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Graham Gooch: 333

30 years ago today, Graham Alan Gooch, OBE, DL chose to put the India Test team to the sword. Records tumbled as the Essex legend rewrote cricketing history.

After setting the Test record for the highest match aggregate (456) when becoming the first batsman in any first-class fixture to follow a triple hundred with a century, he set a host of other milestones details of which feature later in this article.

Apart from his weight of runs, he took the vital wicket of Sanjay Manjrekar, held two catches, and then figured in the last wicket to fall in the match when he ran out Sanjeev Sharma, a dismissal that wrapped up the England victory.

It was little wonder his performance made his nomination as Man of the Match the simplest decision for those charged with deciding such awards. He was in a class of his own.

But before embarking on the record-breaking innings that was to prove a statistician’s delight, Graham played for his beloved County against Lancashire at Colchester immediately before the match at Lord’s.

Essex won by 6 wickets and Graham recalls the match. “Yes, I got 177 (21 fours facing 152 balls) in that game when Lancashire set us 348 to win,” he said. “It was a classic run chase of that era. I remember Mike Atherton bowled then and he was quite a good leg-spinner, he was quite aggressive and over the years, he got me out a couple of times including lbw in this match. We were playing three-day games then and they were often really exciting. Not always, but for a lot of the time both sides were trying to win the game. So, you would have a total to chase which made for an exciting game of cricket in terms of the pursuit of points. It was exciting for the players and spectators and you don’t see much of that nowadays because, generally, to win a game, you have to bowl a team out twice and take 20 wickets. You might have more games set up in the Second Division because obviously, teams are trying to win promotion into the First Division.

“In those days, there was only one day between the last day of a Championship match and the start of a Test match.

“I had scored a lot of runs that summer, conditions for batting were ideal. The previous season had been the year of the big seam on the ball, it had a thicker coarser seam and tended to move around a bit more. But in 1990, the authorities addressed that, and batsmen started scoring plenty of runs.”

So, onto the Lord’s Test.

Thirty-seven years old at the time, his innings was the sixth-highest triple hundred in Test history at that time and included the third-highest tally of runs in boundaries in a Test innings. Only Hanif Mohammad had scored more runs (499) in any first-class game.

As for India’s captain, Mohammad Azharuddin, one wonders how long it was before he could sleep soundly again after he made the nightmare decision to put England in to bat after the tourists had won the toss.

On a dry pitch and with bounce that was to become increasingly variable with spin also coming into the equation as the game progressed, his decision to insert the opposition was baffling.

But he would not have been the only member of the India team to suffer with regrets. Gooch had scored 36 when he was dropped by wicket-keeper Kiran More. Spare a thought for the hapless gloveman who had to watch Gooch’s wonderful innings – often at close hand – as the runs flowed relentlessly from the heavy bat over after over, hour after hour after over to run salt into the keeper’s wounds

Graham relates: “The first day at Lord’s is always quite a difficult decision to know what to do if you win the toss. If it is a little bit overcast and muggy, you think maybe you should bowl because there could be difficult batting conditions on the first day although generally, it’s the first morning if there are any problems. So, if you can get through the first session of the match without losing more than a wicket or two, then you’ve done okay because the pitch generally flattens out. And that’s what happened in this game. They chose to bowl, ‘Athers’ was out reasonably early, David (Gower) got a few and then ‘Lamby’ (Alan Lamb) joined me.

“I did have a bit of luck with the dropped catch and I have to say it wasn’t a particularly difficult catch. The bowling was downhill from the Nursery End, More moved to his right and didn’t even dive, he didn’t have to really, he stooped down but the ball didn’t stick. So, there we go!

“Often the other centuries in that match are forgotten, Azharuddin particularly scored a brilliant hundred but there were quite a few incidents in that match.”

Gooch underpinned England’s highest total against India and teamed up with Lamb for the third wicket to add 308, a record partnership for any wicket against India.

