05/04
Day 2
NOTTS FIGHTBACK THROUGH SLATER AND McCANN AFTER IRRIGATION IRRITATION
Durham go into the third day with a lead of 81 with Notts closing on 297 for 5 off 86 overs in their first innings on another day with clear blue skies accompanied by a brisk and biting north easterly wind.
The players came out at 11:00 but the umpires spotted a leaking water nozzle near the pitch at the Pavilion End. They then went to summon the groundstaff underneath the scoreboard. Within seconds the offending sprinkler and several others then started spraying water. Pure slapstick for the good sized Trent Bridge crowd. Luckily the northernly wind ensured it was only the outfield and not the actual pitch that got a brief soaking. The red faced ground crew then started drying the outfield. They had to put some diesel in the motor mop to get it up and running and eventually play started at 11:45 with four overs lost which will be added to tomorrow’s ration. Pennington (Pavilion End) and O’Neill shared the bowling. In the 100th over, Coughlin was leg before to O’Neill for 11. Durham 378 all out with Potts unbeaten on 11. O’Neill 5 for 81 on his Notts debut very much the pick of the Notts bowlers.
Raine (Radcliffe Road End) and Potts shared the new ball. Hameed and Slater made a comfortable start and Notts stood at 31 for 0 off 9 overs when Coughlin replaced Potts from the Pavilion End. Potts returned from the Radcliffe Road End in the 13th over. At lunch Notts were 48 for 0 off 16 overs with Slater on 31 and Hameed on 17. The openers had batted well and positively to ease the fears of a Notts collapse.
Their good work continued after the interval. The 50 stand was achieved in the opening over after lunch in 98 balls. In the 21st over, Hameed (27) was leg before to Potts, 62 for 1. After all the trouble with the sprinklers in the morning it was perhaps appropriate that Drissell replaced Raine from the Pavilion End for the 26th over. A four through point by Slater off Coughlin took him to his to 50 off 89 balls (10x4) in the 31st over. Three overs later, Slater found the backward point ropes off Drissell to take Notts to three figures. A further two offside fours followed from Slater in an over that cost 12. Next over, a four through point by McCann off Coughlin brought up the 50 stand in 86 balls. Rhodes came on for the 38th over. Notts reached 150 in the 46th over via a four through backward point by McCann off Drissell. Slater (92 off 147 balls, 19x4) was batting beautifully and looked certain to achieve a ton but his fluent innings ended via a poor shot, pulling a short ball from Rhodes to wide long leg where Gay took the catch; 157 for 2 in the 47th over. The second wicket had added 95 in 26 overs. Clarke inside edged his first ball off Rhodes for 4. His second ball was deposited to the square leg ropes. Notts 166 for 2 off 48 overs when tea was taken at 16:00 with McCann 36 and Clarke on 8.
An off driven boundary by McCann off Coughlin got him to 50 off 93 balls in the 54th over. A four through third man by Clarke off Coughlin took Notts to 200 in the 56th over. The two batsmen looked in no trouble. Out of nowhere in the 67th over, ex Notts man Coughlin produced a peach of a delivery to remove Clarke’s (37) middle stump; 225 for 3. The 3rd wicket stand worth 68 in 20 overs. McCann (79 off 158 balls, 10x4), who was attempting to reach his third ton in succession at Trent Bridge chased a wide one from Coughlin and edged an attempted drive into Robinson's gloves; 244 for 4 in the 73rd over. A pull shot to the square leg ropes by Haynes off Coughlin took Notts to their first batting point in the 75th over. The new ball was taken with Notts 280 for 4 off 80 overs. Haynes (30) was adjudged leg before to a short ball from Raine that failed to lift properly. Haynes not offering a shot with the ball hitting his backside; 288 for 5 in the 84th over. With 15 balls remaining Farhan (4*) came in as nightwatchman. Montgomery (19*) stood firm. Notts were five down when stumps were drawn at 18:51 and had allayed fears of giving Durham a big lead.
Slater and McCann both batted well but frustratingly gave their wickets away when well set and nearing their tons. The Durham bowlers were more accurate than Notts 24 hours previously. All their bowlers, apart from Rhodes bowling economically on what was clearly an easing surface. With the new ball only six overs old, the first hour tomorrow will have a big bearing on where this game is heading. MAG
04/04
Day 1
DURHAM DOMINATE
in spite of a promising start for O'Neill
Visitors Durham had the better of the first day of the county season reaching 370 for 9 against a ragged disappointing Notts attack. Former Fox, Colin Ackermann top scored with a well-constructed 116, on his birthday.
