03-04-2025, 17:19
(This post was last modified: 03-04-2025, 17:20 by Ska'dForLife-WBA.)
Worcestershire County Cricket Club
County Champions: 1964, 1965, 1974, 1988, 1989
One-Day Champions: 1991, 1994
T20 Champions: 2018
2025 Season
County Champions: 1964, 1965, 1974, 1988, 1989
One-Day Champions: 1991, 1994
T20 Champions: 2018
2025 Season
It's that wonderful time of year again. Peter's cathedral soars, Severn gleams blue and wide beyond the score-box, and with the fierce midday sun upon the ground, through heat-haze comes the wary sound of bat on ball. The counties have received their Hundred pieces of silver: restorative and auspicious in the short term, but at a long-term cost which may prove incalculable. And so the County Championship commences this year in fittingly fine weather which should be enjoyed while it lasts, for there's no knowing what clouds may lie over the horizon.
In spite of tragedy striking early last season with the untimely passing of Josh Baker, 2024 became the greatest summer of red-ball cricket Worcestershire have enjoyed so far this century, as a string of tenacious performances in the first half of the campaign finally yielded a first-ever Championship win at Chester-le-Street in early July just as prospects were starting to look bleak. With the team united in adversity, and "doing Josh proud" the watchword on the field, it became a hat-trick of victories upon the late-season resumption in August, with first Kent and then Essex - the latter win an astonishing turn-around for the ages - falling victim to the resurgent Pears. A couple of September draws were enough to secure 6th place, far higher than any of us dared dream of before a ball was bowled; but as club stalwart and talisman Joe Leach announced his retirement, the question naturally arose: can it happen again in 2025?
If not, it wouldn't be the first time the county have succumbed to second-season syndrome. And the loss of last year's outstanding overseas man Nathan Smith to Surrey, even if he was only present for one of the season's wins, is a further blow to contend with. The replacements on whom high expectations will inevitably fall are fellow Kiwi Jacob Duffy for Smith, Ben Allison for Leach, and Fateh Singh for Baker. And as ever at New Road, blooding youngsters is the name of the game: Jack Home and Harry Darley are among those eager to step up this year.
It'll be a long, hard battle; we shouldn't expect anything less. But what's been done before can be done again. Come on you Pears.
"I would rather spend a holiday in Tuscany than in the Black Country, but if I were compelled to choose between living in West Bromwich or Florence, I should make straight for West Bromwich." - J.B. Priestley