For the punters there was rare value for money. A ticket on the fourth day entitled them to entry at Durham’s next Twenty20 match; they witnessed far more cricket than anticipated, which included defiance that was silky (from Dinesh Chandimal), plucky (from Rangana Herath) and lucky (in that England’s high standards in the field faltered as Jonny Bairstow and James Vince spilt chances that they should have taken).
And there was a bit of history, which, like England’s victory in this series, we have all been awaiting for rather longer than anticipated: Alastair Cook finally notched his 10,000th Test run.
He needed 36 at the start of the series, which had been grimly whittled down to five after two outings. At the start of the day with the prospect of victory by an innings he might have imagined reaching five-figures next week at a sun-kissed Lord’s packed to the rafters. For good measure he may have dreamt of reaching the landmark with a straight-driven six landing in the lap of Her Majesty sitting in the Committee Room.
Cook, though, has never really been a dreamer. Instead here he was, under the leaden skies of the north-east in front of a few thousand sturdy stalwarts in anoraks. It is highly unlikely that this bothered him.
Cook seldom seeks to draw attention to himself. He will not be tweeting his joy to the nation. In fact, he looked relieved to get this out of the way while delighting that he had led England to another series victory.
He is, however, human and like just about every cricketer that has ever been born he knows all about his stats. Never believe the “I had no idea this was a record; I never read the newspapers” line that is often peddled.
Indeed there had been a little evidence to suggest that the impending landmark was disturbing Cook. He had been dismissed twice in this series to uncharacteristically wayward shots, a windy cover drive at Headingley that hinted at impatience, an ugly prod here in the first innings.
He would not have expected another knock in this Test but Chandimal and Herath changed all that. There was no hooping and hollering from Cook after he crossed the landmark. As every spectator on the ground leapt to their frozen feet to applaud, as Ben Stokes emerged on to the England balcony in his green underpants and with his arms raised, Cook made his way down the pitch to his partner, Alex Hales, and the pair shook hands decorously; then he raised his bat, almost sheepishly, as the applause continued.
Once he has had time for contemplation there will be justified pride in becoming the 12th man to 10,000 runs. Obviously he is in stellar company. Cook is the youngest batsman to reach such heights; he is one of only two opening batsmen on the list – Sunil Gavaskar is the other one – which may be used by the union to demonstrate the grit and unselfishness of those who habitually strap on the pads to face the new ball.
It is a given that every inhabitant of the top 12 is a phenomenal batsmen. But Cook demonstrates – along with Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Allan Border and Steve Waugh – that it is not necessary to dazzle to excel. Cook has not played many memorable innings for the good reason that he always bats in the same way. That is one of the secrets of his success.
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