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Jack Leach - England slow left-armer

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Just over a week after making 92 for England at Lord's, Jack Leach found himself with a free Saturday. He filled it by playing for Taunton Deane Cricket Club in the West of England League.

On the same day, the England team from which the Somerset spinner was omitted were just starting to lose their grip on the first Test Ashes Test at Edgbaston.

Now recalled, it means that by the time the 28-year-old lines up to play in the second Test at Lord's on Wednesday, his most recent three opponents, in order, will be Ireland, North Perrott and Australia.

It says much about the character of one of international cricket's most down-to-earth men.

"I've been at Taunton Deane since I was eight years old," said Leach. "I needed a game of cricket and it was nice to turn out for them.

"It reminded me of where I have come from. At the root of it, I am a Taunton Deane player who has played for England. It's amazing to remember why you play the game and to do it with a smile on your face."

From opening the batting - albeit as nightwatchman - and being named man of the match at Lord's, Leach paid a tenner in match fees, batted number six and bowled third change for Taunton Deane. He made 56 and took 1-8 in a 52-run win.

"It reminds you that it's still the same game. 22 yards, a red ball," said Leach. "It puts things in perspective.

"I feel like I'm experiencing the whole spectrum, from Lord's to club cricket. The reason I play is because I enjoy the game and wherever that is you have to make the most of it."

Now, Leach has returned to the venue where he fell eight runs short of becoming the first England nightwatchman to make a century.

As he prepared on a rainy Monday, he was the final England player to leave the nets, still batting when the rest of the squad had left the indoor school and then rolling his arm for three more practice overs.

When Leach sat down to talk, he revealed that his great mate Jos Buttler, rested from the Ireland Test, spent his time off watching the epic knock.

"He was buzzing for me," said Leach. "He said I reminded him of Simon Katich, the former Australia batsman. That was an interesting one."

As for Leach himself, he explained the emotions of missing out on what will probably be the closest he ever comes to making a Test ton.

"It's life that you always want more," he said. "I was a little bit gutted, but mainly happy.

"I was driving home the next day and thought 'eight more runs'. The longer it goes on, the more you think that you have missed an opportunity, but it's still something I will look back on with fond memories.

"I'll let it go and keep thinking ahead. I'd take 92 again. I had some friends and my girlfriend there and we went out for dinner in the evening. It was a great day."

However, as Leach comically revealed on the night of the 92, one person who was not at Lord's on that Thursday was his father, Simon.

Leach Sr had never before seen his son play in a Test, because all of his previous four had been overseas and he is afraid of flying. When the opportunity to see him at Lord's came around, he turned down the ticket because of the extreme heat - temperatures touched 38 degrees on that day.

Without a Sky subscription, he watched the entire innings on his son's television.

On outing his father for his absence, Leach said: "I feel bad but I didn't mean it in a bad way. I want him to watch wherever he feels comfortable. It was 100% the right decision.

"He's so passionate about my cricket and has supported me more than anyone. He was still watching every ball at my house. That doesn't bother me at all as long as he's happy.

"He's not young anymore so he has to be careful. If it's 38 degrees, it's probably best that he's not nervous watching me. He worries a bit. I just want him to feel as relaxed as possible wherever he's watching."

Simon will be at Lord's this week, the recipient of a precious ticket from his son, who has otherwise struggled to deal with requests.

"Me and Joe Denly were saying that trying to work out who can have your tickets is more stressful than playing in the game, because everyone wants to come, even people that you haven't spoken to for ages," he said.

Those who are in attendance will see Leach trying to solve one of English cricket's most vexing problems - how to dismiss Steve Smith.

While Leach was playing for Taunton Deane, Smith was peeling off twin centuries to go with the 687 runs he scored in the last Ashes down under.

Just as then, Smith has seen off England off-spinner Moeen Ali, whose place Leach has taken.

"Mo sent me a text wishing me all the best," said Leach. "He said he hopes that I do really well. He's been so supportive of me coming into this environment and helping me with my bowling.

"I actually told him to be ready for the third Test, so we had a little laugh."

Now he's in the side, Leach carries the weapon against which Smith has a supposed weakness. If averaging 34.9 against left-arm spinners doesn't sound horrific, it is almost 30 runs behind Smith's career average of 63.

"I'm excited to be here," said Leach. "I feel like I have nothing to lose and a lot to gain. I'm going in with the attitude that I will do what I do, try to do it really well and see where that takes me."

