The Spin | Worcestershire thrive in a summer of adversity, bereavement and floods

September182024
A picture


Somerset could still win their first County Championship title, while Surrey remain on for the three-peat.Gloucestershire’s victory in the T20 Blast was particularly rousing – watched by David Lawrence, their club president so visibly confronted by the effects of motor neurone disease – but Worcestershire’s tale may be the most remarkable of the summer, one of existential questions, tragedy and on-field joy.Promotion to Division One was followed by winter floods – eight in total – that ravaged New Road, the club’s idyllic ground by the River Severn.The venue is familiar with flooding, leading to the odd strange anecdote.“We’ve had players who have left their cars for overseas tours that have been seen floating along the car park,” says the head coach, Alan Richardson.

But the situation is becoming increasingly serious and the club’s chief executive, Ashley Giles, is threatening action.With the floods having forced Worcestershire to play their first two championship home games at Kidderminster, Giles has raised the possibility of leaving the ground, their home since the late 19th century.The club have commissioned consultants to assess available options, be it a redevelopment of the existing ground or a move away.“The board want to look at everything,” he says.“No one wants to leave New Road.

On the other side, given the circumstances, it would be foolish not to say: ‘OK, if we were forced to move, what would the alternatives look like?’“All cricket businesses have many different issues to deal with.But we’re quite possibly the only professional sports team who face an existential threat from climate change.That’s the reality.That’s what’s doing this.That’s why the situation is worsening.

“This is a big issue and we have to tackle it head on, whatever the outcome is.But there is no point in just pretending it isn’t there.We have a lot more to think about than just runs and wickets.”That last sentence feels apt when remembering the news from early May, the death of Josh Baker, at the age of 20.The left-arm spinner was a popular presence at New Road, an academy product beginning to make himself known, the one who hit the runs to seal promotion.

A week on from his death, Baker’s teammates took to the field against Kent at Canterbury with the blessing of his family.“Paul and Lisa, Josh’s parents, are very close to us,” says Richardson.“They’d come and watch Josh a lot.They were absolutely adamant that the first team played their next game.We did check in with the group, but we also expressed Paul and Lisa’s request.

“I can’t even imagine what they’ve been through during that time, and since really.It felt like the right thing to do.They were very supportive of us playing and wanted us to play and believed that Josh would have wanted us to play.” So they carried on, hitting 618 in their first innings against Kent with three centurions: Gareth Roderick, Jason Holder and Matthew Waite.They have carried on to excel in Division One, primed for a mid-table finish when just staying up would have sufficed.

Three consecutive wins included a spectacular result at Chelmsford, 10 for four against Simon Harmer and his sidekicks turning into a 43-run victory,They’ve done it with 33, Baker’s number, sitting below the badge on their shirts,There wasn’t much to shout about in the T20 Blast, finishing second-last in the North Group, but a quarter‑final place in the One-Day Cup was another defiant effort after several injuries forced the need for late reinforcements before the start of the competition,“We had three club players who I phoned in the middle of the week to say: ‘Do you fancy playing for us for a month?’” says Richardson,Sign up to The SpinSubscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week’s actionafter newsletter promotionGiles calls the season’s achievements “not much short of astonishing”, taking into account the senior players Worcestershire have lost to other counties in the past couple of years.

Nottinghamshire’s raid before the season began was particularly stinging, as they signed Josh Tongue, Dillon Pennington – quicks who are part of England’s plans – and Jack Haynes.Worcestershire remain a club of limited means, unable to rival the resources of a Test venue, their lack of an indoor facility meaning they have to train at Malvern college, a nearby private school.While promising talents leave, the club bring in those who have something to prove.Take Kashif Ali, who played second-team cricket around the country before he signed two years ago, his first professional county deal, at the age of 24.He leads their batting averages in Division One this year.

“Our facilities are sometimes a bit of a challenge because of the floods,” says Richardson.“We make no bones about that when we try to attract players, that they won’t get everything they always want.” In return, they get opportunities.Despite making the best of what they’ve got, some extra money would be handy, particularly when faced with a unique threat.Giles admits to excitement about the introduction of private investment into the Hundred and the funds that will filter into the county game.

