"Walden" by Henry David Thoreau

Scorecard
Table

"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." So wrote Thoreau in 1854 of his stay in the Massachusetts countryside, as he embraced the simplest of existences in a rude hut with no material encumbrances.

It was in the same spirit that the philosophers of Coton 1st XI ventured forth to a Walden of a more saffron hue, determined to eke out a life in the most reduced circumstances - most notably having only 10 players, two of them first-team debutants. As Thoreau is now rightly hailed as one of the great thinkers of the nineteenth century, so, surely, will Coton be hailed in generations to come for this brave and noble experiment.


I say 10 players. However, full credit to arch-reductionist Safwan "Descartes" Akram, the vital force who brought us "I hit therefore I am", who helped us to explore even more reduced circumstances by missing the A505 exit off the M11 and ending up in Bishops Stortford, ensuring that the first 8 overs in the field were accomplished with only 9 men (and boys).


Those initial 8 overs produced one success, a catch behind by free-thinking Alastair "John Locke" Breward off Dan "Spinoza" Garson, and a gentle flow of runs through the thinly guarded outfield. Alastair's liberal tendencies were all-too-evident as he freely allowed an edge off Matthew "Bertrand Russell" Chandler to tumble to the waiting earth. Matt, who was engaged in a fascinating project to calculate the dimensions of a cricket pitch by bowling balls of every mathematically possible length onto it, was similarly denied by debutant tree surgeon Dominic "Heidegger" Hughes running in from point. How crucial would those two misses be?


The tide was turned by the tall and elegant Richard "Rousseau" Allison, who introduced the radical philosophy of bowling straight at the stumps, founding a new school which took as its motto, "you miss, I hit". Three Waldenites obligingly did miss, and a fourth equally obligingly spooned a catch to recent arrival Safwan at mid off, to give Richard another jug-avoidingly irritating 4-wicket haul. Not to be too much outdone, the not so tall, nor so elegant David "Hume" Scotcher, operating from the other end, winkled out one batsman with a straight'un and had another snaffled (diving, one-handed, so it is claimed) at short midwicket by Gabriel "Diogenes" Fox, to leave the opposition reeling at a hundred and a little for eight. Youthful Cameron "Joe Root" Black, too young to be a philosopher but having all the hallmarks of a star of the future, then entered the attack and promptly hit the top of off stump with a jaffa. The last pair, however, took a highly measured and responsible approach and mounted an Agar-and-Hughes-like rearguard action to stick another 20-odd onto the total, ending at 132-9 after the 40 overs. How crucial would those extra runs be?


Not for the first time this season, Mr Extras contributed handsomely, with the second-to-top score of 26, 18 of them being wides. How crucial would those wides be?


The Walden bowling was led by a young man named Lehman, who was rather more successful than his namesake Darren, the (not for much longer) Aussie head coach. He and his opening partner bowled "line-an-lenth" to give Fox and Breward precious little to hit. While the ultra-ascetic Dr Fox is never more comfortable than with no runs on the board after 6 overs, this was unfamiliar territory for his more liberal opening partner, who played over a Lehman ball in his haste to get the scoreboard moving. Mr Lehman's next over proved perhaps the turning point of the match, as straight deliveries, with a touch of outswing, rearranged the furniture of Messrs Fox, Hughes and Garson in the space of 5 balls. At 8-4, a previously highly achievable target was suddenly looking daunting. Full credit then to the recently arrived Safwan and his accomplice Matt who steadied the ship and began to turn it around. A change of bowling brought a hail of fours and sixes and the score began to climb rapidly towards 50. Meanwhile, at the other end, Matt did not get out, which was a significant advance over those who went before. Alas, with 56 on the board, Matt went chasing a rather wide ball down the leg side, aborted the stroke but left the bat in the way and presented a catch to a grateful keeper. Cameron kept Safwan company for another 15 runs, before playing over a straight one, while Richard hung about long enough to see another 13 battered onto the score, as Safwan passed his half-century. At 84-7, with Safwan still firing, it was still anyone's game. Cue a masterful innings from the immovable Dave Scotcher, who breathed life into Thomas Aquinas's ancient omnipotence paradox ("can God create a lump so heavy that He cannot move it?"). With an almost arrogant dismissiveness, he skilfully left anything remotely outside off stump (including one so close to off stump that it threatened to dislodge the bail through air turbulence), solidly blocked anything on the stumps and casually swatted away anything on the leg side for either one or four.  As 10, 20, 25 runs alternately flew and crept onto the score, the Walden fielders grew increasingly tetchy. "That's not batting", they chuntered, at the sight of a large bear-like creature watching the ball fly once more unchallenged past the off stump. Then disaster. Safwan, whose philosophy of running usually epitomises the spartan ethos of the team (ie do it as little as possible), elected to take on a second run to the young man whose accurate right arm had already despatched most of the top order during his first bowling spell. 111-8 and still 22 needed. The last man in, the baby of the team, Patrick "the Kid" Butterfield, in his first senior match (other than a fielding stint a few weeks back) - could he and Scotch see it through? Could Coton match the Waldenites stubborn last-wicket resistance? Could the partial team of philosophers, embracing the wilderness in all its austere beauty, carry the day?


