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Essex v Lancashire | Your Match Pack

The 2017 is set to get underway  on Friday morning as Lancashire visit The Cloudfm County Ground in what is set to be a great first fixture back in Division One of the Specsavers County Championship.

Come down and support Ryan ten Doeschate men, who will be looking to get off to a winning start after a very postitive pre-season.

The match is free for all 2017 Essex County Cricket Club Members and day tickets are available on the gates from 9:30am – priced £15 Adult | £10 Young Adults (aged 18-25 years old) | £5 Juniors (U18s). Alternatively, tickets can be purchased in advance online – here.

Play on all 4 days begins at 11am with gates open from 10am for all spectators.

 

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There are a limited number of parking spaces at The Cloudfm County Ground for Members, which are on a first come, first served basis at the cost of £1 per car. We stress that these spaces are limited and the quantity fluctuates on a game-by-game basis. Parking will be available at Meteor Way for all 4 days of this match for Members, at the price of £1.

There will also be a limited number of spaces available at The Cloudfm County Ground for Members with a Blue Badge and Premier Suite Members, which will be allocated on a first come, first served basis.

View the full list of Parking Dates for the 2017 season – here.

 

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Spectators can travel the match by many means of transport including by train, bus and car.

Train | Chelmsford Train Station, operated by Greater Anglia, is situated less than half a mile from the ground and takes approximately 5 minutes to walk from the station to the River Gate. There is a regular direct service to London Liverpool Street, Stratford, Colchester, Ipswich and Norwich.

Bus | Chelmsford Bus Station is situated next to Chelmsford Train Station with connections to all over the county. Alternatively, bus number 42 and 100 stop on New London Road, which is approximately a two minute walk from the ground.

Taxi | Essex Cricket’s Official Taxi Partner is Fareway Taxis. Why not travel to the match by taxi? Contact 01245 355555 to book.

 

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Spectators can keep refreshed throughout the match with food and drink available from Spinner’s Bar. There will be a selection of hot and cold food options available. Greene King is the Club’s official beer partner for 2017, which includes a choice of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages. The bars around the ground will be serving the following alcoholic drinks: Foster’s, Stowford Press, Guinness and Greene King IPA, plus a choice of seasonal real ales in the Members’ Pavilion.

Members can also enjoy an extensive choice of hot and cold meals in the Pavilion with a different choice of dishes available on each day of play.

Spinners will have a range of hot food on offer, with burgers, hot dogs, pies, sausage rolls and new for 2017, jacket potatoes with a choice filling.

Our young fans, can enjoy a packed lunch for this game, priced £3.75 and includes a sandwich, packet of crisps, fruit bag and drink!

 

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Supporters unable to attend the match versus Lancashire can keep up to date with the action via the Essex Cricket Matchzone with BBC ball-by-ball commentary, the live scorecard, match report and highlights.

Live updates are also available through official Essex Cricket social media channels. Follow now – Twitter | Facebook.

 

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Claim Your Free Drink | Members can receive a free drink during this match, as a special gift from our new ground sponsors, Cloudfm. Simply visit the Cloudfm Hub, located by behind the Pavilion to collect your voucher.

Seating | Due to the position of the pitch for this match, unfortunately Block 11 & 12 in the Essex Cricket Foundation Stand (formerly River Stand), and Blocks 27 & 28 of the Boundary Club Stand in the Hayes Close End will be closed for this fixture. We apologise for the inconvenience caused for this match.

 

Match Preview | Essex v Durham MCCU

Essex commence the First Class season when Durham MCCU visit the The Cloudfm County Ground in a three-day fixture, starting on Sunday.

The match acts a pre-cursor to the start of the Specsavers County Championship campaign next Friday (7 April) when Lancashire will be the visitors to Chelmsford as Essex take their place in Division One for the first time since 2010.

Essex Head Coach Chris Silverwood has named a strong 13-man squad for Sunday that includes Alastair Cook, and will see Adam Wheater keep wicket.

“It’s the start of what could be a very exciting year for us,” Silverwood admitted. “We will be going at the fixture full guns blazing to try and put a marker down for ourselves as much as anything. We want to show what we want to do moving forward.

“Preparations for the season could not have been better, we had a pre-season tour to Dubai that went exceptionally well and we have strengthened our squad with some really good signings that will give us a lot of competition for every place in the starting line-up.

“I’m sure that there are going to be two or three disappointed players every now and again who could end up missing out on selection but it is a long season and with three different formats, we are going to need everyone at some stage.

“If you look at the best team, they have all got a strong squad and if we are to compete, we need that also.  We have got real strength in depth now. Look at the batting front alone, we have got nine top-class batters in there who will all be fighting for a position in the starting line-up.

“We’ve now got a world-class spinner in Simon Harmer and Neil Wagner will soon be joining us as a leading fast bowler, so the year ahead really is an exciting prospect.”

Essex squad to face Durham MCCU:
27. Ryan ten Doeschate (captain)
14. Aaron Beard
25. Ravi Bopara
10. Nick Browne
6. Varun Chopra
26. Alastair Cook
30. Matt Dixon
11. Simon Harmer
28. Dan Lawrence
44. Jamie Porter
67. Callum Taylor
21. Tom Westley
31. Adam Wheater

Play is scheduled to start at 11am on all three days and Meteor Way Car Park is available for Members.

 

Westley ready and primed for Division One challenge

It is strange to be heralding 2017 as potentially the breakthrough season for Tom Westley. It is, after all, a decade since the right-handed run-accumulator made his first-class debut and he has been a consistent mainstay of Essex’s batting for many of the following years.

However, with Essex promoted to Division One of the Specsavers County Championship, and barring a personal loss of form of unimaginable proportions, his Test match credentials will finally be laid out for all to see.

Westley has done all that has been asked of him: more than 2,000 runs across all three formats last season; just shy of 400 runs at a tad under 50 each time he went to the wicket for England Lions in Sri Lanka this winter; and about to play in the top division that is key to unlocking the England selection door.

At 28, therefore, this is as big a season for Westley as anyone in the Essex camp. It really does look like now or never in terms of international recognition; Westley, though, will just get his head down and find the gaps in the arc between mid-on and wide mid-off to make his case unassailable.

Westley says: “I feel like I am coming into my best years as a batsman and a professional cricketer. I think my best years are ahead of me. I’m almost at my peak and I’d like to think I’ve still got a few years left in me.

“The ‘up-and-coming tag’ has gone. Now I want to be an established county cricketer. I’m working towards that – and then obviously there’s England. For me, at my age, I think it is down to sheer weight of runs. If I score 1,400-1,500 runs, like [Durham’s] Keaton Jennings did last year, then you make it difficult for the selectors to ignore you. I can’t rely on ‘Oh, he’s got ability, let’s chuck him in’. That won’t work at my age. If I score as many runs as I can then at least I’m throwing my name in the hat for some form of England recognition, maybe in the summer.

“Every time I go out I want to score the biggest amount. You want your name in the headlines. But I have learnt not to get too caught up in that. When you dwell desperately on trying to score hundreds, two hundreds, or desperately wanting to be the person to stand out, it detracts from the simple things that got you where you are.”

If Westley continues where he left off last summer, and on the sub-continent, then it will be to Essex’s benefit, too. The batting line-up was strengthened at the tail-end of last season when Varun Chopra and Adam Wheater returned home after spells at Warwickshire and Hampshire. With Alastair Cook available for large swathes of the Championship campaign, it is no wonder Westley says: “I think there are going to be a few headaches in regard to selection.

“We’ve signed two fantastic batters in Chopra and Wheater. Then you’ve got the likes of Nick Browne, Dan Lawrence, ten Doeschate – someone is going to miss out at some stage, especially when Cookie is back. There is real strength and depth there. Fortunately for me I don’t have to get too … actually, it might be me missing out!”

It might be at times that Westley has to move down from his regular spot at No3. “It is something that’s been spoken about,” he admits. “There could be the option of batting at No4. It’s going to be interesting.”

The retirements of seamers David Masters and Graham Napier have blown huge holes in the bowling attack that the signings of the New Zealand pace bowler Neil Wagner and South African kolpak Simon Harmer – with the Pakistani Mohammad Amir replacing Wagner for the second half of the season – should go some way to plugging.

Westley says: “On paper the signing of Wagner is brilliant for the club. He’s got experience, something a bit different, a left-armer, and a fairly aggressive bowler – someone you want bowling for you rather than against you.”

Off-breaker bowler Harmer will be the front-line spinner that is essential in Division One. “We’ve identified how important spin is going to be by bringing him in,” says Westley. “Dan Lawrence and I are fundamentally part-time off-spinners, but I think we might get a few more overs in, say, a second innings if the surface is turning. I haven’t bowled a huge amount in recent years, and then when I have I haven’t bowled as well as I know I could have – because I haven’t bowled enough. But if Harmer strengthens the squad, and I bowl less, then that is irrelevant to me as long as we are a better team.”

With all-rounder Ryan ten Doeschate now captain in all formats after Ravi Bopara stood down as one-day skipper, Essex will be embarking on only their third season in Division One in the 18 years of a two-tier Championship. Westley was 21 and still at university when Essex had their last one-season stay in 2010. They won just two of 16 games and, in cricketing parlance, didn’t trouble the scorers.

Westley says: “I think sometimes in the past our goal was to stay up, and if you set goals like that, with a negative in it, then you are probably not going to achieve much. I do believe what’s been successful at Essex in recent years is we haven’t put targets in place that are set in stone. We purely take each game as it comes and try our best to win that game.

“Where will we finish? Who knows? We’re an ambitious club and we want to play Division One cricket. So, yes, our priority is to remain in Division One. I think as long as we get runs on the board we give ourselves the best chance to win games. Then we’ll see where that takes us.”

All Stars Cricket – the fun, active form of the game for 5 to 8-year-old boys and girls

The England & Wales Cricket Board (ECB) today launched the first nationwide entry-level participation programme for cricket, with the aim of getting 50,000 boys and girls excited by the game this year.

A new generation of families will be introduced to cricket through All Stars Cricket, a major new grassroots initiative which starts in May.

All Stars Cricket will be delivered through local cricket clubs and centres across England and Wales throughout the summer, giving 5-8 year olds their first experience of the game.

From today (Monday 20 March) parents can register their kids to take part via allstarscricket.co.uk. After signing-up, boys and girls will have a cricket ‘back-pack’ delivered to their door with a bat, ball and everything they need to try the game for the first time.

They will then start an eight-week programme at their local participating centre, with the emphasis placed firmly on learning how to play the game in a fun, safe and inclusive environment. Children will also learn the social development skills that team sport brings.

Each session of the 8-week programme – developed with input from Director of England Cricket Andrew Strauss and the performance team – will give children the basic skills they need to develop a lifelong love of cricket.

ECB will give participating centres free All Stars kits, volunteer training and support via a central marketing campaign, celebrating ‘Big Moments’ as children take their first steps in the game. The programme reflects ECB’s strategic framework for growing the game at every level.

ECB Director of Participation & Growth Matt Dwyer said:

“We have big ambitions to significantly grow the game and this programme is all about putting a bat and ball in the hands of more children at an earlier age. First and foremost, we want to make playing cricket a fun and enjoyable experience for children and give them a passion for the game to last a lifetime.

“Drawing kids to the game at an early age will develop more players, create more fans and show the power of cricket in developing physical and social skills.

“We also want to make sure that parents have a great first experience at the club and give them the chance to have an hour back with their kids every week. We will be encouraging parents to get involved with sessions, whatever their prior knowledge of the game.

“Within weeks of unveiling the programme to clubs we had 2,000 of them sign up to deliver All Stars Cricket and this summer we hope to have 50,000 kids trying the sport all over the country through this exciting nationwide programme.”

Former England captain and All Stars Cricket ambassador Michael Vaughan said:

“I started playing cricket at my local club and have seen first-hand how important it is to introduce kids to our sport in a fun way.

“As a parent, I’ve also seen how tough it can be to get kids interested in sport especially given the amount of activities competing for their time. Finding a way for cricket to appeal to kids and to get them active is more important than ever.

“We are bringing cricket to the front door of kids and parents across England and Wales. I can’t wait to see the positive impact this will have on clubs and the wider game.”

Minister for Sport, Tourism and Heritage Tracey Crouch MP said:

“All Stars Cricket is exactly the type of programme we are keen to see more of. It is vital to encourage children to have a happy, healthy and active lifestyle from an early age. All Stars Cricket proposes to do just that and I’m sure parents will jump at the chance to sign their kids up.”

