Matt Parkinson will leave Lancashire, where he competed for playing time last year. Photo: Getty Images/Alex Davidson
When Jack Leach was injured shortly before the Ashes, there was a collective «what's next?» from the English cricketing public. Management felt the same way, deciding to call up 36-year-old Moen Ali after nearly two years of retirement.
Look at the County Championship and it's no wonder why England chose to go back to Moen. The scene for the young spinners is slaughter.
First, let's take a look at three trial cap spinners who are or will be 26 this year — an age they are still developing but need to be solidified.
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Matt Spinner Parkinson is on his second loan from Lancashire to Durham this season and has agreed to join Kent next year. The off-spinner Dom Bess is not popular in Yorkshire, so he is on loan in his first county, Somerset, after being loaned out to Warwickshire in the last round of the County Championship; it seems possible that he could leave at the end of the season as well.
That Hampshire has now decided not to take Mason Crane on their T20 team, let alone a four-day team, has been noticed by other counties and he may very well be moving too.
Now let's look at the level down. Offee Amar Virdi, who once toured with England, and left-hander Dan Moriarty, named by Rob Key as an outstanding prospect in his days as a pundit, can't make the Surrey team because they rightly prefer the fast Will Jax. part-time improvement in the deep side of batting.
Both are out of contract at the end of the season and Moriarty could move to Yorkshire, where he is currently on loan. Virdi struggles to find a move. Both men are 24 years old.
Callum Parkinson leaves Leicestershire to join Durham, while Liam Trevaskis goes the other way. Leicestershire also have Rehan Ahmed, who is out this week with a shoulder problem but has managed just six wickets in five games this season, including missing 104 overs and Worcestershire chasing 274 in the fourth inning in May.
At Nottinghamshire, Liam Patterson-White, who became Lion this winter and was named by Leach as a trial substitute for a concussion last summer, has not played since May, having taken one wicket in the first five matches of the season.
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Across the country, highly advertised spinners simply don't impress or make their team. Of the above, only Callum Parkinson is playing for his district in this round of the championship.
Some of the reasons are hackneyed—and featured in last year's Strauss Review, which was derided by counties and fans alike but contained many worthy items under headline recommendations.
Too much high-season cricket and the Dukes' nimble ball encourages medium speed, deep bowling. When Somerset created these extreme spinning «Siderabad» fields for Leach and Bess, they were criticized by competitors and punished by the ECB.
Close attention to the future of English pop music is nothing new. It has been almost ten years since the young spinner asked Ollie Rainer of Middlesex for advice, and he replied, «Learn to fly.»
Furthermore, the August 1980 cover of Cricketer magazine was headlined «What to hope for in a spin?» and was written by E. W. Swanton, sometime in this parish. A year later, the era of uncovered fields ended.
A year later, Derek Underwood played his last test. In truth, England has since produced only one world-class spinner, Graeme Swann. Obviously, others — Tufnell, Edmonds, Embury, Panesar, Leach — have had their moments.
Some spinners play on fields that suit them. Teams often select two spinners at Chelmsford, where South African Simon Harmer continues to wreak havoc (and is accompanied by spinner Matt Critchley).
Don't be surprised if Canterbury flips next year and Parkinson joins Hamidullah Qadri. Perhaps the appearance of Shoaib Bashir will encourage Somerset to play with him along with the Leach, as well as take more risks with their surfaces.
But overall, the ECB is increasingly looking to take matters into its own hands. They hope the top-down approach works and that county captains take note of how Ben Stokes is expanding his counter's capabilities. Gradually, red-ball cricket returns to the very heart of summer.
They implemented the Strauss report recommended Kookaburra ball challenge in the championship for the last two rounds. Liam Dawson took 12 wickets in the first round and the effect of the medium-fast seamers was blunted after the new ball popped.
They want to take over Ahmed's development without fully trusting Leicestershire with precious talent. They recently sent Swann to Hove to bowl hour after hour with up-and-coming 22-year-old Jack Carson and teen bowling all-rounder James Coles.
That wouldn't be the case. It's amazing if they introduced contracts for the development of spin bowling, like young pacers. But they want spinners to play more and not manage their workload (like fast ones); if counties don't want to take the risk, we'll wait even longer until another meter shows up.
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