The Guardian (USA)

County Championsh­ip returns to nearnormal after two years of Covid

- Tanya Aldred

With the temperatur­e gauge set to brisk, but rain largely forecast to stay away, the County Championsh­ip rolls into another season. For the first time since 2019, red-ball cricket returns to some normality, two divisions restored to their rightful place, though this time split 10 to eight.

Alongside that, cricket bids farewell to most of the Covid regulation­s that have haunted the past two seasons: adieu multiple-hatted slips, good riddance sanitation breaks.

Symptomati­c testing, however, will remain, with players asked to withdraw from multi-day matches if they test positive. The ECB will also uphold a couple of the MCC rule changes due to come in in October: the (Covid-induced) ban on using saliva on the ball remains, and a tweak to the caught law, whereby a new batter will face the next ball bowled, even if the previous pair crossed while the catch was being taken. This follows a successful trial during last year’s Hundred.

Each county will live stream home games, available through county websites or social media channels, or the

ECB website, with BBC local radio also covering every match.

The blue riband draw of the first round is at Edgbaston, where champions Warwickshi­re take on recent serial underachie­vers Surrey.

Warwickshi­re’s bowling is somewhat hobbled: reliable seamer Liam Norwell will miss the first game with a bad back after sleeping in hospital chairs following the birth of his baby; Olly Stone is still recovering from injury, while Chris Woakes will miss the first two games after an injection in his heel.

More worrying for Warwickshi­re fans, the coach Mark Robinson did not rule out an interest in the England job. “I have a great job at a fantastic club,” he said, “I’m loving every minute of it – but everyone’s ambition is the top level.”

Surrey’s squad includes Hashim Amla and Kemar Roach, with the captain Rory Burns keen to prove both his ability with the bat and his side’s resilience.

Essex and Kent meet at Chelmsford for an (on paper) one-sided affair, Somerset have to face Mohammad Abbas and Kyle Abbott at the Ageas Bowl, while Northants and Gloucester­shire contest the battle of the newly (ish) promoted.

In Division Two, Derbyshire’s Shan Masood avoids meeting his compatriot Shaheen Afridi, yet to land at Lord’s, fresh-faced Sussex take on raging Nottingham­shire, Glamorgan and Durham meet at Cardiff, Worcesters­hire and Leicesters­hire at Grace Road.

All the counties must also throw themselves into the season without knowing how the cards will fall, a reorganisa­tion being likely for 2023, depending on the findings of the High Performanc­e Review sparked by the England Test team’s calamitous winter.

 ?? Photograph: Harry Trump/Getty Images ?? Mark Robinson, Warwickshi­re’s coach, has not ruled out an interest in the England job.
Photograph: Harry Trump/Getty Images Mark Robinson, Warwickshi­re’s coach, has not ruled out an interest in the England job.
 ?? ?? Rory Burns is Surrey’s captain. Photograph: Alex Davidson/Getty Images for
Rory Burns is Surrey’s captain. Photograph: Alex Davidson/Getty Images for

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