County Prospects: Worcestershire (30 March 1999)
This is centenary year for Worcestershire in the County Championship and for first-class cricket at their idyllic New Road ground
30-Mar-1999
30 March 1999
County Prospects: Worcestershire
Mike Beddow
Moody's unexpected absence significant
This is centenary year for Worcestershire in the County Championship
and for first-class cricket at their idyllic New Road ground. It is
also a benefit year for their centurion among century-makers.
The county's celebrations, which are to include a visit by the Duke of
Edinburgh for a one-day match against the Australians on May 10,
coincide with a financial tribute to Graeme Hick's 100th hundred last
summer.
Pomp and ceremony will not always be a partnership between club and
gourmet of their batting records. Hick plans to be feasting with
England for half the season, firstly in Sharjah, then the World Cup
and possibly Tests against New Zealand.
This places an immediate query over Worcestershire's ability to
qualify as a first division side in the split championship of next
year, and more so after Australia's about-turn in selecting Tom Moody
for their World Cup squad. The loss of captain and vice-captain - and
the side's heaviest run-scorers - during a formative period in the
season will be a taxing experience for Martin Horton in his new role
as cricket committee chairman.
Horton's appointment is a throwback to the county's first wave of
success, in which the off-spinner and opening batsman - he did the
double twice - played in two Tests in 1959 and Don Kenyon's
championship-winning teams in 1964 and 1965. After 15 seasons at New
Road, he spent 18 years as national coach in New Zealand, a
broad-based mandate incorporating some involvement with the Test side
and the pioneering of coaching schemes.
At the age of 50, the call of home brought him back to Worcester as
cricket coach at the Royal Grammar School and eventually to where he
is happiest with election to the county committee 12 years ago. Given
that Horton's knowledge of first-class cricket spans almost half a
century he is ideally qualified to be the link between policy-makers
and players, but he does not intend to meddle in day-to-day matters.
"I know when I was a player that we hated committee men in the
dressing room," he acknowledged. "There was one day when Major Jewell
came in and addressed Roly Jenkins. 'Why did you open the bowling,
Jenkins?' 'Because I am captain,' said Roly."
Horton said: "We voted in favour of two divisions, even though we are
not one of the Test match clubs or moneyed clubs."
So how do Worcestershire expect to cope? "As one of the smaller
counties, it's vital - certainly to our treasurer - that we finish in
the top half this summer and in the top six next year.
"When promotion and relegation come in, 12 of the 18 have got to play
in the second division in the first two years."
More than ever, the work of coach Bill Athey and assistant Damian
D'Oliveira is essential to sustained prosperity. A crop of young
batsmen appeared last season and Duncan Catterall is a seamer of some
promise.
Though Worcestershire have a competitive lower batting order, they are
sometimes too reliant on Hick and Moody.
It ought to be a summer for advancement by Philip Weston and the
England A tourist, Vikram Solanki, and one of fruition for David
Leatherdale after falling one short of 1,000 runs last year. Equally
welcome would be the rehabilitation of Reuben Spiring after a 12-month
lay-off.
Team Details & First-Class fixtures
Staff: T M Moody, Kabir Ali, Kadeer Ali, N E Batson, D N Catterall, R
J Chapman, R Driver, A Hafeez, G R Haynes, G A Hick, R K Illingworth,
S R Lampitt, D A Leatherdale, M M Mirza, P J Newport, D B Patel, J M
de la Pena, +D J Pipe, P R Pollard, M J Rawnsley, +S J Rhodes, A
Sheriyar, V S Solanki, K R Spiring, W P C Weston, E J Wilson.
New players: Kabir Ali (West Bromwich Dartmouth CC), Kadeer Ali
(Attock CC), J M de la Pena (Kent & Banbury CC), P R Pollard (Notts).
Released: S W K Ellis.
Beneficiary: G A Hick.
Beneficiary: G A Hick.
1998 record Championship
12th (P17 W4 D7 L6).
AXA League: 7th (P17 W7 T1 L6 NR3).
B & H Cup: Zonal stage.
NatWest Trophy: 1st rd.
AXA League: 7th (P17 W7 T1 L6 NR3).
B & H Cup: Zonal stage.
NatWest Trophy: 1st rd.
First-class fixtures
April
Thurs 8: Oxford University (The Parks). Tues 13: Durham (Riverside).Tues 20 Surrey (Worcester). Wed 28 Nottinghamshire (Trent Bridge).
Thurs 8: Oxford University (The Parks). Tues 13: Durham (Riverside).Tues 20 Surrey (Worcester). Wed 28 Nottinghamshire (Trent Bridge).
May
Fri 14: Hampshire (Southampton). Wed 19: Warwickshire (Edgbaston). Wed 26: Glamorgan (Worcester).
Fri 14: Hampshire (Southampton). Wed 19: Warwickshire (Edgbaston). Wed 26: Glamorgan (Worcester).
June
Wed 2: Sussex (Horsham). Wed 9: New Zealand, if not in World Cup (Worcester). Tues 15: Somerset (Worcester). Wed 30: Northamptonshire (Northampton).
Wed 2: Sussex (Horsham). Wed 9: New Zealand, if not in World Cup (Worcester). Tues 15: Somerset (Worcester). Wed 30: Northamptonshire (Northampton).
July
Fri 9: Kent (Worcester). Wed 14: Gloucestershire (Cheltenham). Thurs 22: Leicestershire (Worcester).
Fri 9: Kent (Worcester). Wed 14: Gloucestershire (Cheltenham). Thurs 22: Leicestershire (Worcester).
August
Wed 4: Yorkshire (Headingley). Tues 10: Sri Lanka A (Worcester). Wed 18: Derbyshire (Kidderminster). Tues 24: Lancashire (Worcester).
Wed 4: Yorkshire (Headingley). Tues 10: Sri Lanka A (Worcester). Wed 18: Derbyshire (Kidderminster). Tues 24: Lancashire (Worcester).
Sept
Wed 8: Essex (Chelmsford). Wed 15: Middlesex (Worcester).
Wed 8: Essex (Chelmsford). Wed 15: Middlesex (Worcester).
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)