County prospects: Lancashire (13 April 1999)
Lancashire are unlikely to repeat last summer's laudable runners-up position in the championship this time around, but the club's efforts to bring customers in greater numbers through the Old Trafford gates continue
13-Apr-1999
13 April 1999
County prospects: Lancashire
Charles Randall
Lancashire look on the bright side
Lancashire are unlikely to repeat last summer's laudable runners-up
position in the championship this time around, but the club's efforts
to bring customers in greater numbers through the Old Trafford gates
continue. Floodlit cricket is the key.
AXA League champions Lancashire have four National League night
matches arranged, and their Saturday game against Essex on July 3
should be an interesting barometer. One official said: "One of our
objectives is to close our doors with a capacity crowd inside." Last
summer, on a wet night in July, a crowd of 9,500 visited the ground
to watch Worcestershire.
Whatever the size of the crowds, cricket thrived in Manchester last
year, and keeping the wagon rolling this summer in success terms will
not be easy.
Wasim Akram, Lancashire's captain, has moved on and four other senior
players, plus the new overseas signing Muttiah Muralitharan, the Sri
Lankan off-spinner, will miss almost half the season.
John Crawley is the new captain and he will be expected to lead from
the front with weight of runs; seven championship hundreds, as last
year, would do very nicely.
The batting generally seems Lancashire's weakest suit. Graham Lloyd
is occasionally capable of sustained innings, but the absence of Neil
Fairbrother, Andrew Flintoff and Ian Austin knocks a hole in the
order, which lacks proven quality in reserve, and the loss of Mike
Atherton through injury hardly helps.
Muralitharan's savagely spun off-breaks will win matches only after
his Sri Lanka duties are completed. Lancashire have to assume he does
not run into no-ball problems during the World Cup; otherwise the
knock-on effect to his county season hardly bears thinking about.
The Old Trafford ground will have a new feature at the Warwick Road
end near the pavilion. The £2.7 million 68-room budget hotel, called
the Old Trafford Lodge, is due to open on May 1 and the club are
confident they can achieve their 75 per cent occupancy rate in the
first year. Some of the rooms have balconies overlooking the cricket
field, and they are to be used for hospitality boxes during big
matches.
One could imagine Lancashire winning a one-day title every season
until doomsday, but a high placing in the championship would be a
very good achievement.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)