Steven Mullaney had plenty of reasons to look forward to the 2020 cricket season: it marked a decade since he moved from Lancashire to Trent Bridge; there was the buzz around cricket after England’s nail-biting World Cup win; Nottinghamshire were keen to put the disappointment of their 2019 behind them; and with new recruits and Academy youngsters coming into the first team squad, there was a chance that his third season as Club Captain would see him fashion a team that he could call his own.

In the end, of course, the Corona Virus pandemic and the nation-wide lockdown meant things were very different for ‘Mull’ and his team-mates.  His leadership skills were called in ways he can’t have expected – having to keep players motivated, to keep his, and his team’s fitness levels up, and to reassure members and supporters that cricket would come back to Trent Bridge.

All a very long way from the 22 year old – he was born on 19 November 1986 in Warrington, Cheshire – all-rounder that turned down a two-year contract at Old Trafford at the end of the 2009 season to move to Nottinghamshire and challenge for a first team spot at another historic Test ground.

In 2010 Steven Mullaney added his name to the small list of Nottinghamshire players who have scored a century on their First-Class debut for the county, making exactly 100no against Hampshire at Southampton. 

A regular in all three formats of the game, Steven comes into his own in white ball matches. An outstanding fielder and punchy stroke-player, his knack of bowling a sequence of tidy medium-paced overs in the middle of matches has turned many contests in Nottinghamshire’s favour.

In 2017 he played a pivotal role as Notts lifted two trophies and secured promotion back to the top flight. He captivated the television audience with his first One-Day century, an innings of 111, in the Royal London semi-final against Essex at Chelmsford, a contribution that won him the man-of-the-match award and his side a place at Lord’s. In the final he had a hand in removing the top five in the Surrey order, taking three catches to add to important wickets of Kumar Sangakkara and Ben Foakes.

The Outlaws’ second success of the summer came in the T20 Blast and Mullaney was again instrumental, taking 3-22 and the man-of-the-match award in the semi-final win over Hampshire.

He was seen as the natural replacement to take over when Chris Read, who had led the side for ten years, retired after the double triumphs of 2017.  Steven Mullaney has captained Nottinghamshire in the County Championship and lead the Notts Outlaws in the Royal London One-Day Cup competition and the T20 Vitality Blast. 

At the end of the 2023 season, Steven announced that he was standing down as club captain, with one year left to run on his contract; in his six years at the helm Notts had endured the drama of the lockdown season, relegation and promotion (as Division Two champions) and some significant white-ball successes.

Mullaney’s elevation to higher honours hasn’t held back his own performances, with the England selectors taking note of some outstanding all-round contributions. Having led his side to victory in the North v South series in Barbados in 2018, he has since captained and toured with the England Lions.

Injury severely hampered Mullaney's 2019 season, but the skipper returned to hit a career-best 179 when opening the batting against Warwickshire towards the end of the season. He and Nottinghamshire were expecting that to be a marker for the next season but his resolve and qualities were tested in ways no-one could have anticipated.

At the time of his announcement of reliquishing the captaincy, he had scored almost 10,000 First-Class runs for Notts, with 18 centuries and a high of 192, made against Sussex at Hove in 2022.  He had also contributed a further 4,000 runs in white-ball competitions with a top score of 124 v Durham in the Royal London Cup of 2018.  His bowling record is equally impressive with 143 First-Class wickets and more than 200 wickets in the limited overs formats. 

In December 2023, the club announced that Steven Mullaney has signed a three-year deal as a player-coach at Nottinghamshire.

The former club captain would skipper the Second XI with the aim of aiding the on-field development of players, whilst remaining available for all forms of cricket. He certainly achieved that, winning the Second XI Championship in 2024 - at which point he announced that he was to stop playing and concentrate on coaching.

 

October 2024

Nottinghamshire First-Class Number: 610

See Steven Mullaney's career stats (to date) here