“To have the opportunity to be able to bat long enough to have the chance to score a triple hundred is rare, because if you are scoring that sort of total at one end, you are often scoring more than that at the opposite end if you see what I mean,” Gooch explained. “But that situation didn’t quite transpire in that game.

“Obviously when I got to 300, there was inwardly the self-gratification because very few people have anywhere near the opportunity to do that and it’s a lovely milestone to have against your name.”

Azharuddin attempted to make amends with a sparkling innings of his own but it was not in the same league as Gooch’s mammoth effort and having scored 124, the Indian skipper was bowled by Eddie Hemmings.

India eventually avoided the follow-on but only just and then Gooch and Atherton extended the lead by 208 in a breezy partnership spanning just 148 minutes, a record opening stand by England against India. Gooch became the first player to score five Test hundreds at Lord’s with 123 in the second innings. “I was pretty livid when I went into bat second time around,” and he revealed the reason why.

“Angus Fraser was bowling at the Pavilion End to Kapil Dev towards the end of the India first innings. He nicked it and I “caught” him at second slip. My hands were on the ground and the ball went straight in. Anyway, he stood there because he didn’t think it had carried which was fair enough, he’s entitled to do that. There were no TV replays or anything like that in those days. Nigel Plews was the umpire, he walked over to the square-leg umpire who was Dickie Bird and I walked with him. Plews said, ‘Dickie, did that carry’ and Dickie said, ‘Nigel, I cannot help you.’

“So, Kapil Dev was given not out, and I was not a happy skipper because at that stage they were getting close to avoiding the follow-on. Then he proceeded to hit Hemmings for four consecutive sixes round about the long-on area where the clock is. Eddie being the wily old pro that he was kept tossing the ball up and tempting him, which is not necessarily the wrong thing to do but Kapil kept whacking the ball over the boundary. They got one run past the follow-on and then Fraser bowled one ball at (Narendra) Hirwani, the leg-spinner, and got him out. So, they’d saved the follow-on by one run.

“So, when I went in to bat in the second innings, my recollection is that far from being calm, I was more annoyed and frustrated and I suppose that transferred itself into my playing quite aggressively. Two hundred was the follow-on figure and we’d have been able to enforce the follow-on but for that catch that wasn’t given. So, we added quick runs and declared 471 ahead.”

Challenged with a mammoth target to win with 110 overs available, India adopted a go-for-glory approach that failed dismally against some outstanding fielding and consistently accurate bowling. Their quest ended with a slick run out-executed by Gooch who, as England captain, was able to celebrate his fourth Test win in seven matches.

“I ran Sharma out from mid-on and that is even rarer than the 300, me running someone out,” Gooch laughed. “That put the seal on a game that had my stamp on it.”

The tourists only consolation that was that they had figured in a match that set new Test records and at least they could claim one positive contribution, the match aggregate of runs totalled 1,603 a new record for any match at Lord’s.

Graham admits he is not particularly a records man. “When I got to 300, I started to accelerate to hasten the declaration after tea on the second day. There is a story, and it’s true, that when I was out and came into the dressing room, Mickey Stewart our manager offered me his congratulations but then asked ‘What were you doing getting out?’ I said,” Sorry Mickey, I’ve run out of petrol. And he basically told me that I should have gone on and beaten the record which was 365 held by Gary Sobers. To be honest, it was the first time I’d even thought about it.
Probably, if that had been mentioned to me before-hand, I might have tried to beat the record. The chance to do that is a once in a lifetime opportunity and not even that for most people.

“As I got older, I got much better at converting scores into hundreds and centuries into big hundreds, hence the term ‘daddy hundreds. That phrase came from the time many years earlier when I was playing for England the second time around and when I was starting my international career properly as it were in 1978 after my earlier two Tests three years before. Kenny Barrington, a great man, was like a father figure to the likes of myself, John Emburey, David Gower, Mike Gatting, Ian Botham. Kenny was a selector and there was no manager or coach or anything like that in those days.

