Gloucestershire secure home tie (29 June 1999)
Gloucestershire have been given a home tie against Sussex in the semi-finals of the first Benson & Hedges Super Cup, as they attempt to reach a Lord's final for the first time in 22 years
29-Jun-1999
29 June 1999
Gloucestershire secure home tie
Christopher Lyles
Gloucestershire have been given a home tie against Sussex in the
semi-finals of the first Benson & Hedges Super Cup, as they attempt
to reach a Lord's final for the first time in 22 years.
Mark Alleyne's side, who beat Surrey by seven wickets in the
quarter-finals yesterday, have avoided competition favourites
Warwickshire and Yorkshire, who face each other a day earlier on July
10.
David Graveney, the former Gloucestershire captain who is now
England's chairman of selectors, welcomed the draw. "Anybody, in a
semi-final, wants to play at home and they would have probably wanted
to avoid Warwickshire and Yorkshire," he said.
Graveney admitted that with the World Cup taking precedence over the
domestic game, the new Benson & Hedges competition for the top eight
sides in last season's County Championship has taken a backseat.
"After the World Cup it's reasonably low key but now all the players
will see it as one step away from a showpiece final at Lord's,"
Graveney said.
Mike Atherton's back complaint has flared up again to rule the former
England captain out of Lancashire's County Championship match against
Essex at Old Trafford today.
Atherton needs more treatment for the condition that forced him out
of England's World Cup squad and has allowed him to play in just two
matches - one a second XI fixture - this summer.
Richard Montgomerie,the former Oxford University captain and opening
batsman who was released by Northamptonshire last autumn, has
received his county cap only three months after making his first
appearance for Sussex.
Montgomerie, 27, has scored 629 first-class runs this season at an
average of 48.He has hit four fifties in 14 innings to go with two
centuries, including a match-winning 110 in the recent victory at
Headingley which lifted Sussex to sixth in the table.
His cap was awarded at Hove last night, before the day-night National
League match against his old county was abandoned because of rain
without a ball being bowled.
John Langridge, considered by many as the finest opening batsman
never to have played for England, has died at the age of 89.
Langridge, the leading run-scorer for Sussex, had been ill for some
time and died in a nursing home in Eastbourne.
He hit a record 76 centuries for the county and scored 34,152 runs in
a career which lasted from 1928 to 1955 - nearly 5,000 more than
Sussex's second highest run-getter, Ken Suttle.
Benson & Hedges Super Cup.- Semi-finals. Warwicks v Yorks (July 10,
Edgbaston) Gloucs v Sussex (July 11, Bristol).
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph