Business Day

Flounderin­g Cook seeks resurgence in Durham

• The runs have dried up, so Stephen follows in footsteps of dad Jimmy in a bid to make SA team for England tour

- Telford Vice Cape Town TMG Digital

On April 20 1989, Jimmy Cook walked out with Peter Roebuck to open the batting for Somerset against Hampshire.

It was Cook’s 150th firstclass match but his first outside SA and Zimbabwe‚ a nod to the realities of apartheid — which among its many deprivatio­ns denied thousands of his compatriot­s the chance to play abroad.

Cook’s son‚ Stephen‚ does not have to factor an evil regime into his bid to keep playing at the highest level.

But he has other problems. Like scoring only 17 runs in four innings in SA’s recent Test series in New Zealand‚ which led to him being dropped.

Now Cook junior is following in his father’s footsteps in a bid to save his career.

“I’ve got great memories of touring with my old man when he played for Somerset‚” Stephen Cook said.

“That idea of having my family on the road and doing the same thing 28 years down the line is very appealing.”

So he agreed to play for Durham in the first half of this English summer‚ mostly to try and help the troubled county — which needed a R65.3m bailout from the England Cricket Board to avoid being put into administra­tion — win promotion.

But the relationsh­ip between Cook and Durham is significan­tly more symbiotic than when it was envisaged. The county needs him to score plenty of runs‚ and he needs to score those runs to settle the doubts the selectors in SA must have about keeping him in the mix for the Proteas’ Test series in England in July and August.

Cook‚ who departed for England on Saturday‚ could get his chance to start doing so in Durham’s match against Nottingham­shire on Friday.

Among his examples is Chris Rogers‚ the opening batsman who in addition to playing for Western Australia from November 1998 represente­d Derbyshire‚ Leicesters­hire and Northampto­nshire from 2004 to 2008 before making his Test debut at the age of 30.

“A guy like Chris Rogers also made his debut later in life‚ and he also went and played county cricket and made a successful comeback against England‚” Cook said.

“There’s definitely reference points that I can use.”

Rogers’ debut‚ against India in Perth in January 2008‚ was his only Test until July 2013 — when he returned for the Ashes in England and scored two halfcentur­ies and a century.

Cook made his Test debut at 33 against England in Centurion in January 2016‚ and scored 115 — the first of his three centuries in 19 innings.

His father was 35 when he went to play for Somerset and 39 when he made his Test debut against India at Kingsmead in November 1992.

Cricket has changed in the ensuing years but runs are still the only currency that matters for batsmen.

“I’ve had my opportunit­ies to score runs‚” Stephen Cook said. “If they decide that’s it and they’re moving on I’ll be sad and disappoint­ed.

“But I’d love the challenge of going to Lord’s and playing against England.

“I would love to be given one more opportunit­y.”

Cook has never played a first-class match in England. But he has 40 more caps than his father owned when he walked out with Roebuck.

How many of those Cook is yet to earn will be for SA depends on how he fares for Durham in the next few weeks.

Jimmy scored 85 that day in Southampto­n and rattled up 79 and 91 in subsequent games before making 156 in his seventh innings for Somerset.

Stephen will hope the apple has not fallen too far from that tree. /

 ?? /John Cowpland / backpagepi­x ?? In the market for runs: Stephen Cook is to play for Durham for the first half of the English season in a bid to save his Test career.
/John Cowpland / backpagepi­x In the market for runs: Stephen Cook is to play for Durham for the first half of the English season in a bid to save his Test career.

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