Cricket Diary (17 July 1999)
Lancashire face a crisis when they host the eagerly awaited NatWest Trophy quarter-final against Yorkshire later this month because they have run out of pitches
17-Jul-1999
17 July 1999
Cricket Diary
Charles Randall
Lancashire face a crisis when they host the eagerly awaited NatWest
Trophy quarter-final against Yorkshire later this month because they
have run out of pitches.
They must have had mixed feelings when the draw was made last week,
knowing they would have to use an exhausted second or third-hand
strip at Old Trafford and leave themselves open to accusations of
doctoring the surface for Muttiah Muralitharan on July 28.
Six strips have been taken out of commission for relaying and another
is being reserved for the third Test against New Zealand. Every other
inch of space has effectively been exhausted.
Peter Marron, the head groundsman, created a golden era of pacey
wickets by renewing part of the square a decade ago, but these
compacted Surrey loam-based strips have suffered "root break". He
said yesterday: "In my terms this is a crisis. I'll have to take a
pitch used twice or three times before and roll it out as flat as I
can."
He added: "For the relaid strips I'm trying to find a more natural
soil that allows the grass to grow well."
In case Muralitharan is wondering, there is no question of returning
to marl, the red clay that, when rain-affected, gave Jim Laker his
19-wicket paradise against Australia in 1956.
Michael Geliot raises an interesting point on behalf of the MCC
members angry at being charged admission to the World Cup final. His
group lost their no-confidence vote, but he reckons the committee
could still be sued for as much as L300,000.
Geliot, 65, a former director of the Welsh National Opera, has been
up in arms over the compulsory L60 for a World Cup final ticket or,
as he prefers to put it, the denial of "right of access" to Lord's.
Writing in this month's Cricket Lore magazine, Geliot summarises a
strong legal case against the MCC committee, who have suffered flak
since pushing the membership into admitting women.
Geliot details the water-tight case for members' rights - they must
always agree first before they pay and so on (no matter the public
paid L100 each to the World Cup fund) -and he asks in conclusion:
"Could a member who purchased World Cup tickets sue for
re-imbursement? Could members who did not purchase such tickets sue
for some form of breach of contract?"
The time is ripe for a phalanx of lawyers to march forward and for
the MCC to disappear up their own backsides.
The Tremlett dynasty is producing a potential third generation of
county cricketer. Chris Tremlett, a 6ft 6in all-rounder from
Taunton's College in Southampton, is in Belfast this weekend with
England Under-17. His father Tim played for Hampshire, and his
grandfather Maurice was a Somerset regular, winning three England
caps in 1947.
Tim Tremlett is standing in as Hampshire's coach while Malcolm
Marshall completes a course of chemotherapy treatment for colon
cancer.
France were banned from this week's European Under-19 Championship in
Belfast for selecting a girl - Cindy Paquin, a leg-spinner from
Picardy -and for the squad's "age differential". Their average age
was only 15.
The French authorities are to appeal to the International Sports
Tribunal in Lausanne against their exclusion by the European Cricket
Council, whose chairman is Doug Insole.
Dennis Lillee is 50 tomorrow and remains Australia's leading Test
wicket-taker. He has two more claims to fame, because he was
responsible for a change in the laws of cricket and for a new
first-class regulation. Bats, by law, must be made of wood only after
Dennis tried to use an aluminium one against England at Perth in the
1979-80 Test series. And a regulation had to be introduced to deter
absence from the field after the 1981 series when our Dennis changed
his shirt and rested in the pavilion after each spell of bowling.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph