How Tim Bresnan turned down Steven Smith as rain rules the roost in the Blast

The latest snippets from the county circuit, including Delray Rawlins’ Bermuda return and Middlesex’s quarter-final preparations

David Hopps and Matt Roller20-Aug-2019In the winter of 2005-06, Tim Bresnan was a 20-year-old playing for Sutherland in grade cricket in New South Wales, when a 16-year-old allrounder broke into the first team.”He’d scored a few in second grade and got in because one of the lads, as they do at that level, had just gone on holiday or whatever,” Bresnan recounted. “He came in, got 70-odd and was difficult to dislodge. He played for the rest of the season.”In his typical style, Bresnan was to-the-point when the teenager asked if he might be able to get a game as an overseas player in county cricket. “He said, ‘Hey, can I come and play for Yorkshire?’ I was like, ‘Woah, hold your horses big lad. We’re full up and you’re not that good yet. Just grab yourself a couple of bats out of my kit bag and score some runs.'”The teenager’s name? Steven Smith. Whatever happened to him?***Two washouts in a week for Kent has ended Canterbury’s record as the ground least likely to suffer an abandonment since Twenty20 cricket came on to the scene in England in 2003.That accolade now rests with the two major London grounds – The Oval and Lord’s – further proof if it was needed that the capital has things all its own way.Not that Kent suffered too much in terms of their position in South Group as Friday night’s programme was entirely washed out – bringing this season’s number of no-results to 24 – more than 25% of the total matches.The grounds most likely to suffer an abandonment in the past 16 years? Nobody will be too surprised to see Chester-le-Street and Cardiff at the top of the list