Mumsnet CEO Justine Roberts said:

“We all know that kids – not to mention grown-ups – benefit from regular exercise, but finding fun new ways to get everyone running around can stretch parents’ ingenuity. We’re happy to be working with the ECB on their campaign to highlight ways to help parents find fun, sporty activities that their children will love.”

England men’s and women’s stars Jonny Bairstow and Lauren Winfield and Ashes winning legend Michael Vaughan are backing the programme which will be formally launched later today at London’s ArcelorMittal Orbit in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.

Essex Cricket caters for National Apprenticeship Week

A new group of catering and hospitality trainees joined Essex Cricket this week to take their first steps towards a career in the industry.

Starting their ten-week innings in National Apprenticeship Week, the trainees work towards customer service skills and food safety qualifications, while gaining new skills during 100 hours spent working at the Club.

National Apprenticeship Week runs from 6-10 March and celebrates the value of obtaining work-based qualifications and skills. Darrell Fox, Essex Cricket Commercial Manager, explained: “It is very rewarding to give young people a chance to get into employment, and we’ve watched many of our trainees grow their skills and confidence and go on to become valuable members of our catering staff.”

Essex-based employment and skills organisation Seetec helps the Club to recruit the trainees and provides ongoing support and training.

Darrell said: “I’d encourage other employers to look at this method of recruitment. Seetec provides invaluable support, and the trainees who do exceptionally well have the chance to become apprentices for a year.”

Toby McLaren, 23, from Chelmsford, has made great progress since his traineeship and been taken on as a catering apprentice. He explained: “I hadn’t considered catering until I heard about the training, and now I’m definitely interested in seeing how far I can take it. Everyone here is really nice and I get on with so many people, my job role is to make all the customers happy. I’m doing an NVQ and I can see myself trying to make a career in hospitality.”

Samantha Tolhurst, 23, from Hatfield Peverel, completed her traineeship a year ago and has also been taken on by the club. She said: “I’m really enjoying all of it, I work with the players serving their meals, and I want a career in catering.”

Bradley Sissons, 21, from Maldon, wanted to work in hospitality and catering and the traineeship gave him his break into the industry. He has also progressed to an apprenticeship and is working towards his Level 2 Customer Service qualification. Bradley said: “I really enjoy it in the summer when I’m kept really busy and work in lots of different areas. I’ve learned about customer service and how to speak to people, and about rotation of stock and handling cash.”

Seetec tutor and assessor Steve Bond has been supporting Toby, Samantha, and Bradley through their apprenticeships and said: “They have come out of their shells and developed their confidence, social and communication skills, and really started to engage with the staff, players and customers. They are valued members of the team.”

Catering manager Nicola Riggs said: “It really helps me when the season starts because I have a group of people who know their way around and who know what they’re doing. I get a lot of help from Seetec with the recruitment process and their training.”

Scott Marsh, 22, from Chelmsford, has also progressed to employment at the Club, and encourages other young people to start traineeships. “Go full steam ahead, and don’t let anyone tell you that you can’t do it,” he said. “Believe in yourself, you will meet new people and you could end up finding full-time work.”

Nationally 75 per cent of apprenticeship employers report that the young people have helped their business to improve the quality of their product or service.

Seetec Group Managing Director John Baumback, who joined the company as a 16-year-old Youth Training Scheme (YTS) trainee, said: “Young people can make such a difference to the outlook of your business if you believe in them and give them the opportunities to develop. We have the expertise available to help businesses to invest in this talent.”

Silverwood honoured to be involved with Lions squad

Chris Silverwood has described his involvement with the current England Lions’ tour of Sri Lanka as an ‘honour’ and one that will only improve his experiences as a coach.

Silverwood was one of five members of the Lions party who missed Tuesday’s inaugural England Players’ Dinner at Lord’s – with fellow coach Bruce French, selector Angus Fraser and the two most recent caps, Haseeb Hameed and Keaton Jennings.

But he had no complaints, because he is enjoying working with the Lions.

“It’s an honour isn’t it, to come out and represent your country as a coach,” he added. “And I’m learning a lot working next to Andy, Bruce French and Chris Taylor as well. It’s a great environment to work in.

“I’ve done Under-19s, worked with the Pace Programme out in Potchefstroom, and I had a short time with the Lions in South Africa two winters ago before Ottis Gibson arrived as bowling coach. But this is the first official role like this as assistant coach.

