The Invasive Species in the County Championship

A look at the pernicious effects the Kookaburra ball is having on the county championship and a photo gallery.

It has been a while since I last posted. The day after the end of the test match that I wrote about in my previous post was the last day of a round of county championship fixtures, while today is the first day of another round of such fixtures. Both these rounds have been played with a Kookaburra ball, the ‘invasive species’ of my title, rather than the traditional Duke ball.

The last round of championship fixtures saw the maximum of nine matches being played. Seven ended in draws, with a definite result varying in unlikeliness from the Derbyshire game, where the draw was only confirmed with a mere two balls to play to the match involving Sussex, where Sussex only bothered to declare their second innings closed because it was 4:50PM, which meant that hands could be shaken on the inevitable draw, with a result having been impossible for some hours. The sole exceptions were Worcestershire v Surrey where the home side had no answer to the defending champions’ firepower and Northamptonshire v Middlesex, where the north Londoners proved vulnerable. For the rest the Kookaburra’s refusal to do anything either in the air or off the pitch led to a lot of boosted batting averages and little else of note. This round of matches looks similar so far, with no side as yet having lost more than four wickets (and we are well into the second session of play, with no rain intervening).

This is the third season of a trial introduction of the Kookaburra into certain rounds of the county championship, and I seriously hope that the ECB take note of the negative effect of this ball and banish it back to the antipodes where it belongs. The ridiculous thing is that in home test matches the Duke ball is still used, so most of the best bowlers aren’t bowling much with the Kookaburra anyway as they are away with England.

Of course the Kookaburra is not the sole factor contributing to the preponderance of drawn matches – the ludicrous scaling of point awards that makes a draw worth 50% of a win also induces caution – a draw with a large haul of bonus points could be worth as much as 16 points, while a win in a low scoring match might only be worth 19, so high scoring draws are not much less valuable than wins in low scoring matches.

My usual sign off…

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Author: Thomas

I am a founder member and currently secretary of the West Norfolk Autism Group and am autistic myself. I am a very keen photographer and almost every blog post I produce will feature some of my own photographs. I am an avidly keen cricket fan and often post about that sport.

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