Short Leg Cricket
Associate Cricketer
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2019
- Profile Flag
- New Zealand
20th April 2020
Here it is! The Europa League begins tomorrow and the 4 competing sides (England, Ireland, Netherlands and Scotland) will battle it out to become Europa League champion and automatically qualify for the upcoming Global Test Tournament along with the runner up. England start the tournament as clear favourites with their recent Test record (defeating South Africa 3-1 away) suggesting they have found a winning and working formula for the longer formatted game, led by the ever impressive and improving Joe Root. They will take on underdogs Scotland who beat the English two years ago albeit in a 50 over fixture and will be looking to use that confidence and fond memories to spur them on in their inaugural Test for the country. The encounter will be played at the Kia Oval in Surrey where local boys Rory Burns, Sam Curran and Ollie Pope will all be hopeful of selection in their familiar surroundings. England will have a lot of selection headaches particularly in the positions surrounding NO.3, wicketkeeper and spin bowler with a bank of players vying for selection most notably Zak Crawley and Ben Foakes. Scotland, on the other hand, will be debating whether to select wily all rounder Richie Berrington or opt for another specialist batsmen such as Michael Jones or Craig Wallace. The third seamer spot is also up for grabs, county cricket stars Brad Wheal and Rudihari Smith amongst others in contention, whilst the spinner selection looks set to come down to a battle between leggie Hamza Tahir or clever left arm orthodox bowler Mark Watt...
The other match in the league sees recently made Test nation Ireland take on another debuting nation in the Netherlands at the picturesque Malahide Cricket Ground. Ireland have a relatively small experience in Test match cricket, losing to Pakistan, Afghanistan and disappointingly to England last summer, but nonetheless they will enter the match with high spirits under the new captaincy of Andrew Balbirnie who has taken over from experienced character Will Porterfield. With new head coach Graham Ford alongside the intelligent Balbirnie, Ireland undoubtedly will be searching for qualification into the big time, into the Global Test Tournament, with a settled and talented squad including Paul Stirling, Kevin O'Brien, Mark Adair and potentially the uncapped Craig Young. Their opponents, the Netherlands, have appeared in many limited overs world tournaments but never in an official Test match and like Scotland will be making their opening bow into the arena of 5 day cricket. Whilst they might be new customers, they have a squad blended with experienced old heads and an exuberance of youth to spearhead the Dutch charge. Newly appointed captain and left handed all rounder Pieter Seelar is blessed with the pair of Ryan ten Doeschate and Roelof van der Merwe, whose longevity has rewarded them with a once in a lifetime Test cap which they will hope to expand on during the competition, who are going to bring a wealth of experience, skill and knowledge to the Dutch side. The Dutch are also gifted with the talent of Colin Ackermann and Brandon Glover who have plied their trade successfully in the English domestic seasons and they will be important if they are to progress into the GTT.
The Europa League is ready and raring to go! The Test Mini Leagues project begins in Surrey and Malahide and will set the benchmark for the other 4 Test Mini Leagues that will operate around the world in preparation and qualification for the ultimate showdown in the Global Test Tournament. The players are ready, the umpires have arrived, the fans are excited, the commentators are thrilled by this new Test Cricket home, the reporters are ready! Everyone is but Keaton Jennings and Jofra Archer ..... are you?!
Here it is! The Europa League begins tomorrow and the 4 competing sides (England, Ireland, Netherlands and Scotland) will battle it out to become Europa League champion and automatically qualify for the upcoming Global Test Tournament along with the runner up. England start the tournament as clear favourites with their recent Test record (defeating South Africa 3-1 away) suggesting they have found a winning and working formula for the longer formatted game, led by the ever impressive and improving Joe Root. They will take on underdogs Scotland who beat the English two years ago albeit in a 50 over fixture and will be looking to use that confidence and fond memories to spur them on in their inaugural Test for the country. The encounter will be played at the Kia Oval in Surrey where local boys Rory Burns, Sam Curran and Ollie Pope will all be hopeful of selection in their familiar surroundings. England will have a lot of selection headaches particularly in the positions surrounding NO.3, wicketkeeper and spin bowler with a bank of players vying for selection most notably Zak Crawley and Ben Foakes. Scotland, on the other hand, will be debating whether to select wily all rounder Richie Berrington or opt for another specialist batsmen such as Michael Jones or Craig Wallace. The third seamer spot is also up for grabs, county cricket stars Brad Wheal and Rudihari Smith amongst others in contention, whilst the spinner selection looks set to come down to a battle between leggie Hamza Tahir or clever left arm orthodox bowler Mark Watt...
The other match in the league sees recently made Test nation Ireland take on another debuting nation in the Netherlands at the picturesque Malahide Cricket Ground. Ireland have a relatively small experience in Test match cricket, losing to Pakistan, Afghanistan and disappointingly to England last summer, but nonetheless they will enter the match with high spirits under the new captaincy of Andrew Balbirnie who has taken over from experienced character Will Porterfield. With new head coach Graham Ford alongside the intelligent Balbirnie, Ireland undoubtedly will be searching for qualification into the big time, into the Global Test Tournament, with a settled and talented squad including Paul Stirling, Kevin O'Brien, Mark Adair and potentially the uncapped Craig Young. Their opponents, the Netherlands, have appeared in many limited overs world tournaments but never in an official Test match and like Scotland will be making their opening bow into the arena of 5 day cricket. Whilst they might be new customers, they have a squad blended with experienced old heads and an exuberance of youth to spearhead the Dutch charge. Newly appointed captain and left handed all rounder Pieter Seelar is blessed with the pair of Ryan ten Doeschate and Roelof van der Merwe, whose longevity has rewarded them with a once in a lifetime Test cap which they will hope to expand on during the competition, who are going to bring a wealth of experience, skill and knowledge to the Dutch side. The Dutch are also gifted with the talent of Colin Ackermann and Brandon Glover who have plied their trade successfully in the English domestic seasons and they will be important if they are to progress into the GTT.
The Europa League is ready and raring to go! The Test Mini Leagues project begins in Surrey and Malahide and will set the benchmark for the other 4 Test Mini Leagues that will operate around the world in preparation and qualification for the ultimate showdown in the Global Test Tournament. The players are ready, the umpires have arrived, the fans are excited, the commentators are thrilled by this new Test Cricket home, the reporters are ready! Everyone is but Keaton Jennings and Jofra Archer ..... are you?!