“Kenny was the assistant manager on the first three tours that I went on and he assumed the role of coach, not officially, but he had been a great player, he knew the game, he ran the nets, he did the coaching and helped us a lot. He was a much-loved figure in terms of his advice and his demeanour, his character was brilliant. He could laugh at himself and the boys used to take the mickey out of him a little bit, but he used to love it. He was never a guy to say, ‘In my day, it was better,’ he never said that. The bit of advice that he gave me and probably several others was to say, ‘If you get in, make it count. If you get to 50, make sure you get to 100. If you get to 100, make sure you get to 150 and if you get that far, make sure you try and get a double-hundred.’ The rationale was, ‘Why give it away when it’s the easiest time to score runs is after your 100. Generally, it’s just yourself that will get you out by being expansive and making a mistake or trying to push the score along too quickly. Or in the modern terminology, ‘playing out of your bubble’.

“The next time that you go back in, you have to start
all over again with your score on nought and you might get a ball that shoots along the deck, or one that takes off the glove or you get a poor lbw decision against you or whatever and you might be out for nought. Then the next time you go in, the same thing might happen again, and you’ll be glad you turned that hundred into 180 or more. So that was the rationale behind it and that stayed with me throughout my career. You’ve probably heard Alastair Cook say on more than once occasion, ‘You’ve never got enough runs’. And that’s right because you never know what’s going to happen in your next innings. People have slumped in form, people lose form, it happens to every player. So, when you are playing well, that’s the time to cash in while you can.

“That’s what I always tried to instil in players when I was coaching full-time and what I tell them now if I’m asked to help them. Always try to stretch out the run of form as long as possible, because you don’t know what’s around the corner. “

And what did Graham do to relax after such demands in that Lord’s Test? Feet-up perhaps or a few days away to recover. Not so. His mode of recovery was to play for Essex later that week at Southend where they met Nottinghamshire. He top-scored in the first innings with 87 and followed with an unbeaten 65 in the assisting the County to a 10-wicket victory.

A true maestro, what a player!

Graham Gooch: The Legend

The word ‘legend’ is often attributed to an individual without that person having deserved such a tribute in the true sense of the word. But Graham Gooch, or Mr Essex as he is rightly known, is the personification of the word.

The magnificent Club servant and superstar has taken his place in folklore, a true marvel in all things cricket both for England his beloved County.

One of the most successful international batsmen of his generation, and through a career spanning from 1973 until 2000, he became the most prolific run-scorer of all time, with 67,057 runs across first-class and limited-overs games. For Essex, his tally of is without equal.

Born in Whipps Cross, he is the most prolific Essex batsman of all time. He played 391 first-class matches for the County between 1973 and 1997, scoring 30,701 runs at 51.77 including 94 centuries.

He is also the Club’s leading scorer in one-day cricket with 16,536 runs including 34 centuries at 40.93, the first being an unbeaten 114 against Leicestershire at Chelmsford when Essex won by two wickets with an over to spare.

And while the Essex legend will always be remembered for his deeds with the bat, he proved himself a useful medium-pace bowler, taking 200 wickets at first-class level. Also a superb slip fielder, he pouched 749 catches in all formats of the game.

He captained Essex between 1986 and 1994 although he did hand over the reins in 1988 to Keith Fletcher for one season. After retiring, he became heavily involved in a variety of posts with both Essex and England and is currently an Ambassador for the County and also serves on the Cricket Advisory Group.

Wherever he played, he provided rich entertainment but for Essex fans, his rich harvest of runs allowed them to indulge themselves in a regular cabaret of enjoyment and showbiz performances with so many headline displays. Pure theatre from the maestro.

No-one will dispute that Graham Gooch was the greatest batsman Essex has produced. His world-class status is confirmed by the mountain of runs he scored all around the globe and there was no more thrilling sight in the world than watching Goochie annihilate attacks with his brutal power.

At Test level, too, he was a gigantic figure. He featured in 118 games, 34 as Captain, and scored nearly 9000 runs, including 20 centuries, at an average of 42.59. He is the only batsman to have scored a triple-hundred and century in the same Test (333 and 123 against India at Lord’s in 1990) but probably his two greatest knocks were against the most fearsome attacks in the world.

