County prospects: Leicestershire (13 April 1999)
Only time will tell whether the absence of Phil Simmons scuppers Leicestershire's hopes of retaining the championship title they won with such panache last summer
13-Apr-1999
13 April 1999
County prospects: Leicestershire
Charles Randall
Champions could rue Simmons loss
Only time will tell whether the absence of Phil Simmons scuppers
Leicestershire's hopes of retaining the championship title they won
with such panache last summer.
Simmons has been replaced by Michael Kasprowicz as the overseas
player at Leicester, while James Whitaker is due to return as captain
for today's opening match against Essex, the bottom side, at
Chelmsford after missing more or less the entire 1998 season with a
knee injury.
Leicestershire still have enough talent to be gunning for a third
championship in four years, but the loss of Simmons could be crucial.
He was a dynamic figure in the county's two recent title seasons in
1996 and last year and even when the Trinidadian endured a miserable
time with the bat last summer, averaging just under 25,
Leicestershire strung together good results.
David Collier, the county's chief executive, said the county had
reluctantly decided to replace Simmons once he had been named in the
West Indies preliminary World Cup squad of 19.
However, he admitted: "He was one of those characters who has as much
impact off the field as he does on the field."
Kasprowicz, a reliable Test seam bowler for Australia, returns to
county cricket a much better player than in his season with Essex in
1994, but he is unlikely to contribute as much as the charismatic
Simmons.
Other new signings are seamer Scott Boswell, from Northamptonshire,
and two leg-spinners in Amer Khan, from Middlesex via Sussex, and
Atul Sachteva, 18, a medical student at Leicester University, who
excelled in second-team cricket last year.
The county enjoyed a productive 12 days pre-season in Sri Lanka,
where Chris Lewis deputised for Whitaker as captain. The opposition
fielded against them proved especially strong, and Leicestershire are
anxious to reciprocate when Sri Lanka play their final World Cup
warm-up game against them at Grace Road on May 11.
The Grace Road ground, meanwhile, has been improved with the
scoreboard upgraded to electronic at a cost of £105,000, a new media
centre at the car park end and an extension to the indoor school.
With the canny Jack Birkenshaw continuing as coach and manager, all
the titles on offer are within Leicestershire's reach.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)