Lancs do not want history repeat (17 Sep 1998)
Lancashire have come close before since sharing the title with Surrey in 1950
17-Sep-1998
17 September 1998
Lancs do not want history repeat
The Lancashire Evening Telegraph
Lancashire have come close before since sharing the title with Surrey
in 1950.
They were second in 1956, 1960 and most recently in 1987, when they
went into the last game at Essex in a similar position - having won
their last five, but needing leaders Notts to lose to give them a
chance.
Lancashire won, but so did Notts - a case of so near, and yet so far.
Chairman Jack Simmons recalls similar situations in 1970, 1971 and
1975, when Lancashire were in the thick of the race but could not get
the results they needed at the end of the season.
"Either we were totally stuffed by the weather, which I remember all
too vividly happening once against Sussex at Hove, or the other teams
just did too much for us," he reflected.
Simmons will be an avid, nervous spectator at Old Trafford for the
next four days - although with one eye on the weather and another on
the television coverage from The Oval, he might be pushed to see any
cricket at all.
And he is not the only Lancashire great who will be willing the
latest Red Rose heroes to an historic success this weekend. Brian
Statham, who made his county debut in Nigel Howard's 1950
championship season and is now the club president, said: "It has been
a great team effort. "They are a talented squad, and they have taken
a more positive approach to their cricket."
Clive Lloyd, another committee man who despite his one day success
never managed to add the championship in his playing days with
Lancashire, added: "Our team has been one of the best in the country
for several seasons, so it's not a great surprise to see them doing
so well, although it has been a great effort to keep winning in all
three competitions."
Finally, David Lloyd, the England coach who captained Lancashire to
fourth place in 1975 and was county coach when they last went close,
finishing fourth again in 1995, enthused: "They have done
terrifically well. They have come of age together."
Bumble might remember being asked by one Lancashire member at the
annual general meeting in late 1995: "When are we going to win the
championship, David? I've been coming here 40 years and I'm running
out of time."
For that member, and tens of thousands of other Lancashire cricket
players and supporters, that time is now tantalisingly close.
Source :: Lancashire Evening Telegraph (https://www.reednews.co.uk/let/)