Both of them were at Headingley when conditions favoured the bowlers. The first of them was in 1991 when he carried his bat for 154 in a total of 252 against a pace attack of Curtly Ambrose, Courtney Walsh, Malcolm Marshall and Patrick Patterson.

A year later in another low scoring match that England won by six wickets, Essex’s favourite son struck 135 when Waqar Younis, Wasim Akram and Mushtaq Ahmed were striving to remove him.

His highest Championship score was 275 against Kent at Chelmsford in 1988, but while his first-class record for the County may never be surpassed, his deeds at one-day level were also phenomenal.

He scored 8,573 runs in the Sunday League, including a dozen centuries with a top score of 176 against Glamorgan at Southend in 1983, whilst amassing 5,176 runs in the Benson & Hedges Cup and carried off a record 22 Gold Awards in the competition. He also won nine Man of the Match awards in the NatWest Trophy in which he totalled 2,547 runs with a personal best 144 against Hampshire at Chelmsford in 1990.

But the one-day innings that gave him and Essex supporters the greatest satisfaction was the one in the 1979 Benson & Hedges Cup Final at Lord’s. In becoming the first player to hit a century in the Final, his 120 laid the foundation for victory against Surrey and signalled the County’s first trophy after a wait of 103 years.

Gooch relates: “Obviously there was great relief at the end that we’d finally won a trophy after falling short of the line many, many times but on this occasion, we finally got over that line.

“It all came together in 1979, not only winning that trophy but going on to win the Championship comfortably way before the end of the season. And that was the launch pad for many years of success.”

Happy Birthday, Mr Essex.

Next Up… Through The Essex Ages: The 2000s

Our next instalment of Through The Essex Ages takes us back to the turn of the century under the captaincy of Ronnie Irani and later Mark Pettini.

This week we are joined by three guests who all featured for the Club during the decade and Members are welcome to join us from 6pm on Tuesday 21 July to hear about their time at the Club.

James Middlebrook, Andre Nel, Jason Gallian adn Will Jefferson will be on the panel and you can submit questions for them in advance by emailing [email protected].

Members can also ask questions during the event but these will be subject to time.

Thank you to Cloudfm who are supporting this series of Q&A events and to all the Members who logged on to join our panel last week for the 1990s. This will be available to view shortly via the Club website and Essex Cricket TV YouTube channel.

 

Members’ Forum: Thursday 16 July

The Club will be hosting a second virtual Members’ Forum at 6pm on Thursday 16 July for a chance to hear the latest information from the Club follow the news that cricket will return on August 1.

The following Club representatives will take part in the panel discussion over the Zoom Conferencing platform, with opportunities to submit questions both in advance and during the event:

• John Faragher, Chairman

• Peter Northfield, Deputy Chairman

• Derek Bowden, Chief Executive

• Ian Patterson, Treasurer

• Ronnie Irani, Chairman of the Cricket Advisory Board

• Philip George, Essex Cricket in the Community Chair

The virtual forum will begin at 6pm and exclusively for 2020 Members, with a unique link and instruction sent via email prior to the meeting.

You can submit questions in advance of the event by 4pm on Thursday 16 July, emailing: [email protected]

All Members with a valid email address would have now received an email from the Club with the virtual Forum announcement. This email address will also receive the unique access link ahead of the event, so please check your online Membership account if you have not received this.

 

Cult Heroes: Ken Farnes

Our Cult Heroes series moves back to the pre-Second World War period and a player who was one of the countries great fast bowlers during the 1930s.

He was also featured a number of times for Cambridge University and the MCC in a career, which was brought to an end too soon. Today (Wednesday 8 July) marks his birthday and 81 years since his last season playing for the Club.

This series is supported by Allen Ford and we thank them for their continued support.

