Good pitches, bowlers out of practice and batters unscarred by failure make it a fruitful time for the wavers of the willow

Maybe it was the sight of Rory Burns’s magnificent mane of brown hair, bouncing behind him as he trundled up to the wicket to deliver a tame dobbler against Warwickshire. Perhaps it was Sir Alastair Cook against Glamorgan, sporting an impish grin as he approached the crease at an angle, his arms fanned out and bent at the elbow before serving a ball high on humour but lacking any bite.

It could have been Michael Burgess’s 178 from No 8 at Edgbaston against Surrey in the opening round of the County Championship season. Or it was the drawn match in Derby a week later that saw Cheteshwar Pujara, Shan Masood and Tom Haines all register double tons. Then again it might have been any of the other 32 centuries scored across eight days of domestic cricket. Whatever prompted it, a counterintuitive idea spilled over the horizon and opened our eyes to its inarguable truth: batting in April in England isn’t so difficult after all.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Vote totals expected to swing back and forth as key US states continue to count

Battleground states Michigan, Pennsylvania, Nevada and Georgia counting as USPS data shows…

John Torode: ‘The kitchen is a great place to find yourself’

The celebrity chef, 56, shares his secrets for a happy relationship and…

‘Nadine Dorries is terrible! That’s made my job easier’: Labour’s Lucy Powell on the Tories, culture war and BBC

As a teenager, the shadow culture secretary was always up for a…