Key events
Five things we have learned in first month of season
Tanya Aldred
The kids are alright The brave new world of international franchise cricket might sing only white-ball tunes, but bright young things still love the red ball game. Item: Farhan Ahmed, Nottinghamshire’s 17-year-old off-spinner, with the optimism of youth but the wisdom of an old head, bringing control and surprise. Item: Ben McKinney, Durham’s 2.66 metres (6ft 7in) left-handed 20-year-old opening batter, who made 153 against Warwickshire in early April at Chester le Street and played a vital role in Durham’s victory in two days on a terror track at New Road. Item: Josh Hull, another 2.66 metres 20-year-old, who played his first game for Leicestershire last week after a winter of “beasting” at the hands of the England fitness coaches and, in a possible omen for the Ashes, trapped Cameron Green lbw for four. There are more.
East Midlands rule There has been nothing like it in the East Midlands since the remains of Richard III were discovered under that Leicestershire car park. Nottinghamshire, like their near neighbours Notts Forest, are having a moment. After two mediocre seasons, everything has slotted into place – runs from their captain Haseeb Hameed, a winning overseas bowler in Fergus O’Neill (though his stint is now over), Farhan Ahmed finding his feet and an injury-free Josh Tongue. And while Notts sit pretty at the top of Division One, oft-mocked Leicestershire and Derbyshire gaze down on the rest of Division Two. Leicestershire have looked reborn this season, with their Bazball opening partnership of Rehan Ahmed and Sol Budinger, and Ian Holland leading the Division Two wicket-takers. They ran pre-season favourites Lancashire ragged in the rain-affected draw at Old Trafford as well as holding their nerve against Gloucestershire at Bristol this week. Meanwhile Wayne Madsen’s return as captain at Derbyshire has had revitalising results.
No two Aprils are alike Whereas last April was a wet dog, with county ground staff posting despairing messages in their WhatsApp group over excess water, the start of the 2025 cricket season has been the polar opposite. England and Wales had their driest March since 1961, and April has followed suit. When local cricket grounds in Manchester are having to water their pitches in very early season, you know something unusual is happening. While the zigzagging of the changing climate is bad news, the dry spell has meant plenty of spring cricket and uncharacteristically pleasant conditions for spectators, with excellent attendances everywhere from Chelmsford to The Oval.
There’s always room for a comeback kid Tom Banton’s 371 in the Championship’s first round was more than just the earliest triple century in Championship history and the highest scores by a Somerset player. It was a redemption song by a young man who, after being thrown in at the deep end of international cricket and the franchise circuit, fell out of love with the game. But there are fewer better places to quietly re-find yourself than Taunton, and beating Langer’s record with a four off the penultimate ball of the second day in front of his home crowd warmed every cockle. A dazed looking Banton said after: “This is the best day I’ve had in cricket and will probably be the best day I’ll ever have.”
The loan system is brilliant The loan system has taken spring in its stride, with Somerset’s Jake Ball grabbing seven wickets in his first match for Durham, Nottinghamshire’s leg-spinner Calvin Harrison swaggering 50 and taking 11 wickets against Lancashire, Hampshire’s Josh Turner enjoying his time at Old Trafford and Somerset’s Ben Green taking a maiden five-wicket haul for Leicestershire. Even if the experience is not a huge success, like Shoaib Bashir’s time at Glamorgan, it sure beats kicking your heels.
Time for me to go – bravo to Middlesex and Derbyshire for the gentle entertainment, and thanks to everyone for hanging to chat today, it’s been fun. We’ll be back on Friday for Root, Brook, Anderson and more, till then – goodbye!
Division Two table
1 Leicestershire (played 4) 74
2 Derbyshire (played 4) 53
3 Kent (played 3) 52
4 Middlesex (played 4) 38
5 Gloucestershire (played 4) 38
6 Lancashire (played 3) 34
7 Northamptonshire (played 3) 34
8 Glamorgan (played 3) 15
Derbyshire DRAW with Middlesex
DIVISION TWO
Derby: Derbyshire 472 DRAW WITH Middlesex 315 and 307-7
Derby 13 points, Leicestershire 11
A third fifty of the innings, Zafar Gohar raises his bat, after Holden and Higgins before him. Despite an occasional rush of blood, this has been a good defensive effort by Middlesex.
The final act? Gohar is dropped on 44 by tired hands.
Thirty overs left. Morley dawdles back to his mark. I think this is drifting towards handshakes.
Tea-time score
DIVISION TWO
Derby: Derbyshire 472 v Middlesex 315 and 243-6 Middx lead by 86 runs
And, without further harm, Middlesex make it to tea.
