England’s Rob Key backs Kookaburra ball for full-time use in county cricket

  • Men’s team director delighted by results of batter-friendly ball
  • ‘It’s been fantastic. You see what four-day cricket is meant to be’

The early-season trial of the ­Kookaburra ball in the County Championship has been hailed as a success by Rob Key, with the England men’s team director keen to make it a permanent fixture throughout the domestic first-class summer.

Speaking after the second round of fixtures to use the Kookaburra, Key shared his view that using a less bowler-friendly ball than the traditional Dukes had brought out the requisite skills for Test cricket by increasing the volume of spin bowling, rewarding seamers who have extra pace, and allowing batters to go big when set.

“I think it’s been fantastic,” said Key. “You see what four-day cricket is meant to be. I’ve watched quite a bit this week and seen some bloody good cricket. I would use the Kookaburra all the time. English cricket would be much better off for it.”

All nine matches in the second round ended in draws for only the third time in history, it should be noted, while Essex beating Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge in their opening ­fixture remains the one positive result from the 18 so far. The Kookaburra, which has a less ­prominent seam and goes softer earlier, has clearly been a ­significant factor.

Indeed, while batting averages have been higher in April in recent years, it has been a veritable feast to start the 2024 season, with 44.49 runs per wicket the highest figure in a month since September 1938. Ten scores of 150 or more were made in round two – a record for a single set of championship fixtures starting on the same day. Across the four Kookaburra rounds in the past two years there have been 39.54 runs scored per wicket, compared with 31.79 in 12 Dukes ball rounds in 2023.

Key said: “The weather has got in the way at times and seven of those nine matches [in round two] could have seen a result. But county cricket is meant to go four days. This week has shown it’s rewarding the right type of players. Cricket is about watching pace bowlers, spinners and really good batting. Four days is about the journey.”

After the move was recommended in 2022 by Andrew Strauss’s high performance review, this is the second season to have the Kookaburra deployed. Two rounds last year have increased to four this summer, with the Kookaburra returning for rounds 12 and 13 in September. Key pushed for half of the season but, despite agreement at a meeting of director’s of cricket, the counties came back with a compromise.

The deployment of spin has increased. Slow bowlers sent down 37% of deliveries in the first two rounds, compared with 17% in the equivalent rounds last year. Key has noted early succes

Kasey Aldridge, with eight wickets at the Oval for Somerset, and Zaman Akhter, with six for ­Gloucestershire against Yorkshire, including Joe Root and Harry Brook, were among the seamers to catch Key’s eye in the ­latest round, having “run in with a bit of pace”. The England team ­director noted Sam Cook’s 10-wicket match for Essex at Trent Bridge, a welcome namecheck for a player who has 199 championship wickets at 16.84 since 2019.

“The pitches are slow this time of year but watching medium pacers is a waste of time,” said Key. “Teams need to find quicker bowlers or ones who will force a wicket. You can’t just keep running up bowling at 75mph. And in terms of those guys who are not express, you really work out who can bowl. Sam Cook, that was seriously impressive what he did.”

It has been particularly hard going for Middlesex, who have shipped 1,203 runs for just 11 wickets in two matches. At Edgbaston, where the groundsman, Gary Barwell, says he ­produced the same pitch in terms of grass and rolling as round two last year, a couple of England hopefuls in Matt Potts (none for 106 from 23 overs) and Brydon Carse (none for 128 from 19) struggled as Warwickshire racked up 698 for three declared against Durham.

Key said: “That looked a turgid [slow] pitch but [Potts and Carse] are much better equipped for international cricket than if they bowled on English snakepits with a Dukes ball moving all over the place. The best bowlers come from the flattest pitches.

“ Why do we think in India their batters come into the Test side averaging 70 [in the Ranji Trophy]? Do you think they’re playing with a little nibbly Dukes ball where it’s doing all sorts? What do we want to be? I want us to be the best team in the world for a generation; this will be one way to do that.”

Potts, who underlined the difference by shutting down the Edgbaston match with an unbeaten 149 as nightwatchman, said he had no issues with further use of the Kookaburra but did make the point that spring conditions, chiefly moist outfields, negate one of the skills the Australian ball will teach bowlers: reverse swing.

With a number of critics among the counties, not least Surrey’s director of cricket, Alec Stewart, Key’s desire to have the Kookaburra used all season – something he does not think should affect the use of the Dukes in home Tests – may be tricky to get across the line. To make the switch permanent will require a consensus among the counties and signoff from the England and Wales Cricket Board’s professional game committee.

• This article was amended on 19 April 2024. Kasey Aldridge plays for Somerset, not Lancashire as an earlier version said.

Contributor

Ali Martin

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
‘We have a superior product’: Dukes maker invites Rob Key for talks over ball
The maker of Dukes balls has entered the debate on the trial use of the Kookaburra ball in county cricket and the ECB’s managing director of men’s cricket to talk about the type of ball he wants to see

James Wallace

19, Apr, 2024 @7:00 AM

Article image
The Spin | County cricket 2022 awards: the Spin’s final word on the season
The Spin dishes out the gongs to the best, worst, and most memorable events of the 2022 Championship season

Tanya Aldred

28, Sep, 2022 @10:28 AM

Article image
The Spin | County cricket’s longform stories offer something IPL just can’t match
Memories are made down by a county ground sightscreen, not the never-ending schedule of T20 leagues around the world

Andy Bull

17, May, 2023 @2:14 PM

Article image
County Championship 2024: team-by-team guide to the new season
Surrey will fancy their chances of retaining the title, but Durham and Essex have high hopes and plenty of talent

Tanya Aldred

01, Apr, 2024 @9:00 PM

Article image
County Championship: Northeast fires 186 but rain keeps four grounds waiting
Glamorgan’s new captain Sam Northeast raced to the season’s first century but there was no play at Old Trafford, Chester-le-Street, Derby and Canterbury

Tanya Aldred at Old Trafford

05, Apr, 2024 @6:25 PM

Article image
The Spin | From Surrey’s title march to Bazball at Durham – county run-in highlights
There is plenty to look out for in the championship climax, including thriving England discards and famous young names

Tanya Aldred

13, Sep, 2023 @9:45 AM

Article image
Rain, rain, go away: groundstaff fear worst on eve of new cricket season
Gloucestershire and Worcestershire are among the clubs fretting about their pitches as county cricket returns

Tanya Aldred

04, Apr, 2024 @3:42 PM

Article image
‘Less cricket, higher intensity’: Dawid Malan backs ECB’s cuts to county game
Yorkshire batter Dawid Malan said cuts will mean ‘bowlers will be fitter’ and warned players are ‘knackered’ by what is now a ‘12-months-a-year game’

Andy Bull in Lahore

29, Sep, 2022 @5:00 PM

Article image
County cricket: Warwickshire face uphill survival battle despite solid start
Warwickshire ended day one on 138-2 against Hampshire, but relegation rivals Yorkshire and Kent also made impressive starts

Tanya Aldred at Old Trafford

26, Sep, 2022 @7:43 PM

Article image
The Spin | Surrey eye history as ‘irreplaceable’ Alec Stewart looks to sign off in style
Stewart’s final act at his beloved club could see Surrey match a cricketing feat that has not been achieved in over half a century

Tanya Aldred

03, Apr, 2024 @9:15 AM