“I’ve got my duties as a head coach with Essex as well, but I’m lucky that the club are very supportive of me – they see it as working up a level and the chance to learn from international coaches, and bring that knowledge back to the club. I’ve also got the benefit of a very good group working back at Essex, with Anthony McGrath my assistant taking the reins alongside Barry Hyam. It’s good for their development as well, to put their stamp on things while I’m away.”

And one last bonus for Essex is that Silverwood has been able to see first-hand that the club’s vice captain Tom Westley is in prime form ahead of their long-awaited return to Division One of the Specsavers County Championship – with scores of 95 in the warm-up game, and 97 in the first innings in Kandy.

“He’s obviously disappointed to have missed out on 100 twice – but as I said to him afterwards, you’d rather that than nought. He looks in control, his game has matured, he knows what his options are, he sticks to them and he makes it work – and he’s a very difficult batsman to stop scoring when he gets in, he’s hard to bowl at.”

Silverwood also praised the performance of the four seamers who played a key part in England Lions’ victory over Sri Lanka A in their first four-day match in Kandy – with bat and ball.

Tom Curran and Toby Roland-Jones took early wickets in both innings, Tom Helm and Sam Curran ensured there was no let-up for the home batsmen even as the pink balls got older – and all four made significant lower order runs which ensured the Lions made the running throughout.

“We saw in the practice game we played in Colombo that using the new ball was absolutely key,” said Silverwood, the Essex Head Coach who is with the Lions as assistant coach to Andy Flower in addition to his fast-bowling specialism.

“And I thought we did that well in both innings in Kandy. We got early wickets, and put ourselves in a good position. You’ve got to pitch the ball up and allow it to swing, and it did a little bit.

“One thing we have got that they’re probably not used to facing out here is pace. We’ve got some people who get it through, and they’re skilful bowlers as well, and that’s what we’ve seen come to the front.

“Toby and TC got those early wickets, Helm looked in really good rhythm and got a wicket in his first over in each innings surprising them with that bit of extra bounce, and Sam Curran bowled a lovely spell in the second innings.”

We’ve met before | Yorkshire

As the County face up to life back in the top-tier of domestic County Cricket, we look back at some memorable matches from the past against opposition we are scheduled to meet in the forthcoming campaign.

In this feature, two memorable games with Yorkshire fall under the spotlight.

Yorkshire v Essex at Huddersfield on 31 July, 1 August 1935.

Yorkshire 31 (HD Read 6-11, MS Nichols 4-17) and 99 (MS Nichols 7-37, HD Read 3-51),  Essex 334 (MS Nichols 146, BH Belle 63).

Essex won by an innings and 204 runs.

Star-studded Yorkshire, with eight present or future England players in their side, had lost only one match whilst retaining their title in 1935 winning 19 matches and drawing 10 of their 30 games. Their blemish came at Huddersfield against Essex where play lasted only until 1.00 p.m. on the second day. The hosts were completely undone by the marvellous bowling of Stan Nichols and ‘Hopper’ Read who ran amok to dismiss the opposition for 31 runs in an hour with five batsmen failing to score. At one stage, the home side were 9 for 6 but Arthur Wood scored 13, the only batsman to reach double figures in an innings that spanned just 12 overs and 4 balls.

Nichols then took centre-stage with the bat as he scored 146 which was to prove more than the two combined totals achieved by the home side before he returned to bowling exploits once again in company with Read.

Nichols claimed the wicket of 18 year-old Len Hutton who bagged a “pair” and the bowler concluded the match with figures of 11-54 while Read recorded 9-62 . Bowled out for 99 second time around, Yorkshire were beaten by an innings and 204 runs.

Essex player Peter Smith recounted that he fielded the ball just once in the match and that was when he caught Hedley Verity to end the game.

Wisden described Nichols performance as “the sensation of the season,” while Essex captain Charles Bray said: “He was a magnificent bowler who had the misfortune to be at his best in an era of fast bowlers in this country. Consequently he did not receive as many representative honours as he would have done had he come to the fore ten years later.”

