Sam Northeast sends the Kookaburra south as Middlesex are put to flight
Written by I Dig SportsGlamorgan 370 for 3 (Northeast 186*, Carlson 77, Root 67) vs Middlesex
In a dank start to the year, few would be able to state with any confidence that they've yet heard their first cuckoo of spring. But cock an ear to the shires on this cold grey day in April, and you'd hear loud and clear the mocking laugh of the Kookaburra - an invasive species in these parts, and one that's been flown in direct from the Antipodes to disrupt the habitat of county cricket's native seamers.
For it was a case of four washouts and one wipeout on the opening day of the 2024 County Championship. The legendary status of the Lord's drainage meant that London's morning downpours were never likely to cause the issues encountered at Derby or Old Trafford, but when Toby Roland-Jones won the toss for Middlesex and chose to bowl first, he could not have envisaged a first-day scoreline of 370 for 3 grinning back at him, or that his incorrectly calling counterpart would be sitting pretty on 186 not out from 266 balls.
Not so fast. Although the impact was more apparent at Lord's than elsewhere, if you squinted through the clouds that enveloped this first day of county action, a common theme emerged, with many of the contests reflecting precisely the type of clear-skied Ashes scoreline that this ball-switching experiment has been designed to do away with - a smattering of breakthroughs within the first 15 or so overs, including Ethan Bamber's snicking-off of Zain-ul-Hassan for this year's maiden Championship wicket, then scant reward and a lot of hard yakka thereafter.
Northeast did had a moment of luck on 11, when Max Holden spilled him at backward point off Bamber, but he could hardly have made it count with more aplomb. With a short boundary down the hill to the Mound Stand, he peppered his drives as the shine went off the ball and the Kookaburra's more slender seam resolutely refused to grip.
Notwithstanding a schoolboy hundred for Harrow versus Eton in 2007 (when Gary Ballance, no less, had been a team-mate), in three previous Championship matches at Lord's, dating back to his first-ball duck for Kent as a 21-year-old in 2011, Northeast had mustered a total of 50 runs at 10.00. Now, en route to what he later described as a "bucket-list" century, he rushed past that total from just 51 balls in a joyous spring offensive. At the other end, Root was scarcely any more sluggish in getting to his fifty from 63 balls, in a second-wicket stand of 129.
By the time he'd flicked the under-used Ryan Higgins off his toes for the 26th and final four, Northeast had romped along to 179 from 241 balls, and with almost an hour of the day still remaining, he seemed odds-on to rack up a remarkable first-day double-hundred.
Instead, with the second Kookaburra offering perhaps just a fraction more assistance than the first, he took his foot off the throttle as the close approached - as is the wont of a man who, two seasons ago, racked up the Championship's most recent quadruple-century. At the rate this innings has progressed, and with the new ball already primed for its mid-life crisis at the age of 16 overs, there'll be plenty more where those have already come from.
"I plan to be very greedy on day two," Northeast said at the close. "It's been a fantastic day and I'm not sure we could have dreamt of it this morning. I want to lead from the front, so it is a nice way to start that, but I'd like to be walking away from here with a victory, that's the most important thing.
"It's been a good toss to lose at the minute. I would have had a bowl as well, but that's the way things go. We'll see what it's like when our bowlers get on it. We were expecting the wicket to do a little bit more, maybe that is the Kookaburra ball. We may have to get a bit imaginative with how we go about things."
Brookes added: "The Kookaburra is different. You don't get as much movement and the ball doesn't stay as hard for as long, but it's here to stay for a few games this year so we have to work hard with it, see what movement we can get and do things a little bit differently."
Andrew Miller is UK editor of ESPNcricinfo. @miller_cricket