Essex Career Stats (1930-1939)
Debut: 28 June 1930 v Gloucestershire (County Championship)
Appearances: 79
Wickets: 367
Best Figures:
5 Wicket in an Innings: 28
10 Wickets in a Match: 10

Recognised as one of England’s finest fast bowlers, the life of Kenneth Farnes was tragically cut short at the age of 30 during the Second World War, his plane crashing in Oxfordshire while on a night flying practice mission.

He was born in July 1911 in Leytonstone and played in 15 Test matches from 1934 to 1939 making his first international appearance in the Ashes series against Australia at Trent Bridge. He took 60 wickets at 28.65 for England and during his 168 first-class matches, claimed a total of 690 victims at 21.45

Farnes, who played club Cricket with Gidea Park, was playing against former Essex ‘great’ P.A. (Percy) Perrin in a Club & Ground match who recognised the talent of the 6’4” paceman and directed him towards the County Club. He was called up to play for Essex against Gloucestershire a few weeks later aged only 19 and took 5-36 in his second county match against Kent at Southend although his performance was overshadowed by AP ‘Tich’ Freeman taking all 10 wickets when Essex batted for the first time.

That autumn, Ken went to Cambridge University for three years while also continuing to play for Essex as he enhanced his reputation as a fearsome fast bowler. In his last year at Cambridge, he took seven wickets in the ‘Varsity ‘match and finished with a seasonal haul of 113 victims. This included 13-98 for Essex v Somerset at Taunton and eleven wickets in the match against Surrey at Southend including 7-21 in the second innings enabling his side to claim their first success against these opponents since 1914.

He became a teacher which further limited his opportunity to play for the County although his ten matches for Essex in 1934 brought him 67 wickets at an average cost of 16.07 and Test recognition.

He was regarded as a natural successor to the great Harold Larwood and in his first Test against Australia at Trent Bridge in 1934, he took 10 wickets in the match (5 for 102 and 5 for 77) but was unable to save England from defeat.

A cartilage injury forced him to miss the whole of the season the following year but he returned as hostile as ever to win a place on the winter tour of Australia.

Taking a comparatively short and easy run, he brought the ball down from a great height with the inevitable effect of sharp lift, which made him extremely difficult to time when retaining a good length.

Clacton proved a happy hunting ground for the 6ft 5in specialist. It was there that he achieved the hat-trick against Nottinghamshire and in 1938 recorded match figures of 15 for 113 against Glamorgan, his 8 for 38 in the second innings representing the best figures of his career.

Playing in the prestigious Gentlemen v Players fixture a few weeks earlier, he had taken 8 for 43 in the first innings against the Players to point the way to only the second Gentlemen’s victory since 1914.

He played in all five Tests during the tour to South Africa that followed including the famous “timeless” Test which remained unfinished after ten days.

A very good fielder near the wicket, Farnes reached many catches that would have been impossible for a man of medium height. He had no pretension as a batsman, but in 1936, at Taunton, hit 97 not out in two hours helping Tom Wade to add 149 for the last wicket and with 6 wickets also to his name, Farnes was largely responsible for Essex winning by an innings and 66 runs.

His last summer for Essex in 1939 was another productive one for both Farnes and the county. At the end of August, the fast bowler returned figures of 6-47 at Clacton in the victory against Northamptonshire that secured fourth place for Essex in the County Championship table, their highest position since 1897.

In what proved to be a tragically short career, he amassed a total of 367 wickets at just under 19 runs each for Essex in 79 games. He played 15 times for England, taking 60 wickets at an average of 28.65.

Despite his imposing physique and aggressive pace, he was a gentle man, unmarried and interested in music and painting. He was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1939 and published an autobiography, ‘Tours and Tests’ in 1940.

He joined the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve in the Second World War and trained in Canada. He was a Sergeant prior to being commissioned as a Pilot Officer on 1 September 1941. However, six weeks later, on October 20, he died shortly after returning to England following a night-flying exercise when the plane that he was flying crashed near Chipping Warden, Oxfordshire.