Oh dear, things suddenly not looking so good for Middlesex, who are six down – Davies done by a zinger by a charging Zak Chappell and caught behind. The lead 63. Higgins and Zafar can bat mind you.
Leus du Plooy gets his feet crushed for the second time in the match and hobbles off, lbw to the high-stepping Blair Tickner. Middx 194-4 and a lead of just 37.
I need to disappear for a bit now to write something but will drop in over the afternoon. Hopefully Middlesex’s batters will continue to entertain.
There’s a blue, blue sky above Derbyshire, and a couple of red, angry hearts in the Middlesex dressing room. du Plooy and Higgins take the mantle in the middle from Eskinazi and Holden – as du Plooy drives the ball over the rope towards the Derbyshire groundsman’s collection of rollers.
Lunchtime score
DIVISION TWO
Derby: Derbyshire 472 v Middlesex 315 and 171-3 Middx lead by 14 runs
And in a shambolic final over before lunch, Eskinazi is now run out in some kind of crazy mix-up involving a runner. After a pretty serene morning, Middx loose both their set batters needlessly within five minutes.
Oh dear: Max Holden smacks Morley down the ground for four and next ball tries to reach his century with a wanton six and – two minutes before lunch – loses his stumps. Middx 169-2.
An old CCLive friend writes: “Hi Tanya.” Hello there, Mike Selvey!
“Greetings from LHR terminal 2 en route to the Azores for a walking holiday. So I’ll miss the end of the game at Derby.
“The Racecourse has always been a cliche for cricket playing miserableism (?) and indeed when I was playing it was a challenge with changing rooms in the old jockey sheds from which you couldn’t see the pitch, cold showers,lunch in the dungeons of the grandstand and the wind whistling down the unprotected straight mile.
“All long gone now of course and I think it’s a lovely ground.
“A question. Is Karol’s Kabin still there?” That is one for the CCLive County Ground regulars…
For those who haven’t discovered the Live Stream yet: here is your window into Dave Fletcher and Kevin Hand’s souls.
There are some beautiful mature trees surrounding the County Ground. Last time I went (ages ago) I thought what a nice place it must be to watch as a child with lots of shade and places to run around. Holden and Eskinazi are still in by the way, both with fifties under their belt, and have reduced the Middlesex deficit to 22.
Derbyshire with 35 mins till lunch, must be rueing those missed chances. Much muttering about the placid, non-crumbling, hybrid pitch on comms.
Jim asks BTL if any state schools play cricket. Not many, is my guess, especially in urban settings, but earlier this this year I did come across the The Fred Trueman & R66T Academy State Schools Cricket League, the brainchild of Fred Trueman and his friend Geoff Hastings.
The germ of an idea came when Trueman and Hastings were admiring the work of Chance to Shine but wishing that there was something similar for state secondary schools. They had got as far as negotiating some financial backing when Trueman was diagnosed with lung cancer and died quite soon afterwards in 2006. Nevertheless, the Trueman state school cricket league was established after his death and grew slowly and organically, when money was available, until Covid closed down schools.
Post pandemic, it was relaunched, with the help of money from the Cricket Society Trust, and joined forces with the Root academy to become the Trueman R66T Academy State School Cricket League – Trueman had been insistent that it should be a league not a cup so that children were not knocked out of the competition after one game. The League has provided playing equipment and match balls and coaches, and helped find locations for schools to play at – many don’t have pitches of their own – including area finals in the beautiful grounds of Kimbolton school.
This summer, over 2,500 secondary-school children spread over seven counties will be playing hard ball cricket in the league, who otherwise might never have picked up a bat.
In other cricket activity, Somerset second XI are playing SACA today. Somerset’s team includes James Rew’s brother Thomas (a right-handed wicketkeeper batter) who was away with England U19 this winter.
2ND XI: Somerset are back in 3-day friendly action today at Taunton Vale, taking on the South Asian Cricket Academy
Umeed
J Thomas
Goldsworthy
Hill
Smeed
T Rew
Roberts
Church
Vukusic
Langridge
MacDonald
J OgborneSCORECARD / CLIPS ⤵️⤵️⤵️#WeAreSomerset
— Somerset Cricket (@SomersetCCC) April 28, 2025
And now Eskinazi slips through the Derbyshire fingers, gloved behind – the ball seems to fly off the gloves of Guest and loop just short of the sprawling close fielders. Derbys 94-1.
