far.

On the other hand, Rehan’s younger brother Farhan Ahmed can keep it tight and take wickets, as he proved while helping Nottinghamshire move towards victory over Sussex. The energy Farhan puts into his offbreaks starts before he begins his run-up, with a purposeful stance as if he were about to bat not bowl, then a longish run-up, and so much of his body goes into revolutions on the ball.

Farhan was mature far beyond his years when he made his first-class debut last summer for England Lions against the touring Sri Lankans aged 16. Now he looks as dynamic as any spinner in England, certainly any finger-spinner, but it says a lot about the cupboard when that accolade goes to someone aged 17.

Sussex lead Notts by 64 runs with only three wickets left. Josh Tongue took another wicket to add to his first-innings five, which suggests that England’s attack against Zimbabwe at Trent Bridge on May 22 will contain Gus Atkinson, Tongue and Sam Cook. But however depleted by injury England’s resources are, Sussex’s Ollie Robinson – who kept Sussex in their game against Notts by taking four wickets – seems to have bowled his last for his country. Even if England have so few bowlers who can make the ball turn, the wheel of fate does.

20/04

Joe Clarke was precautionarily rested from fielding on Day 3 at Edgbaston owing to a stiff neck.

Joe had looked to be in a little discomfort whilst batting in his brief innings on Day 2


15/04


Pravda is usually silent on such matters of players going down injured but our injury list might be growing, but that is unconfirmed:

Ollie Stone - recovering from an op on his knee?
Dillon Pennington - pull out of completing an over yesterday (side)
Conor McKerr - failed to complete an over today at Southampton with the 2s






Notts at Cleethorpes article from 2020




CALVIN HARRISON


7/119 a career best for Calvin
56 a career best also for Calvin
The best f/c debut bowling figures for any player for Northamptonshire, ever.



14/04

Calvin Harrison took eleven wickets in the drawn match between Lancashire and Northants at Old Trafford.


4/34 in the Lancs 1st innings, and 7/119 with Lancs clinging on to a draw following-on



10/04

Nottinghamshire u18s beat Worcestershire u18 in a friendly 50 over contest today at Kidderminster CC





News from Durham is that David Bedingham is back, so in every likelihood Kyle Verreynne is back too at Nottinghamshire.




Pravda is probably saving that news for a squad announcement this evening.

3 comments:

  1. Dave Bracegirdle on XTuesday, 08 April, 2025

    Wish I’d noticed before (!!) but this week’s first class match was Nottinghamshire’s 400th of the 2000s.
    397 have actually been played, with three others abandoned
    Record reads: Won 124 Drawn 154 Lost 119

    ReplyDelete
  2. Any news on the Academy players for 2025?

    ReplyDelete

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