He is buried at the Brookwood Military Cemetery in Surrey.

Ken Farnes
The memorial plaque which was opened by Doug Insole at Hogg End, Chipping Warden on 20 October 2013.

 

2020 Season

 

Bob Willis Trophy – South Group

Last updated Wednesday 09 September 2020 @ 9:45AM

Pos Team Pl W L D T Bat Bowl Ded Points
1 ESSEX (Q) 5 4 0 1 0 6 12 0 90
2 KENT 5 3 1 1 0 12 15 -1 82
3 MIDDLESEX 5 2 2 1 0 8 14 0 62
4 HAMPSHIRE 5 2 2 1 0 4 13 0 57
5 SURREY 5 1 4 0 0 8 12 0 36
6 SUSSEX 5 1 4 0 0 9 11 0 36

 

Vitality Blast – South Group

Last updated Thursday 17 September 2020 @ 12:00PM

Pos Team Pl W L T N/R R/R Ded Points
1 SURREY 8 5 1 1 1 0.399 0 12
2 KENT SPITFIRES 8 4 2 1 1 0.192 0 10
3 SUSSEX SHARKS 8 4 3 0 1 0.319 0 9
4 MIDDLESEX 8 3 3 1 1 -0.181 0 8
5 ESSEX EAGLES 8 2 4 1 1 0.147 0 6
6 HAMPSHIRE 8 1 6 0 1 -0.879 0 3

 

Watch: Through The Essex Ages… The 1980s

Members are invited to the third part of our ‘Through The Essex Ages’ series this evening as we look back at the most successful decade in the Club’s history.

Joining the panel are a group of Club greats in Ken McEwan, John Lever, Ray East, David Acfield and Derek Pringle. Sit alongside them for a live virtual Q&A at 6pm on Tuesday evening to hear their stories from the time.

The 1980s saw six major honours head to the Club during a ‘golden era’ and we’re delighted to get this group of legends back together for our Members and supporters to enjoy.

Thank you to Cloudfm who are supporting this series of Q&A events and to all the Members who logged on to join our panel last week for the 1970s.

‘Through The Essex Ages’ takes place every Tuesday at 6pm with a panel of esteemed guests each week. Members can join us live for free over the Zoom conferencing platform with a unique link emailed prior to each event. Please get in touch with the Club by email ([email protected]) if you are a Member but not receiving emails or experiencing difficulties logging on.

Next week (Tuesday 14 July, 6pm), we focus on the 1990s with another group of great names for you to listen to. h

Last week’s episode is still available to watch via Essex Cricket TV and we hope you enjoy:

 

McGrath: A New Normal at The Cloudfm County Ground

The squad are out of lockdown, back to training, but into a world that has changed almost beyond recognition.

“It’s great being back,” says Head Coach Anthony McGrath after a Spring of forced inactivity. “Not that they’re normal training days.

“The players can’t train with their team-mates; they’re training one-on-one [with the coaches]. The bowlers aren’t bowling at batters; they’re bowling at a net. The batters are just facing a coach throwing down. It’s very strange and abnormal.”

The double-winning champions of 2019 were released from captivity on Monday, though progress through stage one of their regulated rehabilitation has been frustratingly slow.

“Because the lads haven’t done anything for three months they’ve got to go in and see the physio and do the fitness tests to check them out physically,” says McGrath. “Then we get about a half-hour with them for the skills stuff. It’s taken us three days to get through all 21 members of the pro squad who are here at the moment.

“We’ve got a temperature check when we come in the ground and we fill in a questionnaire, which asks, ‘How are you feeling? Have you had any symptoms?’ But we haven’t got testing in place. We’re obviously training with social distancing because it’s one-on-one at the moment. Everyone’s got their own ball. The coaches have to wear gloves and masks if we’re inside.”

The present regime – overseen by coaches McGrath, Barry Hyam, Andre Nel and Tom Huggins – is likely to be repeated for another week, until the structure is announced for the truncated season to start on August 1.

