Express & Star

Jeetan Patel ready for one final Bears Blast

Jeetan Patel expects the emotion to come ‘flooding back’ when he embarks upon the last lap of his brilliant Warwickshire career in this season’s Vitality Blast.

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Jeetan Patel

The club legend will return to the fold in the Blast opener against Somerset at Edgbaston on Friday. His farewell season with his beloved Bears has been severely truncated by the pandemic but at least he will tread the Birmingham turf he has graced for so long a few more times. It is a shame that his return will be without the spectators with whom he has built up some a great rapport, but Patel knows the emotions will still run high.

“I can’t wait,” he said. “My last game for the Bears was back in late September and I am very excited to get back in there and prove that I have still got it in me to compete against the best.

“I love coming back to Edgbaston. I love the club and the people and I am very lucky to have those friendships. To see all the guys again and have the opportunity to play in the Blast is fantastic. I’ve spent so much time thinking about it, the emotion is almost gone for now, but once I get back out there, everyone knows how passionate I get on the field and I’m sure that emotion will come flooding back.

“It will be strange without spectators. When you play at Edgbaston you expect good crowds and you know they will support you very well, so it will be very different without them. But as a group we will have to find that energy within us and not let it affect us.

“The schedule is brilliant with five games in a week then a break and five more games in a week so if you get on a run we all know what momentum can do. I’m really excited about the tournament. We have younger guys who have stepped up now and shown what they can do and have the opportunity to take the club forward, first up in the Blast alongside more experienced guys like Ian Bell, Tim Bresnan, Olly Hannon-Dalby and myself.”

The pandemic has turned Patel’s valedictory season for the Bears into a T20 cameo only, but the Black Caps ace has had the silver lining of some precious time with his family after two decades on the cricket treadmill.

“We were quite lucky in New Zealand,” he said. “We got into lockdown quite early and, to be honest, it was an opportunity to spend some time with the family which I hadn’t had a chance to do for a long time.

“It also gave me a chance to reflect on 20 years of hard graft. I am pretty proud of where I have been and what I have done but also excited about what’s coming next.”

n Worcestershire's first game in this season’s competition – against Glamorgan at Sophia Gardens – was abandoned without a ball being bowled last night.

After heavy rain throughout the morning and early evening, there were pools on every part of the ground with the expectation that play would have been called off after lunch.

The rain then cleared, but despite the valiant efforts of the groundsman and his staff, the two umpires, Jeremy Lloyds and Jeff Evans, after two inspections at 5.0 and 6.30, decided that the ground had not dried sufficiently for play to start.

Glamorgan’s next game will be against Gloucestershire at Bristol on Saturday, followed with a home game against Birmingham Bears the following day.