Gareth Batty, who has been promoted to interim head coach after Vikram Solanki left to become Gujarat Titans’ director of cricket, has encouraged his squad to soak up the experience of playing with two of the format’s greats. “He’s told us to get as much out of them as we can,” Will Jacks told ESPNcricinfo.”To have world-class players like those guys, who have played 400-plus T20 games, is invaluable for us. I’ve already learned from Polly while batting for two or three overs with him: he’s obviously captained West Indies, played for over a decade in the IPL. He’s got knowledge that the rest of us don’t have.”Their availability owes both to their respective absences from the West Indies set-up – Pollard announced his international retirement in April, while Narine’s last T20I was in 2019 – and their involvement in the Hundred later in the summer.Both players were signed by London teams in April’s draft (Narine by Oval Invincibles, Pollard by London Spirit) and as such were willing to extend their stays with rare Blast stints: Narine had never played county cricket before while Pollard’s last appearance was in 2011.Related

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It has given English crowds a rare opportunity to see them in the flesh and appreciate their skills: Pollard and Narine played only 23 internationals between them on English soil, and most of them before they were at their respective peaks. It is apt that they have fitted in so smoothly at a county looking to reconnect with the nearby Caribbean diaspora, not least through the pioneering ACE Programme.Naturally, both players are being paid well, but Surrey’s slick commercial operation helped the club return a £5.4 million profit last year; they also repaid the money they received through the government’s furlough scheme. Surrey are often caricatured as county cricket’s big spenders but they are financially self-sufficient: why shouldn’t they invest heavily in their squad?Adam Hollioake lifts the inaugural Twenty20 Cup in 2003•Getty ImagesJordan’s own contribution should not be underplayed: he is relatively new to captaincy but despite a difficult recent run in an England shirt, he has emerged as a leader in the T20I set-up. Jamie Overton, who has thrived as a finisher since leaving Somerset and has been used as a middle-overs enforcer this season, said he feels “a lot more calm and a lot more relaxed at the end of my mark” with Jordan standing at mid-off talking to him.Everything has changed since the first year of T20 cricket: not only the format itself and how it is played, but the global game as a whole. Surrey’s hope – one that appears well-founded based on the early stages of the Blast – is that their emergence as champions will be the one constant between English domestic T20’s first and 20th seasons.

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