Lancashire: Whatmore's season of hard knocks (22 Sep 1997)
DAV Whatmore will meet with Geoff Ogden, chairman of Lancashire's Cricket Committee, this week to compile the annual report of a disappointing season and start the preparations for 1998
22-Sep-1997
22 September 1997
Whatmore's season of hard knocks
Lancashire Evening Telegraph
DAV Whatmore will meet with Geoff Ogden, chairman of
Lancashire's Cricket Committee, this week to compile the annual
report of a disappointing season and start the preparations for
1998.
They will have plenty to talk about.
Lancashire hung on for a draw with nine wickets down in an
exciting finish against Gloucestershire at Bristol yesterday,
leaving them 11th in the table.
That's four places higher than last year, with five wins
compared to two in 1996, while they have also climbed six places
in the Sunday League from ninth to third.
But last year Lancashire compensated for their poor championship
performance by winning both the Benson & Hedges Cup at the
NatWest Trophy. This time they crashed out of both one-day
competitions, at the group stage in the B&H and, even worse, at
struggling Sussex in the NatWest.
And Whatmore admits that finishing in the bottom half of the
championship table is not good enough for a team containing so
much talent.
Whatmore and captain Mike Watkinson will rightly point out that
things could have been very different had the weather not robbed
Lancashire of victory over Durham in their first game.
And they have been unlucky with injuries as Wasim Akram played
only one championship game. But the batting performances at
Derby, and also against Somerset at Taunton, were unacceptable.
Lancashire suffered an even more spectacular collapse, to 51 all
out in just 14 overs, against Glamorgan at Liverpool, but that
was more excusable as Waqar Younis produced a truly world-class
spell.
While Lancashire were locked in their mid-table scrap with
Gloucestershire on Saturday evening, 40 miles down the M5 at
Taunton, Waqar and his Welsh team mates were celebrating their
first championship since 1969.
They were regarded as cricket's easy-beats a decade ago, but it
is unpleasant food for thought for everyone at Old Trafford that
the unfashionable Taffs have won all three of their
Championships since Lancashire's last outright title, in 1934.
Watkinson, whose captaincy is under threat, was out in
unfortunate style yesterday, run out for one after a mix-up with
Neil Fairbrother.
Mark Harvey had gone in similar fashion three balls earlier, the
victim of a brilliant piece of fielding, as Lancashire
squandered the platform provided by John Crawley's 78.
But fittingly Ian Austin, Lancashire's only ever-present and
their player of the season, added a half century to his four
wickets in the first innings and although Lancashire's victory
chances ended with his dismissal, last pair Glen Chapple and
Gary Keedy hung on for the last two overs to prevent the season
finishing with a seventh defeat.
Source :: Lancashire Evening Telegraph (https://www.reednews.co.uk/let/)