Rossendale Free Press

Onions has the taste for Lancashire

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LANCASHIRE’S Graham Onions has described the chance to help coach one of county cricket’s most talented seam bowling department­s as an honour.

The former England quick has stepped into the gap created by Glen Chapple’s secondment to England as their bowling coach for the ongoing West Indies Test series.

Chapple may be the Red Rose head coach, but the former captain also looks after their plethora of seamers - something now down to Onions as the county prepare for the

●● belated start of the season on August 1.

Another former Lancashire skipper, Mark Chilton, takes on head coaching duties until Chapple’s return just a few days before the start of the campaign.

He will oversee two-day friendlies against Yorkshire and Derbyshire later this month, while secondteam coach Chris Benbow has also stepped up to assist.

Onions said: “When Glen got the fantastic news that he’d be working with England, he rang me up and asked would I feel comfortabl­e doing it.

“He wasn’t questionin­g whether I could do the job as a role on its own, it was just a case of juggling coaching and my bowling.

“But, straightaw­ay, I thought back a couple of years to making the move to Lancs (from Durham). And this kind of thing was exactly why I moved.

“My response was, ‘Absolutely, yes, get me in there. I’ll work around the lads to get my overs in’.

“To be the bowling coach for all the seamers on the profession­al staff is an honour.

“I know it’s only a five-week block, but it’s a really, really important block to get the lads ready to compete for trophies and to give something back to the members, who have had it tough over the last few months.”

Since moving to Emirates Old Trafford ahead of the 2018 summer, the 37-yearold Gateshead native has had a major impact on Lancashire life - both on and off the field. As a seam bowler, Onions has taken 102 wickets in 22 County Championsh­ip matches at an average of 20.80, significan­tly better than his already impressive first-class career average of 25.70.

Off the field, he has had a varied range of coaching duties as he explores a potential future career.

“I’ve worked closely with the first-team squad since I joined, just giving bits of advice without doing much technical coaching,” explained the man nicknamed Bunny.

“But through the winters, I’ve been doing some coaching with the younger Academy lads, which I’ve absolutely loved.

“Even now, as an old pro, I want to keep getting better and keep people out of the team. Hopefully, that kind of mentality rubs off on the younger lads.

“The last three years have been everything I could have asked for. It’s been fantastic.”

Despite being in England’s bio-secure bubble, Chapple is still keeping close tabs on Lancashire’s preparatio­ns, with the squad training at Chester Boughton Hall.

 ??  ?? Graham Onions
Graham Onions

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