CMJ: Ashes outlook even brighter (30 May 1997)
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
30-May-1997
Friday 30 May 1997
Ashes outlook even brighter
Christopher Martin-Jenkins.
ENGLAND`S hopes of winning the Ashes are growing and they will
have greater substance if an expert long- range weather
forecast proves to be correct.
Unsettled weather is predicted for the first three Test matches,
which would suit the home bowlers and prevent, perhaps, a
repetition of the cycle of dry pitches, big scores and turning
surfaces on which Australia triumphed so comfortably on their
last two tours.
The Met Office in London no longer chance their arm with
three-month forecasts but last year the BBC programme QED
unveiled the successful technique developed by Piers Corbyn,
of Weather Action, based on the effects of magnetic and
particle activity from the sun.
Weather conditions could make all the difference so I asked
Corbyn for specific forecasts for the first three Tests at
Birmingham next week, Lord`s in mid-June and Old Trafford
in the first week of July. He expects a certain amount of
thundery rain in each. His detailed predictions are:
1st Test, June 5-9: Generally very unsettled with thick cloud
and heavy rain or thunderstorms at times. Last day probably the
best.
2nd Test, June 19-23: Generally very unsettled with variable
skies and heavy thundery showers at times, especially around the
middle of the match.
3rd Test, July 3-7: Generally very unsettled and dull with
heavy, thundery rain in the first half of the match. The last
two days probably much finer.
Commercial obligations prevent Corbyn from extending his
forecast for the remainder of the season but as the
Australians felt a hot sun on their backs for the first time
at Bristol yesterday they might have been deceived into imagining
that British weather never changes. On the other hand, of
course, weather forecasters sometimes get it wrong.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)