Notts won the toss and elected to bowl on a sunny and windy day with a short boundary on the Bridgford Road side. With Western Province still in action in South Africa both teams were missing key overseas players in Kyle Verreynne and David Bedingham. Durham were also without Aussie Brendan Doggett and England trio Stokes, Carse and Wood. Notts meanwhile gave debuts to Aussie Fergus O’Neill and Josh Tongue. With Notts possessing a very long tail, they were not prepared to give Schadendorf a rare outing and Clarke donned the gloves and Matt Montgomery bolstered the batting at number six. Olly Stone who injured his knee during the pre-season knockabout about Grace Road has undergone an operation and is likely to miss the next four months, hoping to get fit for the Hundred starting in August.
Pennington (Pavilion End) and O’Neill opened the bowling in an impressive manner. In the 6th over, O’Neill got highly-rated McKinney (5) to edge one to Clarke who took the catch diving to his left, 22 for one. In the following over, Lees was dropped on 17 by James at first slip off Pennington, a regulation chance and a costly miss. Gay departed for an eight ball duck another dismissal for the Clarke-O’Neill combination, 24 for 2 in the 8th over. After a six over spell from Pennington, Josh Tongue replaced him. His opening two deliveries were deposited for legside boundaries by Lees. The former Worcester man making a much delayed debut was understandably rusty all day and well below his best in his first championship match since July 2023. The Durham 50 came up in his opening over, the 13th of the innings. Lyndon James replaced O’Neill (7 1 24 2) from the Radcliffe Road End. The 50 stand for the third wicket between Lees and Ackermann came up in 72 balls via a legside boundary by Ackermann off the erratic James. Farhan Ahmed replaced the expensive Tongue from the Radcliffe Road End for the 23rd over, a single for Lees brought up his 50 off 60 balls. A four through third man by Ackermann off James brought up the 100 in the 24th over. The new Durham skipper Lees (52 off 70 balls, 8x4) threw his wicket away being caught at mid-on by O’Neill off Farhan, 102 for 3 in the 25th over. The 3rd wicket had raised 78 in 17 overs. O'Neill returned for the 26th over. Durham 118 for 3 off 30 overs at lunch with Ackermann on 41 and Robinson on 5.
After bowling a no ball, Tongue's opening two legitimate deliveries after lunch were driven for offside fours by Robinson. Pennington switched to the Radcliffe Road End. Robinson (16) fished at a Tongue delivery and was caught at first slip by James, 136 for 4 after 35 overs. Ackermann reached his 50 off 86 balls. James replaced Tongue from the Pavilion End for the 43rd over and proved less expensive than his opening spell. O'Neill returned and with his fourth ball of his third spell had Rhodes (10) well caught by Clarke diving low to his left, 171 for 5 in the 44th over. Notts still reasonably placed, however Durham managed to add a further 199 for the loss of four wickets off the remaining 52 overs of the day. O’Neill was by far the most impressive bowler for Notts today bowling a good probing line and length. In the 51st over, Ackermann on 80 had a huge slice of luck when James brushed his off stump with the bail moving but then returning back into its groove. Farhan returned for the 53rd over with Durham reaching their 200. In the last over before tea, a straight driven boundary for Ackermann off Tongue took him to his ton off 174 balls. Durham 243 for 5 off 64 overs with Ackermann on 104 and Clark on 34.
