The Inbox

September 23, 2011
Posted on 09/23/2011 in English cricket
The Championship team of the season

From Tim Wigmore, United Kingdom

Eleven cricketers who stood out in the recently-concluded County Championship season

Michael Carberry's return was one of the stories of the summer © Getty Images

Marcus Trescothick

Imperious as ever, Trescothick scored 290 more runs than the next best in either Division, despite missing three games to a cruel injury. His dominance was such that it became a cliché to describe him as batting on a different pitch from everyone else.

Michael Carberry

Though it wasn’t enough to keep Hampshire in Division One, Carberry’s return, after fears his career was over, was one of the stories of the summer. Against Yorkshire, he hit an unbeaten 300, displaying the range of shots and concentration that earned him an England Test cap only 18 months ago, while his brilliant last-day century against Warwickshire denied them the title.

Chris Rogers

Brought in to average over 50 and lead a side that finished eighth in division two in the previous two seasons to promotion, Rogers made the twin challenges seem easy.

Dale Benkenstein

There was no third Championship win in four years for Durham, but Benkenstein’s excellence remained unabated: only Trescothick exceeded his 1353 Division One runs. Long established as his side’s crisis man, Benkenstein’s experience as captain was a valuable aid for Phil Mustard.

Zander de Bruyn

In a Surrey top six that is as gung-ho as they come, de Bruyn provides stickability, and two hundreds and two fifties in the last three games allowed Surrey to claim a remarkable promotion. Somerset fans, not unreasonably, will feel they might just have won the Championship had he not been lured to The Oval.

Jonny Bairstow

In an otherwise bleak season for Yorkshire, Bairstow’s excellence, culminating in a memorable England ODI debut, provided some solace. Attractive and calm in front of the stumps, he scored his runs at a strike-rate – 69 – that few top-order batsmen could match. With the gloves Bairstow improved but is not yet the equal of his late father.

Will Gidman

With one first-class appearance before the season began, not many bookmakers would have bet on Gidman becoming the first man for 15 years to score 1000 Championship runs and take 50 wickets. But do that he did, and with a batting average (45) more than double his bowling one (21). A late developer at 26, Gidman deserves selection into the England Lions team.

Glen Chapple (captain)

It’s not only sentimentality that earns Chapple a place in this side; his achievement in lifting the pennant without stars ensures he leads. At 37, his canny fast-medium bowling was effective enough to claim 55 wickets at under 20, despite often not being fully fit. Though he was uncharacteristically short of runs, Lancashire would not have won the Championship without his 97 in their penultimate game.

Tim Murtagh

Unlucky to never represent England (though he may still play for Ireland), Murtagh’s best season yet propelled Middlesex to promotion. Eighty wickets in 15 matches highlight his ability, which is especially good with the new ball, as a three-wicket burst in 16 balls against Derbyshire also illustrates.

David Masters

Lazy cricket writers have spent years describing Masters as a “nagging seamer” and “journeyman”, but he forced them to be rather more imaginative after claiming 93 wickets. Masters’ mastery of the Tiflex ball and constant ability to seam it was never more evident than when he claimed 8 for 10 against Leicestershire.

Gary Keedy

The mark of Keedy’s bowling is that his left-arm spin is almost as effective in April as in August, while his parsimony (giving away just 2.5 an over) means Lancashire never lost control in the field. His 4 for 57 from 28 overs in the first innings of the victory at Taunton perfectly encapsulated his qualities.

Comments (7)
Posted by: Samuel at September 23, 2011 3:43 PM

Maybe a bit too biased towards the old stagers - the likes of Woakes, Hales, Chopra and Kerrigan have all made equally as important an impact for their sides at times, and have the advantage of being younger than 35!

Posted by: Toobz at September 26, 2011 3:20 AM

If you're going to favour the old stagers though, then Alan Richardson is worth a shout. He kept us up, at times single-handedly, when I assumed he'd fade into the backgroung this year.

Posted by: john hughes new zealand at September 27, 2011 7:25 PM

English players only and no-one under 30. So in keeping with the age qualification what about Murray Goodwin, Chaminda Vaas and Andre Adams

Posted by: Mike at September 28, 2011 8:15 AM

I would have included Woakes for Murtagh and Hales for Rogers but the fact remains that most of the top wicket-takers and run scorers tend to be county stalwarts in their thirties who learnt their craft in first-class cricket, not Twenty20.

Posted by: Asten at October 13, 2011 6:35 AM

Hate to burst your overseas bubble here John Hughes, but Chris Rogers is Australian....

Posted by: A Harrison at October 19, 2011 10:16 AM

@ John Hughes: I think you'll find that Benkenstein is not an English player having played ODIs for South Africa. On the point about favouring "old stagers", wily, experienced players have often done well in county cricket: think of all the runs the likes of Grace, Hobbs, Gooch, Boycott and Ramprakash reeled off late in their careers (although Ramps admittedly has had a bad year). Meanwhile some younger players such as Bairstow and Woakes are often taken away from their counties because of England commitments and so play less. Picking a county championship team of young prospects would be a worthwhile exercise, but it would be a different exercise and would certainly produce a different team.

Posted by: Anonymous at October 24, 2011 10:12 AM

im not sure hes saying the best english players in county cricket. just his best 11 playing county cricket. dpk

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