County cricketers across the country are lining up this week in the race to be crowned the FTI Most Valuable Player 2014.
The Ranking system, run by the Professional Cricketers' Association, is now in its eighth season and comes with a £10,000 reward for the overall winner and £5,000 for the player who tops the NatWest T20 Blast table.
Worcestershire's Moeen Ali scooped the prize last year in the most closely fought contest to date, after he held off Nottinghamshire's Samit Patel to triumph by just four points. The FTI MVP analyses the performances of players on a like-for-like basis, with points earned for every run scored, wicket taken and catch held in all forms of the game. Bowlers receive higher marks for good economy rates, bowling maidens and for dismissing the top order, whilst batsmen are rewarded for high run rates and the percentage of the team's runs they hit.
Last year's overall table was dominated by all-rounders, with all but one of the top ten performing for their team with both the bat and ball. The exception that proved the rule was Gloucestershire's Australian batsman, Michael Klinger, who was also the only member of the ten to pick up any captaincy points. Apart from him and Glamorgan's Michael Hogan, all of the top ten were England qualified - including Moeen Ali and Ben Stokes, who have both gone on to receive international call-ups after posting impressive MVP scores.
LV= Division One County Champions, Durham, were well represented at the top of the rankings; unsurprisingly, boasting no less than five players in the top twenty - Stokes, Scott Borthwick, Graham Onions, Chris Rushworth, and Phil Mustard.
Klinger (430.30 pts) was the competition's top overall batsman, Hogan (404.70) the top bowler, and Notts' Chris Read (123) the top fielder. PCA Assistant Chief Executive, Jason Ratcliffe, said, It's an exciting time of year and everybody will have high expectations and aspirations for the Season ahead. One of those aspirations will be to take Moeen's crown and the £10k cash prize. A player's form can be fragile at the best of times, let alone through a long English summer, and so the winner will have to maintain marathon form and avoid the pitfalls of injury to come through and take the title in September.
As well as the extensive coverage on the PCA website, fans will also be able to get closer to the action via the FTI MVP Twitter feed - @FTI_MVP_Cricket - powered by Opta.