Let’s write a pointless opening sentence so that the formatting doesn’t look quite so weird when we give the Warwickshire v Durham game its own subheading.
Warwickshire v Durham
Warwickshire were very much on top after two days, but somehow, after making 313 and bowling Durham out for 190, they contrived to lose. How did this happen?
It’s tempting to say that Josh Poysden is some sort of Brummie Kryptonite. He joined the Bears team at that point and you could argue that he dragged them down.
Or maybe it was psychology. Having Chris Woakes, a good batsman, open in the second innings in the knowledge that he was about to be replaced by Poysden, a shit batsman, was taking the piss a bit. We wouldn’t be surprised if that added to Durham resolve. It can also be a challenge for the guilty side to play remorselessly when they’ve doubtless got a nagging sense that they’re in the wrong.
Rather more prosaically, the guy who took 9-36 in the first innings left the match midway through to go and meet up with the England squad. No matter how well they’d bowled ‘as a unit’ Warwickshire’s other bowlers had only actually managed one wicket between them in that first innings and weren’t much more toothy in the second.
For Durham, Keaton Jennings made another handy hundred. Perhaps we’d make him ‘one to watch’ if we did that kind of thing.
Lancashire v Surrey
Warwickshire are third and Durham move to second. Both are behind Lancashire, who are making the most of the North’s dry season this year. Doubtless they’ll fall back come the August rains, but for now they’re ten points clear.
Their latest win was built around a sterling performance by The Great Neil Wagner, who took 3-52 and 2-17. He was ably supported by Kyle Jarvis who took 11 wickets in the match and Alviro Petersen who made a ton.
For their part, Surrey are quite bad at cricket.
Hampshire v Nottinghamshire
Hampshire won despite none of their players doing anything particularly noteworthy. Tino Best got a four-for. That’s something – although Harry Gurney got nine in the match for the losing side.
Somerset v Middlesex
Two of the first division’s unbeaten sides continued their proud tradition of failing to win or lose a match this season. Middlesex are getting close though. They’ve mostly been rained off during their tour of the South-East in recent weeks but this time, at Lord’s, they were merely struck down by bad light.
Sam Robson made 99. Nick Gubbins made 109. We’d include more details but the Cricinfo scorecard we were looking at has gone invisible and won’t rematerialise even with a refresh.
Hereby we declare this week’s County Championship Division One round-up over.
Hate that scorecard bug with cricinfo
Infuriating, innit?
I really like your opening sentence. I don’t find it pointless at all. I enjoyed it more than any of the other sentences.
Also, as you so eloquently point out in that sentence (ha – more evidence that the sentence isn’t pointless – it makes a point) it provides context for the first sub-heading.
I’m starting to get sense of humour failure at the sight of “played six, drawn six” for Middlesex. Things could be worse of course, but they could be better too.
Back to school next week – should be a result pitch there…
…unless it rains of course.
“I really like your opening”
niiiiiice
I liked the opening sentence too, but I really really liked this one “For their part, Surrey are quite bad at cricket.” I expect they’ll start well at T20 though. As my gran says “All fur coat and no knickers”
Someone should tell Surrey that fur’s no longer in fashion.
Tino Best, TGNW, $lurrey Slagging, veering towards outright opinion on the case of Chris Woakes, self-referential cleverness – this post had it all.
I disagree Mike. No fat cricketers, no “…is/was better than Sachin Tendulkar”, no inabilities to spake, no Venn diagrams… This comment thread has potential, but it’s been a bit disappointing thus far.
This is the James Vince of comment threads.
Except you were talking about the post, of course. Still, could have talkes about Samit Patel’s stout rearguard fifty.
How the mighty have fallen
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/may/26/former-test-player-alan-mullally-convicted-of-fourth-drink-driving-offence
Even in his day he never convincing when driving. Always an accident waiting to happen.