“We’re seeing, possibly, hopefully, one of the biggest changes in cricket,” he says,“This money will benefit the whole game,We need to all make sure we use that moment well to best give ourselves a chance of all 18 [first-class counties] being sustainable in the future,”This is an extract from the Guardian’s weekly cricket email, The Spin,To subscribe, just visit this page and follow the instructions.

cultureSee all
A picture

Trent Dalton’s Love Stories review – a stage adaptation that grabs you by the heart

Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), BrisbaneFrom the team that brought Boy Swallows Universe to the theatre comes a new work that tells a city’s worth of stories – and packs an emotional punchFor two months during the pandemic, the Australian author Trent Dalton lugged a sky blue 1960s Olivetti typewriter to a busy Brisbane street corner and invited strangers to tell him a love story. A sentimental, slightly absurd stunt – and one that could have gone very wrong. But Dalton, ever the charmer, has a way of finding the extraordinary in the everyday.The result was Love Stories, a book brimming with intimate confessions, grand gestures and all the messy business of being human. Now, in a stage adaptation for Queensland Performing Arts Centre, adapted by Tim McGarry and directed by Sam Strong, those stories don’t just leap from the page – they explode with theatrical spectacle

September172024
A picture

Intrigue, desire … and awful landlords: why queer authors are suddenly writing about houses

‘I think it’s an investigation of belonging – one that we didn’t have a literal space for before.”I’m on the phone with the novelist Yael van der Wouden, conferring with her about a recent trend in LGBTQ+ writing: a preoccupation with houses. I figured she would be a good person to talk to because her new novel The Safekeep centres on a lonely old house in the Dutch countryside that suddenly, one summer, is flooded with queer desire and intrigue. The problem is that the Booker-shortlisted author is talking to me in transit, touring Europe, at this moment on a train rattling across northern Italy. Reader, witness the irony of our discussing ideas of rootedness and belonging as Van der Wouden keeps getting ousted from her seat

September162024
A picture

Fifteen architecture firms shortlisted for NSW competition aimed at alleviating housing crisis

More than a dozen architecture firms from across Australia and overseas will vie to design homes for five Sydney sites set aside by the New South Wales government to help alleviate the state’s housing crisis.The 15 finalists in the government’s pattern book design competition were announced on Monday, culled from the portfolios and expressions of interest of more than 200 entries.Although pattern books to build mass housing have been sporadically used since colonial times, this is the first time the NSW government and not private enterprise has been the instigator. The idea behind a pattern book for building is to provide a fast track for construction by pre-approving selected designs, thereby cutting through red tape and lengthy development applications.After submitting site-specific designs in October, five winners will be selected to build their low- and medium-rise designs across the five metropolitan sites, of which only one has so far been revealed – Sydney Olympic Park

September162024
A picture

Last surviver of the Bloomsbury Group? Meet David ‘Bunny’ Garnett, 1972

In 1972, the Observer encountered one of a near-extinct species: Bloomsbury Group survivor writer David ‘Bunny’ Garnett, nearly perishing in the process, thanks to Garnett’s hair-raising driving. ‘“You drive with great imagination,” I said faintly,’ journalist Ruth Hall reported when Garnett collected her for an overnight stay at his cobwebby, dead-fly-infested French farmhouse.It’s a funny, affectionate portrait of a man who ‘retains an incredible “niceness” – there is no other word for it’. Beret-clad Garnett, then 80, was an attentive if eccentric host, frying potatoes, stoking the fire and plying Hall with walnut cake and a bespoke hotwater bottle fashioned from a beer bottle. He was modestly embarrassed to be interviewed, offering an alternative: ‘I’ve prepared a List of the Best and Worst Things in Life

September152024
A picture

On my radar: Mo Gilligan’s cultural highlights

Born in south London in 1988, the comedian and TV presenter Mo Gilligan started doing standup aged 19 and attracted wider attention with a series of viral sketches on YouTube. That landed him a co-hosting gig on The Big Narstie Show on Channel 4, followed by The Lateish Show With Mo Gilligan, for which he won Baftas in 2020 and 2022. He has also appeared as a judge on The Masked Singer UK. Gilligan, who lives in London, has just launched a podcast called Beginning, Middle and End, and he is currently touring the UK.Track Record: Me, Music and the War on Blackness by George the PoetI started reading this on tour and I felt like it was speaking directly to me

September142024
A picture

Trust hopes to turn William Blake’s cottage into a museum

In the early months of 1800, while living in Lambeth, William Blake found himself at the bottom of a “deep pit of melancholy, melancholy without any reason for it”.A change of environment was imperative. So when landed gentleman and patron of the arts William Hayley invited Blake to spend a few days on the Sussex coast, the poet, painter and printmaker agreed, hoping the sea breeze would raise his spirits and stimulate his imagination.Blake and his wife, Catherine, rented a 17th-century cottage in Felpham, a small country village with a population of 500 inhabitants, where they lived for three years until 1803. It was here that Blake wrote his epic poem Milton, the preface to which was set to music and became the hymn Jerusalem, considered to be an alternative English national anthem

September142024