Yorkshire v Essex at Scarborough on 12,13,14,15 September 2001

Essex 250 (GR Napier 42, JS Foster 41, RS Clinton 40, MJ Hoggard 6-51) and 172-8 dec (RC Irani 51*, ML Pettini 41), Yorkshire 104-5 dec (D Byas 41*) and 267 (MP Vaughan 113, AMcGrath 70, AP Grayson 5-20).

Essex won by 51 runs.

This match at North Marine Road proved the last time that Essex recorded a win at the venue but they started the match as outsiders against a side that had won Division One of the County Championship.

The visitors, playing their final four-day match of the season, included three debutants in their starting line-up. Joining 18 year-olds Mark Pettini and Zoheb Sharif was Joe Grant, the Jamaican-born paceman had opened the bowling for his native island in the mid-90’s with the legendary Courtney Walsh but had come over to England later in that decade. Some impressive performances in league cricket in the north and then, when playing Minor Counties cricket for Cambridgeshire, persuaded Essex to offer him a contract after casting their eye over him at winter nets. At that time, the bowler was also combining his time getting fit with a job at Tesco. Having finally earned his call-up for the County, he was praised by captain Ronnie Irani who enthused: “He deserves to succeed; he’s been so dedicated. He might be the wrong side of 30 but he’s been whipping in some lively deliveries in the nets and he’ll do well for us. We’ll bowl him in short bursts and he could be a surprise package.”

Essex won the toss for only the fourth time in the season and decided to bat on a cool and damp morning. Following a one minute silence in respect of the appalling events in New York the previous day, Essex reached 99 for 3 and at lunch, the White Rose county were presented with the champions gold Trophy during an extended lunch interval. However, rain allowed the celebrations to continue and there was no further play for the next five sessions. Prior to play resuming on Day Three, there was a further impeccably observed silence of three minutes in respect of the New York atrocities. When Essex resumed their innings, they eventually advanced to 250 all out before being bowled out. After facing 33.3 overs and avoiding the follow-on, Yorkshire skipper David Byas then made a sporting declaration 146 in arrears. A half-century from Irani and a pleasing 41 from Pettini, set up a good old-fashioned last day run chase with the champions – who were seeking their tenth win of the campaign in the competition –  set a target of 319 from 65 overs. What ensured was pure theatre.

Essex struck quickly to gain the initiative as the opening pair were dismissed without a run on the board. But steadily, the balance swung back firmly to the hosts. By mid-afternoon, Michael Vaughan and Anthony McGrath were collecting runs in scintillating fashion posting 204 in 102 minutes to take their side within 115 runs of victory. However Paul Grayson, playing against his former county, then took centre-stage. First he curbed the flow of runs and then accounted for McGrath (caught at long-on  by  Pettini) and Vaughan (beaten in flight) in successive overs. Still, at tea, Yorkshire required only a further 107 runs from 35 overs. However in little more than an hour, the match was over. Grayson bagged three more wickets before Grant polished off the tail taking three wickets in ten deliveries to give Essex victory by 51 runs. Half of the home side had been banished away in little more than three overs for just nine runs, not the finale the Yorkshire fans expected form their title winners. Grayson’s final analysis of 10-2-20-5 included wicket to wicket figures of 5 for 16 in 42 balls.

 

Tendo excited for the challenges that await

Ryan ten Doeschate enjoyed an excellent first tenure as Specsavers County Championship Captain, leading his team to a Division Two title success.

Division One now awaits and preparations have been underway for months to get the squad ready for the 2017 campaign.

The Dutch international has played a key part in those discussions, alongside Head Coach Chris Silverwood, Chief Executive Derek Bowden, Club Chairman John Faragher and Chairman of the Cricket Advisory Group Ronnie Irani.

Ten Doeschate is now keen to move forward from last year’s success and said: “The back end of 2016 was brilliant, we have all had time to sit back and reflect on what we have achieved but now another challenge awaits and it is all about hitting that head on.

“The 2017 campaign is our only focus now and we have to make sure we are well enough prepared to meet what is in front of us.”

It is well documented that Ravi Bopara stepped down from the limited-overs captaincy to see Club Captain ten Doeschate take the reigns in all formats but the 36-year-old is not daunted by the task ahead of him, it is quite the opposite in fact.

He added: “Taking over the one-day captaincy isn’t particularly a new challenge as I have done it before but hopefully I can continue the success we enjoyed last year in all formats. I was delighted with the way the squad worked last year when I was in charge and I didn’t really feel a burden of responsibility with the captaincy. I think that is maybe the style I am trying to implement; I don’t want anyone to feel burdened when they come to play for Essex.

