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THE Cricket (Notts v Sussex, Losers v Losers)



Trigger

Well-known member
Jul 4, 2003
40,457
Brighton
Hopefully it's a toss worth winning...

My buttocks seem to be more clenched than normal today.

???
 






Moshe Gariani

Well-known member
Mar 10, 2005
12,101
Trigger said:
Hopefully it's a toss worth winning...
can't see that on a used pitch with Mushy in our team the toss is anything other than CRUCIAL...

still, shame it won't make any difference to the overall outcome of the title race :nono:
 
















Muzzman

Pocket Rocket
NSC Patron
Jul 8, 2003
5,229
Here and There
Is the commentary working now? Or does it start bang on 1030?
 


Trigger

Well-known member
Jul 4, 2003
40,457
Brighton
Muzzman said:
Is the commentary working now? Or does it start bang on 1030?
Now, but that aren't saying anything yet, you can hear leather on willow in the background though. :love:
 


Muzzman

Pocket Rocket
NSC Patron
Jul 8, 2003
5,229
Here and There
f***.. I can't get it to work.. I get this instead

47887.jpg
 




Sussex will achieve a double if they defeat last year's champions Nottinghamshire in their Liverpool Victoria Championship tussle at Trent Bridge, starting today.

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Their second championship title in four years under the captaincy of Chris Adams will sit very nicely alongside last month's Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy success, completed after the most arduous process in the one-day competition's history.

Mark Chilton's Lancashire, the only other contenders for the £100,000 first prize, sit eight points behind after a sequence of five draws, three of them rain-affected. They visit Hampshire, who could yet pip them for second place and a cash bonus of £40,000 if they win.

Sussex may be in pole position, but Chilton believes there is every chance his team could claim their first outright title since 1934. He said: "Notts won't just roll over against Sussex – anything can happen, and we have a set of players who just never give up."

Sussex skipper Adams realised as the season took shape that expectation would make this summer more onerous for his players than 2003, the county's maiden championship success. He reckons he has felt more relaxed this time, though that could hardly be said for the rest of his side. Nerves have started to jangle, as evidenced by their brittle victory over Kent at Canterbury two weeks ago.

"We have been under pressure on all fronts all season," Adams said this week. "In fact we have played just one meaningless match all summer."

This would be music to the ears of the England and Wales Cricket Board. In their own world they have moved heaven and earth to achieve a more competitive environment to prepare county players for international cricket. The split championship on flat pitches has become a hardening routine that might well have been a factor in the seizure of the Ashes last year.

The meaningless Sussex game Adams referred to was their final south group match in the C & G Trophy, when they had already qualified for the final against Lancashire at Lord's. It was a pity for Sussex they inexplicably goofed in their Pro40 match at Nottingham on Sunday while they were in line for the first treble since Warwickshire's in 1994.

Despite the intensity of the cricket, the ECB will have to assess very carefully the dominating overseas presence. Figures compiled by the journalist Neville Scott, published yesterday, seemed to confirm that counties are readily taking the option of hiring from abroad rather than developing home players. The reasons are presumably the pressures of relegation and promotion in the split divisions and the ECB central contracts that deprive the circuit of the England elite.

Scott's statistics include all players from overseas and those nurtured abroad until the age of 16. If each match for each player represents a slot, 49 per cent of Durham's slots are not England developed. They are followed by Yorkshire (48 per cent), Derbyshire (47), Worcestershire (44) and Hampshire (43). Sussex are more home-grown than average with 26 per cent, though 61 per cent of their wickets are 'foreign', thanks to the Pakistani connection. Only five per cent of Lancashire's wickets are not home-made.
 


Moshe Gariani

Well-known member
Mar 10, 2005
12,101
ChapmansThe Saviour said:
Great toss to win.

:clap:
indeed :nono:

Lancashire won the toss and elected to bat first

about time they had a bit of luck...
 






hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
61,457
Chandlers Ford
Moshe Gariani said:
indeed :nono:

Lancashire won the toss and elected to bat first



Well they would wouldn't they, at the batters' paradise that is the Rose Bowl. There's absolutely no chance of them not getting maximum batting points on that track.
 




Moshe Gariani

Well-known member
Mar 10, 2005
12,101
Trigger said:
According to ECB Notts & Lancs have both won the tosses.
blimey! you're right - we've been inserted... the plot thickens
 


Moshe Gariani

Well-known member
Mar 10, 2005
12,101
commentary started :clap:
 








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