A cover driven boundary by Ackermann off Tongue saw Durham to 250 in the 66th over. In Tongue's following over Clark pulled him for six into the Smith Cooper Stand. Clark (45) though fell off the last delivery of the over caught by McCann diving to his right at second slip, 264 for 6 off 68 overs. The sixth wicket partnership had added 93 runs in 25 overs. Ackermann (116) finally departed caught by Montgomery at slip off Farhan Ahmed, 278 for 7 off 73 overs. A lofted four by Drissell off James brought up the Durham 300 in the 78th over. The new ball was taken with Durham 310 for 7 off 80 overs. Drissell hit three consecutive boundaries off the tiring O’Neill in the 86th over. Pennington demolished Raine's (27) stumps with a well-pitched up delivery, 347 for 8 in the 87th over. Another useful stand put together by Raine and Drissell adding 69 in 13 overs. The Durham 350 came up in the following over. Drissell (45) became O’Neill's fourth victim, all caught behind by Clarke – the last one a easy effort; 355 for 9 in the 92nd over. The strength of Durham batting line-up could be gleaned by Matty Potts (8*) coming in last man with a first-batting average of 18.72. With former Notts man Coughlin (6*) as his partner they added a further 15 as Durham closed on 370-9 off 96 overs. The extras count was far too high on 40 as the Notts seamers had a very up and down day with the ball.
Without Verreynne, Notts have a challenging task to remain in the game and what is a good pitch with a short boundary on one side. The plus side for Notts was the performance of Sheffield Shield Player of Year who impressed with his 4-74 this on the back of taking 38 wickets at 21.07 for Victoria in the Sheffield Shield last winter. Former England man Tongue looked very rusty. Based on this performance and his earlier pre-season form, Hutton should have been selected ahead of him. MAG
03/04
No Kyle Verreynne included in the opening squad of the season. Kyle's parent club, Western Province that he shares with Dane Paterson and David Bedingham, are still in contention for the play-offs of the South African 4 Day competition, so No Objection Certificates have not been issued yet. The squad does include Fergus O'Neill.
If any of Josh Tongue, Conor McKerr and Fergus O'Neill make their club debuts tomorrow, who will hand them their county caps, Hass, Broad or Fletch?
Durham Squad:
Colin Ackermann, Graham Clark, Paul Coughlin, George Drissell, Emilio Gay, Mitchell Killeen, Alex Lees*, Ben McKinney, Callum Parkinson, Matthew Potts, Ben Raine, Will Rhodes, Ollie Robinson+
Who'd be a sponsor of the County Championship these days? They seem to change annually in recent years, Vitality, LV= and now we have Rothesay, who don't appear to to do insurance but do do pensions and investments. Dave Griffin says that this is the 9th sponsor of the Championship since sponsorship was introduced in 1977.
Just to lower the profile of the new sponsor's launch, there will be no Ben Stokes in the opening few rounds, significant for this fixture.
Also, Root and Brook will be absent for Yorkshire's return to the top flight and Jimmy Anderson is injured for Lancashire's first few Division 2 matches.
Friday could possible see the coming together of a fair proportion of England's fast bowler stable at Trent Bridge:
Notts in theory have Olly Stone, Josh Tongue and Dillon Pennington whereas Durham have Matty Potts, Brydon Carse and Mark Wood but one thing is certain not all of those players wlll be fit or will be given a green light to play from the England string-pullers. Add to those England Lions' Sam Conners and Lyndon James into that mix.
Will Will Rhodes, after switching counties, maintain his happy hunting ground feeling at Trent Bridge with his new playmates?
All the talk around Notts has been the need to score first innings runs this year, so can they achieve this? Durham's bowlers in April will be a stern test for the Notts batting.
Nottinghamshire - 'The Only Way Is Up'
2024 season - Eighth in Division One
Dave Bracegirdle - BBC Radio Nottinghamshire
Yazz knew what she was on about, didn't she? 'The Only Way Is Up' was not only a catchy hit single but is also a good place to approach Nottinghamshire's hopes for 2025.
Head coach Peter Moores has emphasised that it's important to learn from what went wrong last year, as well as draw a line underneath it.
As a brief reminder, Notts narrowly avoided relegation from Division One of the County Championship, finished bottom of their group in the T20 Blast and barely raised a pulse in the One-Day Cup.
So what might be different this time around?
The only domestic signing sees Conor McKerr join from Surrey but with Josh Tongue now fully fit, those two bolster a fast-bowling unit that promises untold riches.
If Notts can keep Olly Stone healthy, alongside overseas recruits in Australia's Fergus O'Neill and Pakistan's Mohammad Abbas, throw in the evergreen Brett Hutton and the raw pace of Rob Lord, then their resources seem well stocked.
Teenagers Farhan Ahmed and Freddie McCann both made their county debuts towards the back end of last season and already carry the weight of expectation.
The prodigious spinning fingers of 17-year old Ahmed have already marked him out as a generational talent, while 19-year-old team-mate McCann hit two centuries in just seven innings.