And does that involve getting Smith out?

"Getting everyone out."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/49322966
 
What a bowler - gets wicket first over he comes after Tea - Australia all over the place.
 
Leach should be their permanent spinner in Test format. Moeen can play if there is a need for a second spinner (for example - subcontinent pitches).
 
Leach has bowled a lot better than Moeen, he should be given a run in the team now.
Not dropped after a game or two.
 
Leach has bowled a lot better than Moeen, he should be given a run in the team now.
Not dropped after a game or two.

Moin in 2019 is actually one off the leading wicket takers, he's taken 40odd wickets at a good rate, so how does a bad game with a ball justify him getting dropped?
 
Moin in 2019 is actually one off the leading wicket takers, he's taken 40odd wickets at a good rate, so how does a bad game with a ball justify him getting dropped?

Moeen’s Test performances vs Australia:
2015 Ashes: 12 wickets at 45
2017 Ashes: 5 wickets at 115
2019 Ashes: 3 wickets at 57

His bowling performances vs Australia do not warrant a place in the team as the main spinner. Had he not been a walking wicket lately, he’d get in as a batting all-rounder. But Australia appear to have his number.

On topic, Leach appears to be good without being anything special. At worst, he offers the control that Moeen just can’t. And on a turning pitch, he’s well capable of taking wickets.
 
Moeen’s Test performances vs Australia:
2015 Ashes: 12 wickets at 45
2017 Ashes: 5 wickets at 115
2019 Ashes: 3 wickets at 57

His bowling performances vs Australia do not warrant a place in the team as the main spinner. Had he not been a walking wicket lately, he’d get in as a batting all-rounder. But Australia appear to have his number.

On topic, Leach appears to be good without being anything special. At worst, he offers the control that Moeen just can’t. And on a turning pitch, he’s well capable of

To be fair on the last Australian tour every England was absolute dribble, I do agree moin is not a front line spinner
 
crazy ball to get rid of Marcus Harris in the 3rd Ashes Test

WhatsApp Image 2019-08-23 at 7.15.04 AM.jpgWhatsApp Image 2019-08-23 at 7.15.05 AM.jpg
 
Last edited by a moderator:
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">We can confirm we will offer Jack Leach free glasses for life <a href="https://t.co/7rfPBK77GS">https://t.co/7rfPBK77GS</a></p>— Specsavers (@Specsavers) <a href="https://twitter.com/Specsavers/status/1165702469474750464?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 25, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Moeen would have bottled it and lost England the game. Thanks to Leach we won’t see him play Tests for England for a while.
 
Moeen can come back in for Woakes on the next trip to the Subcontinent.

OT and the Oval can take a bit of spin later on in tests so we will see what Leach does there, especially if we get some dry weather. England might consider bringing in Curran to rough up the wicket for him!
 
So let's have....

Burns
Denly
Bairstow
Root
Morgan (skipper)
Stokes
Foakes (w)
Curran
Archer
Broad
Leach
 
So let's have....

Burns
Denly
Bairstow
Root
Morgan (skipper)
Stokes
Foakes (w)
Curran
Archer
Broad
Leach

Not sure about Bairstow at first drop, he seems vulnerable to a shiny Dukes. Aside from that potential gripe, it’s the best current England XI that I have seen. Woakes is good for ODIs but Curran is better in Tests.
 
Moeen would have bottled it and lost England the game. Thanks to Leach we won’t see him play Tests for England for a while.

Another one of your moronic comments, if it wasn't for a once in a lifetime knock then England would have certainly lost
 
How the World Cup final inspired 'village cricketer' Leach

ack Leach, who played an integral role in England's spectacular run chase against Australia in the third Ashes Test, said that the ICC Men's Cricket World Cup 2019 final had inspired him and given him hope for an improbable win in the Headingley game.

Leach, who came in at No.11 with England still 73 runs behind the 359-run target, shared a pivotal 76-run stand with Ben Stokes to take the hosts to a memorable one-wicket victory to level the five-Test series. While Stokes took most of the strike during his remarkable 135*, Leach played the perfect second fiddle to him.

He revealed that watching Stokes' Player-of-the-Match performance in the World Cup final inspired him ahead of his Headingley knock. "I was watching the World Cup final as a fan and that showed that anything is possible," Leach said. "Ben Stokes was at the centre of that as well. Maybe Ben Stokes has to be at the centre of all things that are possible. He was just unbelievable.