“We put plans into place and train our hardest and you can’t ask for much more than that from the players. My role is to do my homework, find out what gets the best out of the group and work extremely hard. That is how I am going to face captaining all forms and hopefully our success continues.”

The 2016 Batsman of the Year is also keen to give Bopara the platform to return to his best in all facets of his game and acknowledged: “I think the biggest thing is giving Ravi the freedom to focus on his cricket and express himself. He is arguably one of the best players on the staff when he is firing on all cylinders and will be a big part of the side in all formats during 2017.”

Once again it will be vital to start the season well and with the potential presence of Alastair Cook, ten Doeschate’s side have the opportunity to build on the momentum created in all competitions during 2016.

He concluded: “I think last season showed how important it is to hit the ground running. There are some very good teams in Division One but we are a good team as well and go into the season full of confidence after a promotion. We are working hard now to make sure we are ready, and believe me, we will be.”

We’ve Met Before | Warwickshire

As the County face up to life back in the top-tier of domestic County Cricket, we look back at some memorable matches from the past against opposition we are scheduled to meet in the forthcoming campaign.

In this feature, two memorable games with Warwickshire fall under the spotlight.

Essex v Warwickshire at Ilford on 9, 11, 12, June 1984.

Warwickshire 334 (AI Kalicharran100, TA Lloyd 72, JK Lever 5-89) and 119 (DR Pringle 4-13, JK Lever 4-46. Essex 114 (AM Ferreira 4-44) and 374 KS McEwan 97, C Gladwin 92, GA Gooch 54, N Gifford 4-144).

Essex won by 35 runs.

An amazing match took place at Valentine’s Park where the home side overcame the ignominy of following-on before ending winners of an absorbing contest.

It was only the second occasion in the County’s history that they had achieved the feat and very few present at the outground would have envisaged an Essex victory when they started their second innings trailing by 220 runs. Consistent batting by Chris Gladwin, Ken McEwan, Graham Gooch and others set the visitors a  fourth innings target of just 155 but it proved beyond them. John Lever and Derek Pringle, with assistance from David Acfield, saw the Midlanders bowled out for 199 with nearly ten overs of the match still remaining.

Norman Gifford bowled 47 overs in the Essex second innings and some years later, the match still featured prominently in his memory.

“Over the years playing against Essex, first with Worcestershire and then with Warwickshire was always a challenge and even more when you had to play on Mr.Lever’s home patch, Ilford,” he reflected. “For us, it was a challenge we could look forward to, having a strong pace attack in Willis, Old, Small and Ferreira, and I was looking forward to an easy match with the ball but not with the bat.

“We finished our innings on a very good score of 334 thanks to Chris Old and Anton Ferreira. When we bowled Essex out for 114 and enforced the follow-on, the only result you could possibly envisage was a Warwickshire win or at least a draw.  Making a side follow-on is always hard as the first thing you have to overcome is their dented pride, the next with a side like Essex is the strength of batting, and theirs was as strong as any in the eighties. With Chris Old only bowling four overs, someone was going to have to bowl plenty and that fell to yours truly. Gooch 54, Gladwin 92, McEwan 97, Essex 374. The plusses for me were the four wickets, and bowling Gooch, which did not happen to me very often. The minuses were conceding 144 runs.

“After all that, we still only needed 155 to win. At the start of the match, if someone had offered us that to win batting last, we would have said thank you very much, yes please. The wheels came off in a big way for us succumbing to some top class seam bowling from Lever and Pringle, finally losing by 35 runs and Essex recording a memorable victory. Looking back that is what made Essex a very good side in those days, total belief in the ability of the team together with some fine cricketers and a very good captain. Thanks for the memory, but not for losing, and not for all the overs in the second innings.”

Essex v Warwickshire at Chelmsford on 13,14,15,16 September 2000.

Warwickshire 400 (MA Wagh 137, MJ Powell 106) and 8-0 declared. Essex 208-5 dec (DDJ Robinson 92, RC Irani 72*) and 202-4 (SD Peters 77*, RC Irani 64*).

Essex won by 6 wickets.

