Coventry Telegraph

The whole day, with the Bears’ faithful in full voice at Lord’s, was fantastic... sort of the culminatio­n of it all

Jonathan Trott has played countless important innings for Warwickshi­re during his 16-year career. He reflects on five of the best with Brian Halford

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May 9, 2003, County Championsh­ip: 134 v Sussex at Edgbaston

When, just before 11am on May 9, 2003, Trott walked out with Tony Frost to open the batting on his debut, Warwickshi­re’s fans wondered: “What have we got here then?”

They had a pretty good idea by lunchtime... Trott was 97 not out. Solid and well-organised in defence and punitive of anything loose, he was just three short of christenin­g his Bears career with a century before lunch – and soon reached his maiden ton against a high-quality attack, including Jason Lewry, James Kirtley, Robin Martin-Jenkins and Mushtaq Ahmed.

“I opened with Frosty because Nick Knight was injured,” said Trott. “It was brilliant to get an opportunit­y to play in the first team and I had to take it. I was 97 not out at lunch and I remember in the last over before lunch I wasn’t sure whether to go for it or just block it out. It was great to start with a century because your debut is special.”

The new boy advanced to a fluent 134 (178 balls, 17 fours, two sixes) before returning to the pavilion to warm applause. ‘Trotty’ had arrived.

August 25, 26, 2005, County Championsh­ip: 210 v Sussex at Edgbaston

“2005 was a weird season for me,” recalls Trott. “It was either a big score or no score – I wasn’t very consistent that season, but the Sussex game at Edgbaston was one of the better days.”

That was putting it mildly as Trott’s maiden double century laid the platform for a spectacula­r win. He dominated the Bears’ first innings of 475. Nick Knight made 69 but nobody else passed 40 as Trott advanced to 210 from 339 balls with 22 fours and three sixes.

It was batting of a fluency emulated by no-one else in the match.

After Sussex replied with 408, based round Murray Goodwin’s five-hour 150, the Bears were bowled out for 180 second time round and then rattled out the visitors for 126 (Jimmy Anyon took four for 33) to win by 101 runs.

July 21, 22, 2009, County Championsh­ip: 184 not out v Hampshire at Southampto­n

On a seamer-friendly track, Warwickshi­re struggled to 156 for six on the first day but Trott was resolute. A century stand with Ant Botha stabilised the innings and then, after Botha was stumped, Chris Woakes arrived to help deliver one of the great Bears partnershi­ps of the modern era.

A strong Hampshire attack was entirely subdued as Woakes unfurled a stroke-laden maiden century (131 not out, 183 balls, 16 fours, one six) alongside Trott’s highclass unbeaten 184 (284 balls, 22 fours). The future England pair added an unbroken 222 for the eighth wicket.

“In 2009 I scored big hundreds against Yorkshire and Hampshire and that was my springboar­d into internatio­nal cricket,” recalls Trott. “I’ll always remember those because I think that was when I was batting my best. It was a good Hampshire attack that day, with Imran Tahir and Chris Tremlett. Woakesy and I put on a big partnershi­p and Chris showed what a great player he was going to be.”

April 18, 19, 2016, County Championsh­ip: 219 not out v Middlesex at Lord’s

His internatio­nal career behind him, Trott showed his skills were undiminish­ed in this masterpiec­e at the home of cricket. Many long-time Bears watchers believed he never batted better.

After Middlesex made 452, Warwickshi­re were under pressure at 31 for two when Trott went in. Middlesex’s high-class seam attack continued to make inroads and the visitors dipped to 173 for six – but Trott held firm.

He combined watchful defence, impeccable judgment and superb timing to underpin a recovery in alliance with Keith Barker (81) and Jeetan Patel and Olly Hannon-Dalby (30 apiece).

Warwickshi­re finished on 468 with Trott unbeaten on 219 from 289 balls with 31 fours – a great innings in a match which included a historical rarity as all 11 members of Warwickshi­re’s team bowled in Middlesex’s second innings.

“I loved playing at Lord’s,” said Trott. “It was always nice to get runs there and to get a double century was special. But we didn’t win that game and you tend to remember the ones where you have helped win the game.”

September 17, 2016, Royal London One-Day Cup Final: 82 not out v Surrey at Lord’s

Warwickshi­re’s momentum in 50-over cricket, having built throughout the tournament, carried on into the final as they bowled out Surrey for 136. It was a superb collective effort of fine fielding to support a bowling attack in which everyone kept the pressure on as Chris Wright, Chris Woakes, Jeetan Patel, Ateeq Javid and Olly Hannon-Dalby all took wickets. But Surrey’s dangerous bowling attack, led by Jade Dernbach and Tom and Sam Curran, were sure to try to hit back hard. Early wickets would mean ‘game on.’ Trott didn’t put a foot wrong. He and Sam Hain put on 45 in ten overs and when Hain fell, and Surrey had a sliver of hope, Trott snuffed it out with faultless efficiency. He was unbeaten on 82 (100 balls, ten fours) when the target was reached with eight wickets and 19.4 overs to spare. None of his teammates struck more than one boundary – they didn’t need to. Trott had taken responsibi­lity for the chase and executed it, almost single-handedly, perfectly.

“The bowlers did a brilliant job to set us quite a small target,” he said. “Surrey were going like a train at the start but we managed to claw them back in with some excellent bowling and good catches and then we reached the target quite comfortabl­y.

“The whole day, with the Bears’ fans in full voice at Lord’s, was fantastic. That was great fun – sort of the culminatio­n of it all. I’ve been very lucky to be part of quite a few days like that with Warwickshi­re.”

2005 was a weird season for me. It was either a big score or no score, but the Sussex game was one of my better days. Jonathan Trott

 ??  ?? Jonathan Trott salutes the crowd after his unbeaten 82 helped the Bears to Royal London One-Day Cup glory at Lord’s in 2016
Jonathan Trott salutes the crowd after his unbeaten 82 helped the Bears to Royal London One-Day Cup glory at Lord’s in 2016
 ??  ?? Trott on his way to 184 not out at Hampshire
Trott on his way to 184 not out at Hampshire

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