“Until we’re clear on what comp we’re playing we’re pretty much in the dark,” McGrath admits. “So we are using these two weeks to try and get through as much as we can according to the guidance we’ve been given. And then we’ll react to which comp we’re going to be playing in. We should know that by the end of next week.

“We’re happy to play whatever competition, be it red-ball, 20-over or 50-over, as long as it’s safe for players, staff and whoever’s in the ground. But a bio-secure environment, where you are staying on site and not leaving, is very different to what we’re doing. We’re training, going home and seeing family and following government advice.

“The players look in decent shape. They’ve been doing their individual training, but they’ve not done a lot of gym work. They’ve lost quite a bit of muscle from not being in the gym. There is a worry about – if we do play red-ball – how much they will have bowled before because they won’t have done a lot. The medical team are doing their sums on how their fitness figures look from March to now, and we’ll find that out soon.

“All we really want, if we are going to be playing at the start of next month, is to prepare properly. And that’s preparing as a team, doing proper team drills and getting everything going. At the moment we’re not. So we’re hoping that in the next week or two we’ll be able to prepare and train as normal.”

It is likely that when cricket does return, it will be behind closed doors. “It’s going to be very strange,” McGrath admits. “If you’ve ever been to a pre-season friendly with no one in the ground, it’s very eerie and it feels very slow-paced. The players have got to deal with it. I’m sure they’ll be as professional as they can.

“But there’s no doubt about it, the game won’t be the same without spectators and the interaction with the crowd. Hopefully it won’t be long before they allow spectators back into the ground.”

The ECB have approved a 1 August start date for the 2020 season with formats and fixtures set to be announced in the weeks ahead – read more.

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Watch: Through The Essex Ages… The 1970s

Following the first episode of the ‘Through The Essex Ages’ series last week, Tuesday evening saw us head back to the 1970s.

The second instalment included an illustrious panel of former Club heroes to talk about a pivotal decade, which laid the foundations for a string of trophy successes in 1979 and through the 80s.

Joining us were Graham Saville, David Acfield, Stuart Turner and Keith Pont, who all played key roles in the side during the 70s and they shared many stories on matches, fellow teammates and cricket during that time.

Thank you to Cloudfm who are supporting this series of Q&A events and to all the Members who logged on to join our panel on Tuesday evening.

‘Through The Essex Ages’ takes place every Tuesday at 6pm with a panel esteemed guests each week. Members can join us live for free over the Zoom conferencing platform with a unique link emailed prior to each event. Please get in touch with the Club by email ([email protected]) if you are a Member but not receiving emails or experiencing difficulties logging on.

Next week (Tuesday 7 July, 6pm), we focus on the 1980s with a host of legendary names from the Club’s history. The panel includes John Lever, Ray East, David Acfield, Derek Pringle and Ken McEwan for an hour of more cricketing stories from a golden age.

This week’s episode is now available to watch via Essex Cricket TV and we hope you enjoy:

 

Our Next Through The Essex Ages: The 1970s

The new Through The Essex Ages series, supported by Platinum Partners Cloudfm started with our most recent success as we looked back on four memorable past seasons with Ronnie Irani, Anthony McGrath and John Faragher.

Now it’s time to go back to a time which started a run of trophy success as we look at Essex County Cricket Club in the 1970s.

Members are invited to join our panel of distinguished guests on the Zoom virtual platform from 6pm on Tuesday 30 June.

Joining us this week is David Acfield, Graham Saville, Keith Pont and Stuart Turner.

Questions can be submitted prior to the event via email as we focus on a decade of cricket which built the foundations of a golden era under the stewardship of the late Brian Taylor and Keith Fletcher.

Please send by midday on Tuesday 30 June, emailing: [email protected]

All Members with a valid email address on their online Membership account will receive an email from the Club ahead of the event which includes a unique access link. We recommend checking your online Membership account if you’re not currently receiving emails from the Club to make sure your details are up to date.

Not a Member? You’ll still be able to enjoy these events which will available to watch afterwards through our website and social media channels.