Essex start with Irani in charge (13 April 1999)
Essex have handed the captaincy to Ronnie Irani for the first time as last year's bottom team take on the champions, Leicestershire, in the opening round of the PPP healthcare Championship matches at Chelmsford today
13-Apr-1999
13 April 1999
Essex start with Irani in charge
Charles Randall
Essex have handed the captaincy to Ronnie Irani for the first time as
last year's bottom team take on the champions, Leicestershire, in the
opening round of the PPP healthcare Championship matches at
Chelmsford today.
Irani, 27, will probably be leading Essex more often than not as
understudy for Nasser Hussain, who has England duties during the
World Cup and a four-Test series against New Zealand, and all the
signs suggest Irani will do a very good job, passionate cricketer
that he is. It also underlines Essex's puzzling decision to hand the
captaincy in the first place to a player likely to be absent for long
periods.
The weather outlook for today looks wintry and rainy everywhere, so
Lancashire's idea of charging no entrance fee for their match against
Sussex at Old Trafford is a very good idea. It brings to mind that
18th century entry in the Hambledon Club's minutes: "Wet day, only
three members present, nine bottles of wine."
Free ground admission is a pointer to the future. Membership
subscriptions should represent added value such as good catering
facilities, the best viewing areas, convivial bars, discounts on
merchandise and travel. There should be no need to include a season
ticket element, and one cannot expect people to pay to watch cricket
on exposed terracing in April in any case.
Allowing free public access for four-day cricket all through the
summer should attract the curious and enthusiasts with little time on
their hands. The players would welcome greater acclaim for their
successful moments.
The April weather explains why the first class season cannot be
opened with a fanfare as it can in football, as with the FA Charity
Shield. Special curtain-raising games have been tried - such as
champion county versus an England XI - and have usually proved to be
miserably chilled anti-climactic affairs.
Lancashire are weakened for the Sussex match by the absence of their
England contingent, though John Crawley, their leading batsman,
starts his first season as captain. Sussex's new ball attack will be
minus Jason Lewry for another month after an operation on the
shoulder injury that ended his England A tour prematurely.
Essex , with or without spectators, expect a great improvement on
last year under the Irani/Hussain ticket, though they might breathe a
sigh of relief that Vince Wells, who scored 171 against them at
Leicester last year, is away with England. That match marked Essex's
nadir, the fifth of six consecutive championship defeats that brought
a season of cursed memory to an end.
Bottom place used to be a preserve of Durham's. Not any more, and
there is good news at Chester-le-Street, where Simon Brown returns to
the bowling attack against Worcestershire after missing the whole of
last year's championship with a chronic knee injury. Melvyn Betts has
been passed fit from the leg injury that ruined his England A tour to
Zimbabwe and South Africa during the winter.
There are a few burgeoning reputations at Durham - for example,
Betts, Steve Harmison and Paul Collingwood - so David Boon, their
Australian captain, will be disappointed if there is not a further
substantial rise up the table this summer, and Worcestershire look
vulnerable enough to present Durham with a good start.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)