County Championship: Worcestershire pick up point to secure promotion back to Division One

County Championship: Worcestershire pick up point to secure promotion back to Division One


Worcestershire captain Brett D'Oliveira batting against Yorkshire
Worcestershire captain Brett D’Oliveira was dismissed just before his side scored their promotion-clinching run
LV= County Championship Division Two, Headingley (day two)
Worcestershire 389: D’Oliveira 103, Kashif Ali 93; Bess 3-55
Yorkshire 24-0: Bean 12*
Yorkshire (3 pts) trail Worcestershire (3 pts) by 365 runs
Match scorecard

Worcestershire have been promoted back to Division One of the County Championship – for a record seventh time.

Aided by skipper Brett D’Oliveira completing his century, Alan Richardson’s side passed 300 against Yorkshire at Headingley to pick up the second batting bonus point they needed to edge out third-placed Leicestershire.

Alongside already crowned Division Two champions Durham, the Pears will be back playing top flight cricket again next season for the first time since being relegated for a sixth time – also a record – in 2018.

It is six years to the day since they were last promoted in 2017.

Skipper D’Oliveira missed out on the opportunity to hit the promotion-sealing run when, with just one needed, he was out leg before wicket to Matt Milnes for 103.

The honour was passed instead to young spinner Josh Baker, who clipped two runs off Milnes, before holing out a ball later.

Ben Allison brought up a first-class best of 75 before he was the first of Worcestershire’s last three wickets to fall quickly as they were all out for 389.

Yorkshire moved to 24-0 in their first innings, but just one over was possible after lunch before Storm Agnes arrived in Leeds and day two was called off at 15:00 BST.

Pears coach Alan Richardson at New Road
Alan Richardson’s first promotion as Worcestershire coach came 10 years to the day since the former Staffordshire, Warwickshire and Middlesex paceman retired as a Pears player

Pears latest promotion against the odds

Worcestershire already held the record for the most promotions since the County Championship became a two-division structure in 2000.

Their total of six was already one better than Nottinghamshire (five), while Essex, Lancashire and Northants have all done it four times.

But this seventh success, six years on from doing it for the last time under former boss Steve Rhodes in 2017, is their longest between promotions.

It is also perhaps the most surprising, given all that has gone on behind the scenes over the past year or more, in the continued battle to keep ahead financially in the period following the Covid pandemic.

Coach Alex Gidman left last winter, to be replaced by his deputy Richardson – and the club had to wait a long time before finally tempting former Warwickshire and England boss Ashley Giles to arrive as chief executive.

They have also been hit by the announced departure of several players, most notably England paceman Josh Tongue, fellow fast bowler Dillon Pennington and batter Jack Haynes to Nottinghamshire.

But all three – along with another former Pears player Joe Clarke at Notts – will now be on the same stage as Worcestershire next season.

‘The boys have been really together’ – reaction

Worcestershire head coach Alan Richardson:

“It has been a bit of an emotional rollercoaster at times with everything that’s gone on. But the lads in the squad have held themselves brilliantly well, have not been distracted and shown some remarkable resilience.

“You hoped that they could go on and achieve the red-ball goal we set out at the start of the season, and they deserve it. What is the key to a successful season? I don’t think we can point to one thing if I’m honest, but the boys have been really together.

“We’ve probably had a bit of luck at times, which we’ve not always had. Certainly, in the red-ball game at the start of the year, our task was made a little bit easier with weather conditions. But we still had to put in some amazing shifts, which we did against Leicestershire at home and Sussex at home, to either win or save games.

“We get lots of challenges, and they come in different guises and different form – but the boys dealt with it brilliantly well.

“It did have an impact, but the guys ensured the distraction side of it all had a minimal effect. It’s full credit to the players who are staying, but also the ones that are not going to be around, that they’ve all bought in and shown a lot of commitment and really put a shift in for us.”These things can derail you, but I’m always someone who looks at things and thinks you can dwell on them, and you can let them make a negative impact, or you can turn them around and see it as another challenge.”



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