"Obviously when I first went in, he was going to have a lot of the strike, being ready to run two, and I just broke it down into the balls that I had to face. It was a special feeling," he told Sky Sports. "Stokesy – unbelievable, like nothing I've ever seen before. The crowd – insane. To be part of that at the end was an incredible feeling."

The bespectacled Leach formed a special connection with the supporters, who warmed up to his action of wiping his glasses clean regularly through the innings. "It's nice to have that," admitted the 28-year-old. "It's probably because I look like a village cricketer out there, in my glasses and with the bald head.

"Maybe people think 'that could be me', because all the others look pretty professional. I just had to make sure they were clean every time I was facing up. I would really regret it if they had been smudged and I'd got out, then the cameras zoom in on the glasses and they say, 'he didn't clean his glasses'. I just had to stay calm and do the job at hand."

Leach came into the series after a match-winning performance with the bat in the one-off Test against Ireland. Despite that, the presence of Adil Rashid and Moeen Ali made Leach an uncertainty for the Ashes series. However, with Rashid nursing a shoulder injury and Ali struggling with loss of form, Leach came into the XI in the second Test at Lord's, where he claimed four wickets. He retained his place at Headingley, and ended the Test with one of the most memorable knocks by a No.11 in the history of the game.

"I probably thought I'd be watching the Ashes at home," he said. "But I wanted to be ready to play and not presume anything. Now my opportunity has come about so I'm trying to make the most of it."

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1327047
 
So let's have....

Burns
Denly
Bairstow
Root
Morgan (skipper)
Stokes
Foakes (w)
Curran
Archer
Broad
Leach

I wouldn't consider Morgan in the test arena, Morgan will get bombed with bouncers, that's his Achilles heel, having recently been to a few limited over and t20 gamesat emirates old trafford the wicket looks to have lost the carry it once had, maybe the repositioning of the wicket might have something to do with it
 
Another one of your moronic comments, if it wasn't for a once in a lifetime knock then England would have certainly lost

A once in a lifetime knock duly supported by Root, Denly and Leach. Moeen is a gutless player and he wouldn’t have survived the pressure.

Dropping him after the Lord’s Test was a great decision. He has no business playing for England at the moment.
 
A once in a lifetime knock duly supported by Root, Denly and Leach. Moeen is a gutless player and he wouldn’t have survived the pressure.

Dropping him after the Lord’s Test was a great decision. He has no business playing for England at the moment.

It's funny how some PPers get so worked up when someone utters a word against their precious Moeen Ali.

He's been very lucky to play for England for as long as he has. As I said after the WC, he shouldn't have been anywhere near the test squad for the summer.

Safe to say Moeen Ali's test and ODI career is over.
 
It's funny how some PPers get so worked up when someone utters a word against their precious Moeen Ali.

He's been very lucky to play for England for as long as he has. As I said after the WC, he shouldn't have been anywhere near the test squad for the summer.

Safe to say Moeen Ali's test and ODI career is over.

moeen spends more time grooming the beard, then practicing.. his batting has regressed a lot, bowling was average to begin with.

i dont think we will see him again, unless eng think there is some use in moeen.
 
Mo.Ali was a strange case.. a very non-english cricketer of recent... he couldnt hit ground running in test or odi and was never regarded a T20 player (largly) doubt we would see him again...
 
A once in a lifetime knock duly supported by Root, Denly and Leach. Moeen is a gutless player and he wouldn’t have survived the pressure.

Dropping him after the Lord’s Test was a great decision. He has no business playing for England at the moment.

What i would say is moeen is no worse than buttler burns Roy, you have no business getting emotional about England or pakistan, your Indian!
 
A specialist spinner will always be better than a bits and pieces all rounder.

Leach deserves his place in the team.
 
I like that Stokes tweet giving some good business advice to the Ashes 2019 major sponsors Specsavers to make Jack Leach their brand ambassador and to give him lifetime supply of glasses
 
A specialist spinner will always be better than a bits and pieces all rounder.

Leach deserves his place in the team.

Agree always, but a player has to have clarity in his role in the team, I don't think moin has had that, batting wise he's been used like a yo yo, his bowling has been effected by his lack of confidence with the bat, also root is arguably the worse England captain I've seen when it comes tactically , leach does deserve a fair crack , cant say same for buttler, roy who are short of test class
 
A once in a lifetime knock duly supported by Root, Denly and Leach. Moeen is a gutless player and he wouldn’t have survived the pressure.

