“It’s knockout cricket,” the all-rounder says, reflecting on final season’s one-run defeat to Yorkshire within the quarter-finals. “Even if you finish top of the group stage, like we did, you make a few mistakes and you lose in the knockout.
“We took that one quite hard — and I took that one hard, personally.”
Ahead of Thursday’s London derby opener in opposition to Middlesex at Lord’s, Surrey have, as Jacks places it, “unfinished business” with a contest they final gained in its inaugural season in 2003, however there may be explicit cause to imagine this could be the yr during which they lastly polish it off.
In that loss to Yorkshire, Jacks captained a aspect lacking Chris Jordan, Jason Roy, Sam Curran and Reece Topley due to England white-ball call-ups, a daily supply of disruption for a county that has been a sufferer of its personal energy on that entrance. This time round, although, with the Ashes dominating the primary half of the worldwide summer season, Surrey must, for as soon as, be at close to full-strength all through and know they have to capitalise.
“We haven’t specifically said that, because you never want to put that pressure on yourself, but I think we all feel that,” Jacks says. “I know I’m thinking it inside.”
That Jacks is able to roll from the outset is a bonus, the 24-year-old’s restoration from the hip drawback that dominated him out of the IPL having gone easily. He has, by his personal admission, not “set the world on fire” but in averaging 21.5 throughout 4 County Championship innings this time period, however believes he can mirror final yr’s development, when some explosive knocks within the Blast “kickstarted my summer”, main ultimately to England debuts in all three codecs this winter.
“I’ve always found it easier [to find form] in white-ball cricket,” he says. “I’m better when I’m looking to score runs, and sometimes in red-ball I have a tendency to get a bit too negative. Time in the middle, I have a 50-50 relationship with. In T20 cricket, time in the middle is a myth. Some of my best knocks have lasted 25 balls, I’ve batted for half-an-hour. But if you do bat for two or three hours in a County Championship game, then obviously you feel pretty good.”
Missing out on a primary IPL look, “something I’ve always dreamed of”, was a significant blow to Jacks, who had been purchased by Royal Challengers Bangalore for round £320,000 at public sale, however did a minimum of permit him time to recharge after a manic winter, having blamed the relentless schedule for his damage.
You can’t cover from the truth that there may be competitors with Jason Roy… however we’ve an important relationship
The likes of Curran and Roy solely returned from India this week, however each are set to play on Thursday, the latter able to reform a harmful opening partnership with Jacks that at occasions final summer season appeared awfully lop-sided, Roy enduring an abysmal run of kind that led to his axing from England’s T20 World Cup-winning aspect.
After making a redemptive ODI ton in South Africa earlier this yr, Roy admitted to having blended emotions at watching Jacks’s success amid his personal struggles, the pair long-time team-mates but additionally rivals for an England shirt.
“You can’t hide from the fact that there is competition there,” Jacks says. “As I’ve grown up and I’ve opened with him, he’s always helped me and been brilliant in progressing my journey.
“I feel like I’m now at that stage where I’ve also got the ability to play international cricket and, in a weird way, we are almost competing for that. But it’s never created any awkwardness between us, we have a great relationship. We’ve probably opened together 50 times, know each other really well and we can tell on the day really quickly who fancies it and who doesn’t.”
If both do on Thursday night time, Surrey’s newest quest to finish their drought must get off to a flier.