Ali Martin 

County season arrives with fresh hope of domestic displays paving path to international stage

Not everyone is optimistic it will be the case, but players should start the season believing performances will be noticed by the England setup
  
  

Fans watch Yorkshire take on Sussex in Scarborough last season.
As much as England selection dilemmas will feature in the opening rounds, the County Championship stands alone as a competition of great interest. Photograph: Allan McKenzie/SWpix.com/Shutterstock

Peter Moores could be forgiven for raising an eyebrow at England’s backing for Brendon McCullum after four years as head coach and that bleak Australian winter. Moores was afforded barely three during his two spells in the job, neither of which included an Ashes series.

But as his Nottinghamshire side begin the defence of their County Championship title away at Somerset on Friday, Moores is keen to look forwards. During his Ashes mea culpa, the England team director, Rob Key, said he wanted better communication with the counties on selection, music to the ears of the leading domestic coach.

“If I was a county player, I’d be more excited about starting this season than the one before,” says Moores, whose captain, Haseeb Hameed, should be among those looking to state their case. “It feels more likely there’s a route into the England team now. I liked the thought when I played that, even though you might be a million miles off, you’ve still got the dream that if you go well, you’re a chance.

“It doesn’t guarantee anything because there should be loyalty to some of the players there already. But I hope England will start to genuinely engage more with the county game because since the start of international cricket that’s where the players have come from.”

While Moores is optimistic, Paul Farbrace, his equivalent at Sussex, sounds less so. On TalkSport last week, Farbrace said “you just know McCullum isn’t interested in county cricket” and that his contact with the clubs is minimal. And so in turn, he went on to lament, the counties are not fussed about how England fare.

In an attempt to fix this disconnect, Key has established a County Insight Group that will hold quarterly meetings with four county representatives (two from each division). He and McCullum are also due to address the county directors of cricket this week, the first such meeting for two years.

One coach said these latest moves are welcome, clearly, but that county cricket “almost feels more professional” than the England setup these days. Key’s public explanation for any perceived indifference was a reluctance to meddle in county business, something many took to be contempt for the cricket they play.

The underlying aspect is the difference between domestic and international cricket. As Farbrace acknowledged, the former is a front-foot game due to the slower pitches and medium-fast seamers, the latter challenges techniques above the waist. England, therefore, have felt the need to look beyond domestic numbers. Supporting the theory is Jacob Bethell, who is yet to score a century for Warwickshire, but in the space of six months made one in each of the three international formats. As McCullum said last year, an England squad picked to win the County Championship would look very different to the one chosen for the Ashes.

Even if selection must continue to be nuanced, dissolving the sense of them and us that has built up will be one of the themes of the season. There may only be a couple of vacancies come the first Test against New Zealand in June, but players should start the season believing performances will be noticed.

Unless Zak Crawley embarks on a hitherto-unseen early season rampage at Kent, his spot at opener certainly feels ripe to be reassigned. If not then Key’s recent admission that England have been far too loyal in selection will look empty. Matt Henry – six cheap dismissals from six when they last met in New Zealand – will be licking his lips.

Much like a recent Australian tradition, there may well be a “bat off” for opener. Hameed is the fully blossomed option, racking up runs with a new level of intent, while Glamorgan’s Asa Tribe and Durham’s Ben McKinney are two promising youngsters already in the Lions. Ben Duckett had one poor series in Australia, but, unless his scores with Notts are binary, he seems likely to partner one of them.

Thereafter, it will be a case of assessing Jamie Smith’s recovery from a torrid winter, with Somerset’s James Rew in the wicketkeeping wings. Jordan Cox is another here, but misses Essex duty for the Indian Premier League. Bethell, Jofra Archer and Brydon Carse are also there.

Ollie Robinson and Sam Cook can push to fill the new ball berth left empty since Chris Woakes took a tumble. Spin is still the biggest quandary and where spring conditions muddy the thinking most. Shoaib Bashir’s fresh start at Derbyshire will be followed closely.

Although as much as selection dilemmas feature in the opening rounds, the County Championship also stands alone as a competition of great interest and having finished eighth in 2024 Nottinghamshire’s title win should demonstrate that upward mobility is possible. Surrey remain stocked to the gills with talent and will want to show last year’s second place was a blip. Warwickshire, their first opponents, could also mount a decent challenge, boasting nine seamers with a claim to be first-choice picks and Woakes back among them.

Bar Sussex, hit with a 12-point penalty for financial shortcomings, the remaining 17 teams in the two divisions start out on zero. As the upbeat Moores puts it, this is the time of year to dream.

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*