Ben Duckett, the England Lions batsman, and Tim Bresnan, the
Yorkshire all-rounder, are among the eight cricketers to have been
chosen for the inaugural North versus South series in the United Arab
Emirates next year in March.
Earlier this year,
Andrew Strauss, managing director of cricket of the England And Wales
Cricket Board (ECB), introduced the new concept of identifying the best
English players based on their domestic performances and pitting them
against each other, thus giving them an opportunity to make it to the
England One-Day International squad for the 2017 Champions Trophy and
the 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup.
As a result, the
Professional Cricketers' Association collaborated with the ECB's High
Performance Centre to come up with the PCA MVP formula. This formula
considers the pitch conditions, the quality of the opposition, runs
scored, wickets taken, captaincy as well as strike rates while assigning
points to the players.
It was then decided to
include the top four players from each region of the Royal London
One-Day Cup's MVP rankings for the series in UAE. Based on those
rankings, apart from Bresnan and Duckett, Harry Gurney, Liam Dawson,
Graeme White, Matt Coles, Lewis Gregory and Tim Groenewald have made the
cut.
Duckett's ranking was boosted by his
performances in the tri-series featuring Sri Lanka A and Pakistan A.
He
blasted an unbeaten 163 and followed it up with a brutal unbeaten double
hundred a few days later. He also scored another half-century in the
series.
Bresnan has been in great form for
Yorkshire with both bat and ball recently and had made back-to-back
ninety-plus scores in his last two games. Coles, the 26-year-old Kent
seamer, shot into contention after picking up 12 wickets in his last
three one-day games.
Left-arm seamer Gurney, who
has played 10 ODIs for England, expressed delight after making the cut
and hopes to play more matches for the national team in the future. "The
North v South series is something that there has been a lot of banter
about in the dressing room since the start of the competition and as we
got close to the end of the group stage I knew that I was there or
thereabouts," he said.
"It's a good opportunity
for someone like me just to remind the selectors that I can still do it
and that I believe that I have still got an awful lot to offer the
international game. It's up to me now to persuade them that's still the
case."
Groenewald, the 32-year-old Somerset
batsman, admitted that he put in more efforts in the last few games
after realising that he was in contention. "I had been following the MVP
for the last few games when I realised I was in the mix and it put a
bit more on the games we had left. I'm really happy to be involved in
something like this particularly with it being the first one and it
should be a really good tournament.
"It's
brilliant how the system has worked giving an incentive from guys
outside the England set-up to work for. I am sure there will be some
really good players out there, players who will be playing in the next
World Cup so it's brilliant to be involved in this tournament."
The rest of the players for the series will be chosen by the England selectors.
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