The curious case of the Bob Willis Trophy, a grand concept in need of meaning

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NICK FRIEND: Given the drama of the final round of the County Championship season, this week will do well to mean as much as it ought. Creating cricket’s Community Shield would be a fine place to start

What to do with the Bob Willis Trophy, the latest quandary facing the unsolvable Tetris that is English cricket’s domestic schedule.

Its second instalment begins on Monday – a year after its foundation as an admirable, appropriate memorial for a widely-respected hero of the game, set up initially to bring meaning to a shortened summer that had decided against trivialising the County Championship into a whistle-stop, chaotic monthlong competition.

It worked as well as could reasonably be expected: Essex and Somerset – the best teams in the country the previous year, when they fought to be county champions at Taunton in the last week of the season – qualified for the final, a five-day showcase at Lord’s, albeit behind closed doors. Perhaps the manner of the result wasn’t ideal – Essex were awarded the title on account of a higher first-innings score – but otherwise it was broadly an autumnal triumph that achieved more than looked feasible at the height of lockdown.

That was a one-off, though: while life isn’t quite back to normal, the county summer did still return to its traditional April beginning, only concluding last week, with Warwickshire clinching the County Championship crown ahead of Lancashire. No doubt, both teams have been celebrating hard. The prospect of another week, therefore, feels like a strange, misplaced addition.

To a degree, the relative antipathy around this showpiece occasion seems somewhat ironic, given the drive in several quarters for more high-profile red-ball matches, but perhaps it also speaks to the sense of tiredness running through the whole game at the end of a season as busy and draining as this. It is asking a lot of the players to go again with the same intensity as the last five months.

So, if it were up to me, I would invert the calendar to make this cricket’s answer to football’s Community Shield: a curtain-raiser to the campaign featuring the two best red-ball teams in the previous year.

In this case, Warwickshire and Lancashire at Lord’s in April: a flagship precursor to the county summer, with its participants known seven months in advance, no complaints around a lack of time to purchase tickets – as was the case with the Royal London Cup final’s 48-hour turnaround this year – and the potential for a high-quality fixture in front of a decent crowd to summon in the new season after a winter away.

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Leicester City won the 2021 Community Shield, having qualified by beating Chelsea to win the FA Cup

Where that leaves the Champion County match, played out between the winners and an MCC side, would need some discussion, but there is an opportunity here to raise the status of domestic red-ball cricket in a way that the current setup can’t achieve.

There is no partisanship attached to the MCC game – how could there be, with an Invitational XI? It exists, for all intents and purposes, as a glorified warmup. It doesn’t have to be completely dismantled: in the last few years, it has been taken abroad in March, and there is no reason why that innovation shouldn’t continue, but the chance to stage a five-day final – as the World Test Championship has cottoned onto – is a genuinely interesting proposition, if it is packaged and sold correctly.

“I think we’ve got to make County Championship cricket more exciting,” one county chief executive told me last week. His dream is for a one-off, winner-takes-all match at Lord’s, with the victors taking both the County Championship and the Bob Willis Trophy in the style of Australia’s Sheffield Shield.

“I would put everything on Bob Willis Finals Day,” he said. “For me, that’s a no-brainer, but I know I’m probably in a minority in thinking that. We have a big Blast final, we’ve got a big Hundred final, we have to work out where the 50-over final fits.

“It would give massive profile to red-ball cricket, to county members, to sponsors. Imagine if every year was built to that crescendo, and two teams in red-ball cricket were getting a five-day match at Lord’s. I think you could market that and get 20,000 people every day at Lord’s.

“In reality, we’ve sort of played two semi-finals last week in Division One for the right to play at Lord’s.”

That concept was put to the counties ahead of the season but rejected. “I think the counties felt that was probably a step too far to put it all on that one game, particularly with it all being so late in the year,” Neil Snowball, the ECB’s managing director of county cricket, told The Cricketer.

“I still think that debate is to be had. Part of me loves the jeopardy – can you imagine if you ended up with Lancashire and Yorkshire in the Bob Willis Trophy final, playing off to determine who’s also the county champions. You’d have Lord’s packed out for four days.”

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Warwickshire come into the Bob Willis Trophy, having won the County Championship last week

For the moment, though, he sees this occasion operating as “a celebration of county cricket” in the absence of anything more tangible on the line. Of course, there is merit in that alone but also so much more potential elsewhere. Its success last time around was contingent on the simple fact that it carried real purpose. “The winner of the Bob Willis Trophy won the Bob Willis Trophy,” as Snowball puts it.

Given the legend of Willis – not to mention his legacy with the Bob Willis Fund – there is a real, heartening desire to keep the trophy in circulation, whatever its guise. It is fitting that this edition involves Warwickshire, where he spent 12 years of his professional career, and that it has found a home at Lord’s, where he took more Test wickets – 47 at 18.76 apiece – than at any other ground.

In time, let’s hope it can settle upon a suitable meaning as well. For, given the drama of the final round of the County Championship season, this week will do well to mean as much as it ought. Creating cricket’s Community Shield would be a fine place to start.

Comments

Posted by Stuart Ellis on 04/10/2021 at 15:52

The Bob Willis trophy should be between Champion County v MCC or Warwickshire v Surrey, his former teams. Failing that, the most successful bowler for England or in the county championship.

Posted by Mike Hamilton on 30/09/2021 at 15:18

I do agree with your article; I feel that the Bob Willis Trophy which was a great idea has lost its way and having it as an opening to the County Season would be a great idea and create a lot of interest. Having watched bits of a very one side Warwickshire against Lancashire final I must admit I felt that the players were jaded and just going through the motions.

Posted by Lloyd Birch on 30/09/2021 at 13:07

What a good idea. Also get back to a two Division County Championship. Dump the "Money Grabbing" Hundred - this is why we have fixture congestion. We already have a T20 competition.

Posted by Martyn Webster on 30/09/2021 at 11:24

20,000 spectators - you would need music and a DJ to get that in to county cricket! Ludicrous concept from the ECB to make the Championship a winner-take-all match. Batting first in late September is hazardous - as Lancashire have found, and turns the competition into more of a lottery than it is now. Worrying that Neil Snowball 'still thinks that there is a debate to be had' in other words keep asking the same question until you get the answer you want.

Posted by Andy Cullen on 29/09/2021 at 14:23

What would be really good would be a meaningful, two division County championship played in the summer. Not 4 games in April, a few more in May and then some meaningless final rounds o September. How the top division can call itself that without Essex is laughable.

Posted by Steve Walcott on 29/09/2021 at 13:12

As I've said on other forums I think it should be an annual North v South test trial. Reward those who've had good seasons and are on the fringes of international recognition. A perfect opportunity for such players to stake a late claim for a tour spot. We don't need 1st v 2nd playing each other when the title has been decided.

Posted by Marc Evans on 29/09/2021 at 12:30

Agree totally. What an opportunity to create cricket's community shield, by using it as a curtain raiser to the new season. Playing it at the end of September means it's likely to be disrupted by the weather and dew affected for the morning sessions, making the toss a key factor. Once again our administrators miss the boat.

Posted by Robert Henderson on 29/09/2021 at 10:21

The best game to hold at the end of the season is Champion County v the Rest (of England). There is also a good case for a North v South game in the old G v P slot in midsummer.

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