Dropping him after the Lord’s Test was a great decision. He has no business playing for England at the moment.
""
"Duly supported by root and denly", lol, at 286-9 the knocks by root and denly were non existent, it was stokes freakish master class that took England from down the barrels.
 
Agree always, but a player has to have clarity in his role in the team, I don't think moin has had that, batting wise he's been used like a yo yo, his bowling has been effected by his lack of confidence with the bat, also root is arguably the worse England captain I've seen when it comes tactically , leach does deserve a fair crack , cant say same for buttler, roy who are short of test class

Moen Ali was never good enough to make the team on batting merit or bowling merit alone so it was difficult to give him a clear role. England should not have made him a frontline spinner for this long.
 
""
"Duly supported by root and denly", lol, at 286-9 the knocks by root and denly were non existent, it was stokes freakish master class that took England from down the barrels.

I disagree entirely. England were coming off the back of 67 all out, and then in the second innings having lost their usual 2 early wickets then it could have easily happened again. Enter Root and Denly with extremely patient and gutsy half-centuries, for a partnership of 130. Stokes won the game but setting the platform was a team effort.
 
Moen Ali was never good enough to make the team on batting merit or bowling merit alone so it was difficult to give him a clear role. England should not have made him a frontline spinner for this long.

There was no better spinner available. Perhaps Leach is now. We will see.
 
""
"Duly supported by root and denly", lol, at 286-9 the knocks by root and denly were non existent, it was stokes freakish master class that took England from down the barrels.

Without Root and Denly, Stokes would have had to score 250 not 135. It’s a team game after all.
 
Moen Ali was never good enough to make the team on batting merit or bowling merit alone so it was difficult to give him a clear role. England should not have made him a frontline spinner for this long.

That's the point, any player that has no clarity of his position will fail, remember moin ali in 2019 is one of the leading wicket takers in world cricket in tests
 
I disagree entirely. England were coming off the back of 67 all out, and then in the second innings having lost their usual 2 early wickets then it could have easily happened again. Enter Root and Denly with extremely patient and gutsy half-centuries, for a partnership of 130. Stokes won the game but setting the platform was a team effort.

286-9 is no platform
 
A specialist spinner will always be better than a bits and pieces all rounder.

Leach deserves his place in the team.

7 Tests.

25 wickets, averages 25.04 with the ball, and has taken his first 5-wicket haul already which is quite quick for a slow left-armer. Also has a very decent Strike Rate of 56.

Notched a brilliant innings of 92 against Ireland, and played a crucial role in a match-winning partnership with Ben Stokes against Australia.

He’s doing great to be fair !
 
""
"Duly supported by root and denly", lol, at 286-9 the knocks by root and denly were non existent, it was stokes freakish master class that took England from down the barrels.

You have a lot to learn, but I don’t think I am willing to guide you.
 
That's the point, any player that has no clarity of his position will fail, remember moin ali in 2019 is one of the leading wicket takers in world cricket in tests

Everyone talks about Moen Ali bowling in the last year. He has been facing Sri Lanka and West Indies in some of those tests.
 
7 Tests.

25 wickets, averages 25.04 with the ball, and has taken his first 5-wicket haul already which is quite quick for a slow left-armer. Also has a very decent Strike Rate of 56.

Notched a brilliant innings of 92 against Ireland, and played a crucial role in a match-winning partnership with Ben Stokes against Australia.

He’s doing great to be fair !

Should have been in the side a while ago to be honest.
 
Everyone talks about Moen Ali bowling in the last year. He has been facing Sri Lanka and West Indies in some of those tests.

Using that logic, kholi is bang average he's been a total flop in icc knockout games , Anderson is Not a great his average away from England is poor, Ponting was ordinary as his record in India was awful
 
Using that logic, kholi is bang average he's been a total flop in icc knockout games , Anderson is Not a great his average away from England is poor, Ponting was ordinary as his record in India was awful

Your logic is not even making sense. Those 3 players have been world class for a number of years, Moen Ali has a few good games and that goes back to his place in the side being questioned. It’s interesting how England have looked a better side in the ashes when he has been dropped, and they went onto win the World Cup once he was dropped.
 
Your logic is not even making sense. Those 3 players have been world class for a number of years, Moen Ali has a few good games and that goes back to his place in the side being questioned. It’s interesting how England have looked a better side in the ashes when he has been dropped, and they went onto win the World Cup once he was dropped.