Some astute observers are already wondering if Kyle Verreynne is the best wicketkeeper-batter in the world right now. The county fought off a lot of competition to secure the services of the South African for the whole campaign.
That just leaves the top order. While Trent Bridge members may not see too much of England's Ben Duckett once again, there are guaranteed runs from skipper Haseeb Hameed and the gifted Joe Clarke, both as good as any in the county game.
2024 season - Fifth in Division One
Martin Emmerson - BBC Radio Newcastle
Durham finished fifth on their return to Division One last season and in general more than held their own. They might be able to improve on that this year. We'll see.
They weren't helped by the loss of their entire opening game - at home to Hampshire in April – but there was only really Surrey who turned them over.
That was towards the end of the season and the week Surrey retained their title - and they beat a weakened Durham side struggling with injuries.
From a batting point of view they have added Emilio Gay to the ranks. He joined towards the end of last season from Northants, while Will Rhodes chose to leave Warwickshire after seven seasons, despite the offer of a new contract.
They will help boost a line-up which includes the leading batter in Division One last season, in South African David Bedingham. He scored 1,331 runs, including a club-record 279 against Lancashire in September. He also became the first Durham batter to score centuries in four consecutive innings.
Opener Michael Jones has left for Lancashire. His outings last season were limited due to selection choices, so he took the decision to head back home.
Bowling is the key issue. They've had no luck with overseas players in recent seasons. Scott Boland lasted part of one game before returning home to Australia in April. Neil Wagner managed just one game too. Veteran Peter Siddle came in and did well in his four games, while West Indian Chemar Holder didn't particularly pull up any trees in his three matches. Keeping their bowlers fit will be key.
It remains to be seen how much of a good signing Sam Conners will be. The bowler has joined from Derbyshire. While he boasted 50 championship wickets in 2022, he took 27 the following year, but only played five Championship matches last season. Australian seamer Brendan Doggett will play County Championship matches in April and May. The 30-year-old seamer plays for South Australia and has 157 first-class wickets to his name.
Then there's the likes of ever-dependable all-rounder Ben Raine. Matthew Potts is important to the team too, when England allow him to be available. Seventeen-year-old James Minto looks a good prospect and fellow bowler Daniel Hogg will be looking to push on after a career-best 7-66 against Notts in Chester-le-Street.
A Durham preview:
Previewed by Graham Hardcastle - ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay
Captain: Alex Lees
Head Coach: Ryan Campbell
2024 finish: Fifth (Division One)
2024 highest run-scorer: David Bedingham (1,331)
2024 highest wicket-taker: Matthew Potts (33)
Key winter moves: Experienced Australia A seamer Brendan Doggett has signed an overseas deal for the first two months of the season, supplementing prolific South African batter David Bedingham, who is available all summer aside from any Test Match commitments. Scotland batter Michael Jones has moved to birth-county Lancashire, but three domestic recruits have arrived in the North East; opening batter Emilio Gay, all-rounder Will Rhodes and fast bowler Sam Conners.
What we’re looking forward to seeing: After winning Division Two in 2023, Durham consolidated their top-flight position last season by finishing mid-table courtesy of four wins and five draws. Can they kick on now and give champions Surrey something to think about? England Test captain Ben Stokes, currently sidelined following hamstring surgery, could return to county colours during the early stages of the summer as he builds up to blockbuster series against India and Australia this year.
Final thought: It will be fascinating to chart the progress of three highly-rated homegrown youngsters as they tackle a summer in which Alex Lees will captain Durham’s Championship team alongside their white-ball sides. Opening batter Ben McKinney scored an England Lions century against Australia A this winter and is targeting a breakthrough campaign, while fast bowlers Daniel Hogg and James Minto can further progress after brief - and exciting - exposure in last summer’s Rothesay County Championship.
A disappointing first day , looks like we will need to try and force a draw.
ReplyDeleteThe plus side , a beautiful sunny day and not too cold.
Colin.
I wouldn't say "Durham dominate" but I do think they've got a slight advantage as they scored their runs fairly quickly and considering they were put in they would probably have expected to be all out on day one. Obviously we have no idea how we will bat yet. Should be a decent crowd there tomorrow seeing as there's no football in Nottingham.
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