Tillakaratne Dilshan and Dwayne Smith play for
Sussex:
Durham eye Yorkshire milestone as county season begins
by Steve Douglas
CRICKET, LONDON, April 10, 2010: Durham will bid to become the first
side since Yorkshire in the 1960s to win three successive titles when a
new, much-changed English county season began Friday.
The usual raft of overseas players, including Andrew Symonds, Adam
Gilchrist and Shahid Afridi, will add spice to a season that makes its
earliest ever start and which has been revamped in an attempt to bring
the crowds back.
While the County Championship remains largely in the same format and
should see Nottinghamshire and Lancashire provide the sternest challenge
to holders and favourites Durham in Division One, the limited-overs
competitions have been tinkered with by the authorities.
The Twenty20 tournament will begin midway through the season and has
been expanded so that each county plays eight home matches before the
quarter-finals.
A new 40-over competition, meanwhile, replaces the 50-over format and
will see Scotland, Netherlands and the ECB Unicorns take part, with the
21 teams split into three groups of seven.
England hardly have the most glamorous of visitors this summer —
Bangladesh arrive in May before a Pakistan squad in a sorry state come
over in June.
England’s Ashes tour to Australia at the end of the year will also be
a carrot for many players dreaming of a Test call-up for the biggest
series of them all.
Overseas players eye Twenty20
Many of the overseas players have only signed short-term contracts
with the counties, mostly to compete in the Twenty20, which will try to
ride on the momentum given to the newest form of cricket by the success
of the Indian Premier League.
Sussex, the reigning Twenty20 Cup champions after their win over
Somerset in the 2009 final, have recruited West Indies’ Dwayne Smith and
Sri Lanka’s Tillakaratne Dilshan for the tournament.
Surrey will hope the signing of explosive Australian all-rounder
Symonds will spark them into life, although how Rory Hamilton-Brown — at
just 22 the county’s youngest ever captain — manages to cope with the
increased burden of the armband remains to be seen.
Former Australia wicketkeeper Gilchrist will play for Middlesex in
the Twenty20 group stages, while Brad Hodge (Leicestershire), Pakistan
duo Afridi, Abdul Razzaq (both Hampshire) and Australia paceman Shaun
Tait (Glamorgan) will also provide added entertainment.
Durham may struggle in limited-overs competition but they are being
tipped to rule the four-day version once again.
They went through the league unbeaten last year to sweep to the
title, which they also won in 2008 for their first ever county
championship trophy.
They have a potent mix of experience and talented youth players, more
and more of whom are making the step up to the England team, such as
Liam Plunkett and Graham Onions.
Durham eye another title
Paceman Steve Harmison’s international exile will suit Durham just
fine while coach Geoff Cook will be hoping Australian Michael Di
Venuto’s superb form with the bat continues into 2010.
If they do claim another title, Durham will become only the fourth
side to win three English championships on the bounce.
Nottinghamshire, captained by Chris Read and with overseas stars
Hashim Amla and David Hussey in their ranks, will be desperate to go one
better after finishing as runners-up the past two years, while
Lancashire are looking to end their 76-year title drought.
It will also be interesting to see how former England seamer Matthew
Hoggard, controversially released by Yorkshire and snapped up by
Leicestershire, does as captain at Grace Road.
The season began unofficially last week when Durham played the MCC in
a traditional campaign curtain-raiser. This time, however, the match
took place in Abu Dhabi, away from Lord’s for the first time and
complete with a pink ball and floodlights.
AFP
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