The final round of championship matches for the season saw Essex start the match in third place, level on points with second-placed Glamorgan and knowing that the victors from this game would earn a place in Division One for the following season. With as much attention being cast towards the clutch of other teams vying for the two remaining promotion places – Northamptonshire had already secured their place in the top-flight for 2002 – Essex had a far from profitable opening day.

Ronnie Irani opted to field in overcast conditions that persisted for the opening two days. Warwickshire, missing star fast bowler Allan Donald, posted 230 before losing their first wicket and had reached 348 for 5 in a match broadcast by Sky Television.  By the end of the second day, the home side were 192 runs behind their opponents with half of their first innings wickets still intact. However, there was controversy when Warwickshire bowler Mark Wagh had to be taken out of the attack after being warned off by umpires Barry Duddleston and John Hampshire who had concerns regarding the legality of his action.

Matches elsewhere were affected by the weather and the inclement stuff duly arrived at Chelmsford resulting in the complete loss of play on the third scheduled day. That however favoured the home side. Rain was again in evidence on the morning of Day Four. The position at this stage of the two teams involved in the Chelmsford contest was that Essex required a further 7 points for promotion whilst Warwickshire needed to win. The dilemma for Irani, in his first year of captaincy, was that his side could have achieved their objective by continuing to bat provided they reached 350 from their remaining 53 overs and then claim points from the inevitable draw but with only 5 first innings wickets standing, it was a risk.

Irani decided against such a risky course instead preferring to barter with his opposing captain Neil Smith in the hopes of setting up the chance for either side to go for the victory that would realise promotion for the eventual victor. In truth, Irani held the ace cards and after intensive debate, he negotiated a challenge for his side of making 201 to win form 56 overs.

A great start was made by openers Paul Prichard and Paul Grayson who took 27 form the first three overs  but they both fell in quick succession to be followed by Darren Robinson and Stuart Law leaving  the home side 64 for 4 in the 17th over. However skipper Irani typically led from the front and was joined by ultra-confident and stylish batsman Stephen Peters as both addressed the crisis with commendable intent and positive play.

The pair took Essex across the winning line and into Division One with a wonderful unbroken partnership worth 138 in 25 overs with Peters clubbing 13 boundaries from 84 balls that brought him 77 runs whilst Irani hit an authoritative 64 not out, including the winning run,  from 77 deliveries sending the ball to the boundary boards on 11 occasions. Thanks to the supreme performance of the pair, incredibly, Essex reached their target with 17.2 overs to spare. The victory left the County with the runners-position as the champagne corks were still popping long after the shadows had fallen on the County Ground.

Peter Such was the pick of the Essex bowlers as they struggled for wickets in the Warwickshire first innings although rain subsequently meant that the off-spinner played little part over the remainder of the march. On the final day, he watched Irani and Peters complete the successful run chase and was full of praise for the role that the 21 year-old Peters played on that memorable final day.

“Stephen Peters was the difference in that game,” Such acknowledged. “He played very well and was a very fine young player at the time. Credit for him for starting to turn that potential into genuine runs over the latter part of his career (with third county Northamptonshire). He also played an excellent knock in the 1998 Benson & Hedges quarter-final at Lord’s in a very tight game so we knew he had the ability to play important innings.”

McQueen promoted to Lead Strength and Conditioning Coach

Essex CCC are delighted to announce Harry McQueen has been appointed as the Club’s new Lead Strength and Conditioning Coach.

Harry will now lead player preparation heading into the 2017 season and will look to ready the players for Division One cricket.

He steps up from his role as Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach which he fulfilled for two years with success.

A former sprinter himself, McQueen is thrilled to be appointed and said: “I am absolutely delighted to take up this role. I have thoroughly enjoyed working with the players and staff over the last two seasons and believe I am well placed to help the squad forward.

“The lads have already put in a lot of hard work in the run up to Christmas and I am looking forward to getting them back in training and making sure they are fully prepared for our push in Division One next season.”

Chris Clarke-Irons, Head of Athlete Development, is happy to see McQueen appointed and said: “Harry has gone through a rigorous interview process along with a number of high calibre applicants.

“He has shown to us over the past two years and during the winter so far that he has the desire and effort to really put his own stamp on this role. He will also hit the ground running and allow us to prepare properly heading into what is an exciting season for everyone at the Club.”