Some of the youngsters, like Somerset’s Tom Lammonby, looked potential England players, the 20-year old left-hander instrumental in Somerset’s passage to the final of the Bob Willis Trophy. There against Essex he made his third hundred in six matches, an exceptional effort for an opening batsman in a summer short on placid pitches.
That he finished on the losing side in that final, by dint of Essex drawing the match with a higher first innings score than Somerset, was due to another left-hander, Sir Alastair Cook, one of cricket’s great batsmen. Batting when conditions were at their easiest, Cook made 172 with a greater fluency than we normally associate with him. High praise then that Lammonby’s 116 in the second innings was almost its equal.
Born in Exeter and educated at Exeter School, Lammonby has an Australian father who came to play club cricket in England during the late 1990s and stayed, eventually marrying here and settling in the south west. The young Lammonby played Devon agegroup cricket before graduating to the full Devon side whereupon Somerset’s scouts pounced and he was put through the county’s Academy. It is a well trodden route with six of the county’s current playing staff having taken it.
In his first season at Somerset and batting in the late middle-order, Lammonby played a dozen T20 Blast matches as an all-rounder without distinction. Indeed, he can bowl brisk left-arm seamers, a handy skill to go with his fine, athletic fielding.
Denne historien er fra October 04, 2020-utgaven av The Cricket Paper.
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Denne historien er fra October 04, 2020-utgaven av The Cricket Paper.
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