I applied the same logic as you " picking and choosing", moin has performed in 2019 as bowler in tests, one of the leading wicket takers at a very good rate, as for England dropping him rightly or wrongly that's their way to go, remember moins stats are very similar to stokes and flintoff who are heralded as legends !, lol
 
Your logic is not even making sense. Those 3 players have been world class for a number of years, Moen Ali has a few good games and that goes back to his place in the side being questioned. It’s interesting how England have looked a better side in the ashes when he has been dropped, and they went onto win the World Cup once he was dropped.
He bowled better than Adil Rashid in the world cup though.

He was the best test spinner in the world last year.
But if you exclude last year, he stole Jack Leach's place for 4 years.

Leach is by far engs best spinner in tests. Hopefully Leach will not get dropped now.

But he might be dropped in the sa tour Dec this year
But he should be picked every other time
 
Very down to earth, enjoyed his interviews after the Leeds Test.

Looks like he'll be getting free glasses for life from his local Specsavers.
 
Very down to earth, enjoyed his interviews after the Leeds Test.

Looks like he'll be getting free glasses for life from his local Specsavers.

Yes leach seems a very down to earth and a nice guy, hope he has alot of success
 
He bowled better than Adil Rashid in the world cup though.

He was the best test spinner in the world last year.
But if you exclude last year, he stole Jack Leach's place for 4 years.

Leach is by far engs best spinner in tests. Hopefully Leach will not get dropped now.

But he might be dropped in the sa tour Dec this year
But he should be picked every other time

Adil Rashid had a awful tournament. It wouldn't have taken much to out perform him.
 
I applied the same logic as you " picking and choosing", moin has performed in 2019 as bowler in tests, one of the leading wicket takers at a very good rate, as for England dropping him rightly or wrongly that's their way to go, remember moins stats are very similar to stokes and flintoff who are heralded as legends !, lol

Stokes averages over 40 for the last 3 years. Don't even need to talk about their fielding.

Stokes is leagues and leagues above Moen Ali.
 
Stokes averages over 40 for the last 3 years. Don't even need to talk about their fielding.

Stokes is leagues and leagues above Moen Ali.

Did I say they were, I said similar stats, now you bought up stokes current form which is excellent by a quality player, moin Ali's form in 2019 with the ball is as good as any
 
Doing it again Leach! Can he pull another miracle for England?
 
Good bowler, quirky character and he should be batting at number nine for England.
 
Nice guy but is this guy really England's best spinner at the moment.
 
For Jack Leach, the noise coming from the hotel room next to his is a nice problem to have.

"I'm rooming next to Jofra Archer and when he arrived, he was straight on to gaming," says Leach. "Wow, it was loud.

"He's got his headphones on so you can't hear anyone else, you can just hear him shouting at people telling them they are rubbish at whatever he's playing."

To even be part of England's training camp in Southampton is a world away from Leach's torrid winter, which began when the left-arm spinner contracted sepsis in New Zealand.

On the tour of South Africa that followed almost immediately afterwards, Leach had the symptoms of what he now thinks could have been coronavirus, and was eventually sent home.

Finally fit for the trip to Sri Lanka in March, albeit after a calf injury, Leach was denied once more by the global pandemic that will keep England off the field until the three-Test series against West Indies begins on 8 July.

"I went down with food poisoning in Hamilton," explains the Somerset man. "That progressed quite dramatically through a 12-hour period and it turned into a sort of sepsis. I was in a very, very bad way.

"I travelled back from New Zealand and didn't really realise how bad I was. Then it was only a week later that we went to South Africa.

"With all the travel, I picked up a cough, a temperature and just felt shattered. Having been through what I'd been through in New Zealand and all the medication I was on, I struggled to fight that off as well.

"It just wasn't happening, so we decided the best thing was for me to come home."

Managing his health is nothing new for the affable 29-year-old, who suffers from Crohn's disease.

Leach says the lifelong condition is currently under control and has not caused any extra complications during the coronavirus restrictions of the past few months.

"There's nothing I can really do about what happened in the winter," he says. "It's quite unfortunate how it happened. It's the way it is, so I just have to take it on."

Before illness struck, Leach was the man in possession of the spinner's berth in the England Test side, only for his good friend and Somerset team-mate Dom Bess to impress when given the opportunity in South Africa.

Now both have been joined by the experienced Moeen Ali, who has ended his self-imposed hiatus from Test cricket, and uncapped pair Matt Parkinson and Amar Virdi in vying for a place in the side for the series opener against the Windies.

