honestbharani
Whatever it takes!!!
Julian was in there sometime too, right?
I genuinely don't remember him playing for us, but cricinfo reckon you're right. Maybe in the mid-1990s before we started winning the CC again in the late 1990s?Julian was in there sometime too, right?
In the late 70s/early 80s Somerset were a decent county side, though (as you say) never that close to winning the championship.I think your first bit is key. The rest of the side was OK but no great shakes; Rose, Denning, Marks, Roebuck, Dredge and a bunch of guys not even as good as them. So they were good enough to win a few one-day cups, but rarely even close to winning the CC.
Middlesex had a more than handy side in the early 1980s. Certainly a very strong attack (Daniel, Van de Bijl, Edmonds, Emburey etc.), and better than average batting too.
Surrey had an outstanding line-up in the 1950s; May, Barrington, Loader, Laker, Lock et al. I've probably forgotten several very fine players there.
Ditto Yorkshire in the 1960s; Boycott, Sharp, Close, Hampshire, Trueman, Nicholson and several others who escape me right now.
Looks like he played just the one season (1996), though he was pretty successful, averaging 36 and 28 in the championship.I genuinely don't remember him playing for us, but cricinfo reckon you're right. Maybe in the mid-1990s before we started winning the CC again in the late 1990s?
I think we need to have a go at this.Middlesex at one point in (I think) 1981 had an XI who had all played Test cricket.
Here we are ..I think we need to have a go at this.
Brearley, Radley, Gatting, Barlow, Butcher, Downton, Emburey, Edmonds, Selvey and Daniel. Did Jeff Thomson play for them too? Big Vince wouldn't have played test cricket, I suppose.
I reckon I'm short of an opening batsman there, unless Graham Barlow had moved up the order by then.
I was just about to say Surrey late 1990s, I remember playing international cricket captain and them winning everything each year. They were the real Madrid of county cricket.I remember Surrey had a host of international players even in the mid to late 90s. Were insanely strong in whatever county games I saw.
Yeah, pretty sure that that XI against Essex in the first game of the season was the first CC side who had all played Test cricket. Noticeable that they had much the worse of a draw, despite Essex only having 4 Test cricketers (plus McEwan who presumably would have played for SA).Here we are ..
https://cricketarchive.com/Middlesex/Seasons/1981_County_Championship.html
Looks like I called it right about Barlow opening some of the time, and also about Thomson. I hadn't realised that Wilf Slack also played in that season. He went on to play a few tests in the mid-80s of course.
Minor point of interest was Shakoor Rana umpiring in one of the matches against Essex.
The sides in this match were handy:
https://www.espncricinfo.com/series...a-vs-new-south-wales-sheffield-shield-1995-96
WA had Hussey, Langer, Martyn, Moody, Gilchrist, Julien, Angel and Reid.
NSW had Taylor, Slater, S Waugh, M Waugh, Bevan, Matthews, S Lee and McGrath.
One and a half test sides between the two sides.
These 4 domestic sides would easily beat plenty of test sides that have been turned out by some nations. What an era.At the same time, these two sides were playing:
https://www.espncricinfo.com/series...eensland-vs-victoria-sheffield-shield-1995-96
Queensland had Hayden, Love, Law, Border, Maher, Seccombe, Kasprowicz, McDermott and Rackemann.
Vic had Elliot, Jones, Hodge, Reiffel, Warne, Fleming and Williams.
Pretty strong 4 sides.
I think Mark definitely preferred #4 because it meant he could have a nap while the openers were in.I remember we used to get a channel called Australia Network on cable around then. They had this school gameshow thing called "Amazing" but they also showed highlights of some of the Shield games.and I do remember seeing some NSW games around this time. Found it weird that they had Steve Waugh at 3 and Mark at 4, but when they played for Aus, Steve moved down to 5 but Mark stayed at 4.
Seems like Mark Waugh was Tendulkar before Tendulkar himself was, in refusing to bat outside a particular number.
Did part of this have something to do with the newly discovered art of swing bowling? Was it a novelty like the googly in its early days?Yorkshire in the first few years of the 1900s had J.T. Brown, David Denton, Frank Mitchell, Stanley Jackson, George Hirst, Wilfred Rhodes, Ted Wainwright and Schofield Haigh, all of whom played international cricket. They easily won the county championship every year between 1900 and 1902, winning 49 matches and losing only 2. They didn't lose any of their 41 away matches over this period, and at home they were unbeaten in their 38 matches against everyone except Somerset. The Surrey side of the 1950s was not this dominant, and generally lost a few matches each year.
Yes, they had an extraordinary match against Somerset in 1901: Somerset 87 & 630 v Yorkshire 325 & 113; and then lost to them again in 1902.Yorkshire in the first few years of the 1900s had J.T. Brown, David Denton, Frank Mitchell, Stanley Jackson, George Hirst, Wilfred Rhodes, Ted Wainwright and Schofield Haigh, all of whom played international cricket. They easily won the county championship every year between 1900 and 1902, winning 49 matches and losing only 2. They didn't lose any of their 41 away matches over this period, and at home they were unbeaten in their 38 matches against everyone except Somerset. The Surrey side of the 1950s was not this dominant, and generally lost a few matches each year.