they came from Knypersley... |
Sunday,
July 23
TALBOT CUP,
SEMI-FINAL
The first Talbot Cup semi-final in Moddershall’s
history was played at the second attempt after rain had washed out the initial
encounter, with Knypersley on 45 for 2 from 10 overs (i.e. with us certain to
roll them for 93 and knock them off for 2 with 18 overs to spare). Even before
the replay had started, a sizeable crowd had gathered at Barnfields, no doubt
hoping to see a keenly fought contest between the second placed team in Section
A and the leaders of Section B. As he had done last week, Addo won the toss and
put Knypersley in, hoping that their strenuous fielding drills (all conducted
in pristine club tracksuits) had tired them out. The pitch, although firm and
dry, looked a little sluggish, but with clear skies overhead and a sun-scorched
outfield the batting conditions were excellent.
In a complete change of tactics from the abandoned
game, Addo opened the bowling with himself from the Road End whilst Andy
Hawkins operated from the Pavilion End. As our two most consistently accurate
bowlers the plan was clear: peg back Knypersley in the early stages and then
pick up wickets as the pressure mounted. Indeed, with only 17 runs conceded in
the opening ten overs we had gained the early initiative and it was clear that
Gareth Coates and Rob Doorbar were not settled. It was Doorbar that seemed the
keener of the two to inject some much needed urgency into proceedings and he
began to charge at Addo indiscriminately, yet without success.
Coates would eventually run past one |
When 15 overs had gone down there were still just 36
runs on the board, so Doorbar reverted to plan B and slogged Addo for a four
and a six in the same over, shots that he had clearly learned from his time at
Stallington (probably off the inmates). It seemed as though the shackles had
been broken but in the following over he was caught at mid-off to put
Knypersley on 49 for 1. Seth bowled another tight over to finish with, and
completed his allotted ten over ration having conceded a miserly 23 runs.
In Addo’s final over, Coates – who by this time had
been dropped at slip by the pro and survived gloving one into my hands off Hawky
– realized, belatedly, that he wasn’t playing in a timeless Test Match and that
16 runs in 19 overs was to nobody’s benefit but ours. He also decided to adopt
the cavalry charge method, but accidentally ran past the ball and I took the
stumping without fuss. Simon Bailey, brother of Northamptonshire’s Rob, was
then run out a few overs later in a dreadful mix-up with his captain, Darren
Long, to put us on top.
Rob Bailey's (in)famous dismissal in Barbados, 1990 |
With Knypersley on 67 for 3 from 24 overs I felt that
if we could remove either one of
Long or Mark Tournier, the fourth wicket pair, then we could force our
opponents into complete consolidation. However, they launched an astonishing
and brilliant counter-attack that yielded 132 runs in only 13 overs before Long
was well caught by Dave Astle at deep cover off Wayne Stones. While Long’s 59
provided the backbone of the Knypersley effort, it was the innings of Tournier,
the tall Australian professional, that gave them their impetus. However, his
innings was not without blemish: he had an escape whilst still in his late
teens when he skied Iain Carr to deep long-off where John Myatt settled himself
for the catch. Suddenly there was a loud cry of “Addo’s!” as Lovejoy sprinted
across in front of the sight-screen from long-on. Unfortunately, despite a
desperate dive, he failed even to get a hand on it.
Tournier didn’t look back, and after a cautious start
he began to open his broad shoulders, moving to his half-century with three
consecutive sixes off Cokey who was all too frequently drifting onto his
leg-stump. He reached 74 before being dismissed in the penultimate over. The
Brew brothers fell in consecutive balls during the final over but still
Knypersley were able to post a score of 227 from their 40 overs, having
garnered 10 runs an over from the final 16. In spite of overtures to the
contrary, we left the field feeling quite demoralized, knowing that we would
have to bat exceptionally well to win. However, before we had reached the
halfway stage of our reply we were in complete disarray at 60 for 6, and the
game had gone…
Darren Long (left) and Neil Dutton |
The first wicket fell when I was triggered in the
fifth over, allegedly caught down the
leg side off Boon. The decision was appalling – in fact, I missed the ball by
such a distance that I actually laughed when I heard the appeal, thinking it
was just a ruse to try and prevent the umpire giving a wide. But then up popped
his finger. I stood motionless at the crease for a few moments before trudging
off incredulously. On returning to the dressing room I hurled my kit everywhere
and sat there feeling angry and bewildered, as is always the case in such
circumstances.