Leach's record - 34 wickets in 10 Tests at an average of 29.02 - is more than respectable, yet he believes he has not been at his best with the ball on the international stage, if not for the numbers, but for the way he feels when he pulls on an England shirt.


What will an England Test match look like?
"It takes a bit of working out mentally how you want to go about things," he says. "You come from county cricket, where you feel like you are massively involved after performing over and over.

"For England, I feel like I haven't done that yet and I have a better understanding of why that is. A lot of it is mental.

"It is down to how I feel out there. I want to feel comfortable and I don't want to be over-thinking."

Still, irrespective of how Leach regards his own performances, his position in English cricketing folklore is guaranteed for the role he played on that barely believable Sunday afternoon at Headingley last summer.

As Ben Stokes' doughty sidekick, Leach, armed with a massive heart and a small glasses-cleaning cloth, defied Australia, eventually scrambling one of the most famous singles in Test history to leave the stage clear for Stokes to complete the improbable run-chase in the third Ashes Test.

All this just a couple of weeks after making 92 opening the batting as nightwatchman against Ireland at Lord's.

It means that, for the moment at least, the slow left-armer with a first-class batting average of 12.47 is best known for his Test efforts with the bat.

"I pride myself on my bowling," he says. "That's why I'm picked, to do that. I want to be bowling teams out on the last day, and that's what I want to be remembered for."

However, Leach will still take the opportunity to dine out on his batting exploits.

"Everyone talks about Headingley, and if I keep being remembered for batting, I can take that," he says.

"When I'm older, I'm going to tell people in the pub that I opened the batting for England."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/53204898
 
Would be a bit harsh to drop Leach. Averaged 26 with the ball and showed a lot of heart and guts with the bat in the last series in England(Ashes) .
 
He is a good spinner with a good amount of experience in first class cricket. Also has a lot of character. He has been unlucky with injuries and others issues which haven't allowed him to get a run in the team.
 
Has a lot of character. He nearly died of sepsis a few years ago in New Zealand, and suffers from a chronic gastrointestinal condition.
 
Believed he was the best spinner in England back in 2016 and still believe it.
 
A gutsy comeback today in Sydney for Jack Leach after a tough period for him personally… a 4-fer in the second innings, good performance.
 
Jack is having a pretty good comeback series in the West Indies.

He has a very important role to play if England are to win a Test and/or win the series out here on slow and low pitches.
 
A five wicket haul for Jack Leach in County Championship Div 1 for Somerset looks like it will soon be part of condemning Gloucs to a massive innings defeat.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A big performance from Jack Leach in Somerset's monumental win over Glos!<br><br>The spinner picked up his first five-for of the season &#55357;&#56720;<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/LVCountyChamp?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#LVCountyChamp</a> <a href="https://t.co/Aziex6t0KQ">pic.twitter.com/Aziex6t0KQ</a></p>— LV= Insurance County Championship (@CountyChamp) <a href="https://twitter.com/CountyChamp/status/1525521266526105601?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 14, 2022</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A big performance from Jack Leach in Somerset's monumental win over Glos!<br><br>The spinner picked up his first five-for of the season <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/LVCountyChamp?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#LVCountyChamp</a> <a href="https://t.co/Aziex6t0KQ">pic.twitter.com/Aziex6t0KQ</a></p>— LV= Insurance County Championship (@CountyChamp) <a href="https://twitter.com/CountyChamp/status/1525521266526105601?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 14, 2022</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Some fantastic dismissals!

It’s between Jack and Matt Parkinson for the England spinner’s spot in the first Test against New Zealand.
 
Some fantastic dismissals!

It’s between Jack and Matt Parkinson for the England spinner’s spot in the first Test against New Zealand.

Stokes will still rate Leach after the offie’s gutsy support of Stokes’ miracle innings in Ashes 2019.
 
Jack could have picked up a nasty injury on the first morning at Lord’s. He is being assessed by the medical staff after going over badly on his neck over the boundary bumper.
 
Jack could have picked up a nasty injury on the first morning at Lord’s. He is being assessed by the medical staff after going over badly on his neck over the boundary bumper.

<b>Update</b> on Jack Leach as per Sky Sports:

Jack is showing signs of concussion after his fielding accident and as per the concussion protocols has been withdrawn from the first Test match against New Zealand. A concussion substitute for the remainder of the match will be arranged in due course.
 
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