(09-04-2023 19:45 )hornball Wrote: What about Leicestershire also?? what a match, and the kind of finish that only cricket can provide over and over again! The foxes have come up trumps with Handscomb (can't have come cheap either btw), and he may be the difference between a reasonable season (for as long as he is there) and propping the rest up once more! the rest in the line - up, however, have to back him up and play responsibly in their own roles - I get that the run rate was near 7 plus today, but some of the ways his playing partners got themselves out was kamikaze stuff. Still a win, and maybe the catalyst for helping Paul Nixon to prove the naysayers wrong!
County Cricket a problem?? Maybe need to look for a different scapegoat??
A Historic win for the Foxes, the first at Headingley since 1910
May I add some context to this victory. Played out on a dead, slow surface, very little seam movement, & hardly a ball offered to swing all match.
If there was ever a situation where a Leicestershire team could producea win then this was it. No disrespect to them but I expect them to return to their winless ways that has prevailed for countless seasons. Such is their reputation for an inability to get over the line that many Yorkshire fans had been calling for a declaration before stumps on day 3. I was not one o them, what I saw was a medium-paced attack with only a handful of ball creeping above 80mph, & an unresponsive pitch. I was looking at a 450 target with the ability to keep attacking fields for longer, but not really a realistic chance of forcing a win. Many were surprised that the Foxes opted to bowl first on what appeared to be a surfaced that would produce runs, I suspect that they were hoping for the gifted declaration that they received even at that stage. Leicestershire's captain Lewis Hill almost cost his own team a chance of victory with his blatant timewasting on the final morning, as it took 50 minutes to bowl 7 overs before the declaration came. He didn't believe they could win himself. The Yorkshire fielders were having difficulty sighting the ball in the closing stages, the light was marginal, & there would have been no arguments if the umpires had taken the players off before the match could be completed. Yorkshire drove the whole game, up until the declaration. Hill let the over-rate slip to -5 in the first season on day one. After 3 hour rain delay, Yorkshire pushed on in the final season, & into day 2, sacrificing wickets as they scored at a healthy 5 runs an over.
After a promising start in Div 1 last year, Yorkshire did a great impression of Leicestershire, in their inability to win.
I will count Yorkshire out of the running for promotion. The only benefit I can see is for young batters, Hill, Bean & Wharton to gain experience against weaker bowling attacks, although the negative would be on poorer pitches.
Whilst Yorkshire have continued to supply England with batters, I have a concern that the standard of bowlers coming through is not looking good.