When I thought I was composed enough, I set off on a lap of the ground, but hadn’t made it very far before I became embroiled in a heated argument with Barry Coates, the Knypersley coach. He had taken it upon himself to sermonize to me over what is deemed fair play on the field. My crime? Being the victim of an atrocious decision and pausing briefly with shock before walking off without passing any comment upon the correctness or otherwise of the umpire’s adjudication, nor upon the integrity of the appeal despite one of Knypersley’s fielders (whose on-field discipline falls within Mr Coates’ brief as coach) telling me to “f**k off out!” My disbelief at Coates’ lecture increased tenfold when I recalled that his own son had not walked when batting. Needless to say, I gave as good as I got, but after the match bought him a diplomatic pint; the matter was resolved with him saying “these things balance themselves out in the long run”. This particular cliché does not apply to batsmen that walk so I took a good deal more consolation from the pint of lager he bought me in return.
When I thought I was composed enough, I set off on a lap of the ground, but hadn’t made it very far before I became embroiled in a heated argument with Barry Coates, the Knypersley coach. He had taken it upon himself to sermonize to me over what is deemed fair play on the field. My crime? Being the victim of an atrocious decision and pausing briefly with shock before walking off without passing any comment upon the correctness or otherwise of the umpire’s adjudication, nor upon the integrity of the appeal despite one of Knypersley’s fielders (whose on-field discipline falls within Mr Coates’ brief as coach) telling me to “f**k off out!” My disbelief at Coates’ lecture increased tenfold when I recalled that his own son had not walked when batting. Needless to say, I gave as good as I got, but after the match bought him a diplomatic pint; the matter was resolved with him saying “these things balance themselves out in the long run”. This particular cliché does not apply to batsmen that walk so I took a good deal more consolation from the pint of lager he bought me in return.
scattered kit |
Anyway, whilst I was locking horns, Andy Hawkins had
the scoreboard ticking along nicely at four an over, and things looked
promising for a few overs…until Addo had his second quixotic impulse of the
afternoon, running down the pitch at Boon to give Brew another victim behind
the stumps. Having discussed the need to keep wickets intact this shot was incomprehensible
and served to remind us that even the best players are prone to hot-headedness
when batting under pressure. In mitigation, it has to be said that we would
have all applauded wildly had the ball gone crashing to the boundary. Rich
Harvey went next, misjudging the length as he drove Boon to mid-off. Iain Carr
then fell lbw for a duck to a ball that hit him extremely high. Finally, Mauler,
having just seen off a nosebleed, joined the procession as he holed out to
long-on. When Seth followed a couple of overs later to a brilliant return catch
from Neil Dutton, the game was over as a contest.
Pride was partially restored by a partnership between
Drew and Barry and then by a late flurry from Dave Astle and Wayne Stones, as
they all chipped a few singles and stole the odd boundary. It was ultimately to
prove futile and our innings was finally wrapped up for 147 in the 36th over.
mypoic umpires... |
It was extremely disappointing that we hadn’t come
close to doing ourselves justice in a game that we had a decent chance of
winning. Most of the conversation in the bar was constructive and friendly.
Knypersley’s out-cricket had been superb (perhaps that fielding drill was
useful, after all!!) and we had been thoroughly outplayed on the day, but we
took our defeat graciously and no amount of in-depth analysis would change the
fact that we were never really in the chase. However, Darren Long, the
victorious captain, conceded that the rub of the green with the umpiring
decisions did go, and always has gone, in favour of the team from the higher
division.
Despite being pilloried from all quarters over my
groovy yellow shirt, I stayed until midnight with Addo and Harv, by which time
Dickie and I had become a little rowdy, and managed to simulate a convincing enough
row for one of Moddershall’s non-cricketing members to feel he had to step in
to separate us! The ‘argument’ started when Harv suggested that all my Spanish degree
would lead me to was “meeting people off the coach in Torremolinos”. Imagine, then,
that in the year 2005 I can guide tourists into a Spanish leisure complex and
introduce them to their tennis instructor, Dickie Mint!
Once again we trudged away drunkenly, consoling
ourselves with the delusion that all sides use when they are knocked out of the
cup: at least we can concentrate on the league
now!
MODDERSHALL LOST BY 80 RUNS
KNYPERSLEY 227 for 7 (40 overs)
M Tournier 74, D Long 59
MODDERSHALL 147 all out (36 overs)
N Dutton 4-36, J Boon 3-21
* Having escaped relegation the previous year on a technicality, Knypersley went on to win the North Staffordshire and South Cheshire League, Division 1 Section A title in 1995. They lost the Talbot Cup Final to Longton.
MODDERSHALL LOST BY 80 RUNS
KNYPERSLEY 227 for 7 (40 overs)
M Tournier 74, D Long 59
MODDERSHALL 147 all out (36 overs)
N Dutton 4-36, J Boon 3-21
* Having escaped relegation the previous year on a technicality, Knypersley went on to win the North Staffordshire and South Cheshire League, Division 1 Section A title in 1995. They lost the Talbot Cup Final to Longton.
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