A couple of cricketing letters:
Spin at both ends, as Wayne Madsen turns to Jack Morley and brings in a clutch of close fielders. Holden pulls with absolute abandon and is dropped by Tickner at midwicket on 46. An bullet though – that must have hurt.
DIVISION ONE TABLE
1 Nottinghamshire (played 4) 70
2 Surrey (played 4) 60
3 Sussex (played 4) 52
4 Essex (played 3) 47
5 Warwickshire (played 3) 46
6 Durham (played 4) 45
7 Hampshire (played 3) 43
8 Yorkshire (played 3) 40
9 Somerset (played 4) 33
10 Worcestershire (played 4) 18
Big shades for Alex Thomson, bowling with the popular squirrel tail haircut attached to his head. It’s sunny at the County Ground, where Holden and Eskinazi have added 15 this morning.
We’ll have half an eye on proceedings today, but also chewing over the first month of the season. Have you been studying fast bowlers with a Baz ‘n’ Ben eye? Is your heart with one of the Joshes, or Sonny Baker, Gus Atkinson? What about the young spinners, like Jack Carson or Farhan Ahmed? Should Crawley keep his place or do you fancy a change? Perhaps Tom Haines, Ben McKinney or even Rehan Ahmed? Or is it time to bring back a Dom Sibley or HH-shaped barnacle?
Was Fergus O’Neill the pick of the overseas crop?
What about new look Kent? Or on-the-up Leicestershire?
Will Surrey trip up again?
All this and more, but, first, time to put the kettle on.
Obituary of Keith Stackpole
“A stockily belligerent counterpoint to Lawry’s reed-thin caution,” – what a a brilliant line in a nice obituary of an interesting and talented cricketer.
Sunday’s round-up
On a London day of high spirits as the marathon threaded its way round the streets, Surrey cranked through the gears. They completed a comprehensive eight-wicket victory, their first of the season, just after tea – a game turned upside down when Somerset suffered a half-hour of horror.
After restricting Surrey to a lead of 84, Somerset lost two early wickets. But it was as people were finishing their post-prandial pints that the game was lost, the visitors at one stage losing five for four in 34 balls. Tom Abell shouldered arms, Josh Davey played on, Tom Banton was brilliantly caught, Kasey Aldridge edged onto his stumps, and an airborne Dan Lawrence plucked James Rew out of the spring air.
From 38 for seven, a total of 119 was actually something of an achievement, especially with Sean Dickson unable to bat. Rory Burns’ busy 20 quickly guided Surrey to 36 for victory, though Dom Sibley and Ollie Pope fell along the way. Pope was out for one for the second time in the game as Jordan Clark went home with eight wickets in his wallet.
Nottinghamshire marched to a nine-wicket win over Sussex, buoyed by another four wickets from 17-year old Farhan Ahmed, and fifties from Haseeb Hameed and Ben Duckett – one a Penguin classic, the other an airport thriller. Fergus O’Neill leaves Trent Bridge, after 21 wickets in four games, to be replaced by Mohammad Abbas, who lands just in time for their next match – against his old club Hampshire. It was a second victory of the season for Notts, who sit pretty at the top of Division One.
In Division Two, a zig-zagging game on a Bristol pitch with unusual energy ended with a two-wicket victory for Leicestershire in the evening sunlight. Gloucestershire couldn’t regain enough ground after their batting suffered an attack of the vapours, at one stage losing five for 16, with four wickets for Ian Holland – the second tier’s leading wicket-taker.
Leicestershire were set 143 and it looked unlikely as Dom Goodman (four for 33) zipped through the top order, but Ben Cox and the tail hauled them over the line. In the only game to reach a fourth day, Middlesex are following on against Derbyshire, still trailing by 97 runs in their second innings.
Scores on the doors
DIVISION ONE
Trent Bridge: Nottinghamshire 300 and 148-1 BEAT Sussex 169 and 278 BY NINE WICKETS
The Oval: Surrey 367 and 36-2 BEAT Somerset 283 and 119 BY EIGHT WICKETS
New Road: Durham 136 and 108-4 BEAT Worcestershire 162 and 81 BY SIX WICKETS
DIVISION TWO
Derby: Derbyshire 472 v Middlesex 315 and 60-1
Bristol: Leicestershire 262 and 146-8 BEAT Gloucestershire 252 and 152 BY TWO WICKETS
Preamble
Hello! It’s a relaxed Monday at CC Live!, the air gorgeous with hawthorn and cow parsley, and with just one game in town. All eyes to Derby, where Middlesex are following on.
We’ll be here all day, draw up a chair and join us between spreadsheets.