DURHAM OFF TO DUBAI FOR PRE-SEASON WORK
After several seasons when they couldn’t afford a preseason tour, Durham flew out yesterday for an 11-day trip to Dubai.
The 15-man squad does not include Keaton Jennings, Mark Wood and Paul Coughlin, who are already in Dubai for the North v South series, while Barry McCarthy is in India with the Ireland oneday squad playing against Afghanistan.
Prior to winning their third county title in 2013, Durham prepared by scaling a snowy peak in the Scottish Highlands. Now they face a tougher climb as they have been cast 48 points adrift at the foot of Division Two.
The punishment for seeking a £3.8million ECB bailout has prompted more than 1,500 people to sign a protest petition, but it has brought financial stability and a highprofile chairman in Sir Ian Botham, who says: “We will take it on the chin.”
“We will be playing in the Emirates T20 tournament, which is attracting teams from around the world and is becoming quite a big event,” said coach Jon Lewis.
The absence of Wood, Coughlin and McCarthy, plus Usman Arshad with an ankle injury, leaves Durham’s seam attack a little light, but Lewis will be focusing more on the batting. “There is a lot of uncertainty about the lineup for the start of the season and we need to see some performances rather than base decisions purely on prac- tice,” he said.
“With the loss of two of our top three, Mark Stoneman and Scott Borthwick, to Surrey, and possibly Keaton to the Test side later in the summer, there are places up for grabs.
“Jack Burnham could move up to three, or Michael Richardson if he is not keeping wicket. Stuart Poynter had the gloves at the end of last season.”
Other than opening batsmen Stephen Cook and Tom Latham, who will share the overseas player’s duties and are current adversaries in the New Zealand-South Africa series, the only new signing is top-order batsman Cameron Steel.
A former Durham University captain, who spent three years in Middlesex’s second team, he is on the trip to Dubai, along with England Under-19 seamer Josh Coughlin and young spinner George Harding.
Meanwhile Jennings, Wood and Coughlin all featured for the North in their warm-up win over Worcestershire on Wednesday.
Jennings, who will be gaining further captaincy experience ahead of leading Durham in the Royal London One-Day Cup this spring, took out some of the frustrations of the Lions one-day series in Sri Lanka by striking 92 including five sixes – his highest score since the century on Test debut in Mumbai before Christmas.
Paul Coughlin, a late inclusion in the North squad following an injury to Richard Gleeson of Northants, took the final wicket as the North completed a 71-run win, and impressed the watching England selectors and coaches with the athletic fielding that has become familiar to Durham regulars.
Wood bowled two threeover spells on his first appearance since ankle surgery last autumn. The threematch North-South Series began today, with the North team coached by ex-Durham favourite Ottis Gibson, the England fast-bowling coach.