No.


Patrick batted quite well for two balls but was out on the third and the day was lost. How crucial were those dropped catches, wides, last wicket Walden runs, careless strokes to straight deliveries, suicidal second runs? Could we, with a full eleven throughout, have saved ten or fifteen runs in the field and scored ten or fifteen more ourselves? As robust epistemologists, we eschew answering such hypothetical questions. We are interested only in the essential facts of life not the unanswerable what-ifs of hedonistic milquetoasts.


And so we are deposed from top spot and sent crashing to mid-table (6th). But with about 0.5 points between 6th and 2nd, the path to the top is not yet closed to us. Next week we entertain 5th placed Shelford and hope, after appropriate reflection, to field a less numerically challenged eleven.


The (Sour) Grapes Of Wrath by John Steinbeck

League Table
Scorecard



It was probably the hottest day of the year so far as Coton took on Elmdon at The Recreation Ground last Saturday.  The sun beat down from a cloudless sky as we took the field.  Dan took up the reigns as captain again, obviously not too impressed with the useless tosser that had been standing in the previous week.  As has been stated too often, with the one ball per game rule for this competition winning the toss is important as teams will invariably bowl first.   Indeed Safwan will give you his latest theories on how the rule should be changed if you have a couple of hours to spare.   On a dry wicket Matt and Dan opened the bowling.  The wicket was later to receive a “bad” rating by the opposition skipper.  Probably just sour grapes for the methodical dismantling of the opposition by a Coton team that is now 2nd in the league.  True there was a bit of crumbling on the footholds but it was hardly the dustbowl that drove midwest farmers off their land in the Great Depression.
 
The first dozen or so overs only yielded little over one run per over but no wickets.  Both Dan and Matt beat the bat repeatedly and when they didn’t it the batsmen showed little inclination to aggression.  The breakthrough almost came when the ball was clipped through Scotch’s hands at square leg.  As he nursed his sore fingers, Scotch made a very implausible claim that the drop was deliberate to keep the slow scoring batsman in.  Scotch and Richard got the call as change bowlers and although the rate picked up a little it was still very, very slow going.  It was nothing to do with the pitch, just accurate bowling and conservative batting.  Cameron Black – handed the gloves in the absence of Alastair – was the busiest person on the field.

Richard finally made the breakthrough, with two wickets in two balls.  The first a plumb LBW removing the first of the atrophied opening batsmen and the second bowled his replacement.  This seemed to go off the pads and it was a few seconds before he realised that it had clipped the off stump and toppled the bail.  These were the last two balls of the over and despite crowding the young batsman with the first of the next over he easily survived.

Scotch wasn’t making much headway for once – despite the batsmen being of the right age – and Rob took a turn.   Richard took a third wicket and then Rob joined the fun bowling another.  Its always entertaining to see a batman swing in the direction of midwicket only to have off stump pegged back.  One of the young Elmdon team had decided that this was a baseball game.  With three successive balls from Rob there were huge swings in the direction of cow corner.  On each delivery the ball nestled into Cameron’s waiting hands.  A cry of “strike three, you’re out” from the frustrated bowler held now sway with the umpire who even now was chewing on the aforementioned sour grapes.
Richard then grabbed a fourth wicket, but was unable to complete the 5-for with the last two balls of his spell.  A case of jug avoidance, I think!   

Dan decided enough of the good batsmen were out to have another go and immediately struck with the one delivery that had a noticeably odd bounce and grabbed a wicket.  There were also wickets for the returning Matt and finally for Scotch.  The innings ended as Scotch hit wickets direct with a throw from fine leg removing the Elmdon #10.  They batted one short and ended up on 94 all out.
After a fine tea, courtesy of Richard, that contained not one grape sour or otherwise, we batted.
Adam opened with Gabriel and we were making good progress until Adam slapped a delivery that was a marginal full toss no-ball to point.  Gabriel had looked determined to carry his bat for a nought not out but also produced a couple of excellent boundaries before missing a straight one.

A feature of the innings was that Elmdon had already switched their keepers by the sixth over and were to swap again before the end.  Probably all the bad bounces on the bad wicket were causing problems: nothing to do with ability of course.

Bobby Elmes was promoted to number three after his fine knock last week and with Dan coming in at four runs accumulated quickly despite the former’s nimble footwork turning wides into dot balls.  Dan smacked some lusty pulls counterpointed with drives.  Bobby produced his repertoire of glances and cuts.  It was only a matter of how quickly we would pass the target not whether we would very quickly.  It was something of a surprise when Dan succumbed to an innocuous straight delivery (he couldn’t even blame the pitch this week), shortly afterwards followed by Bobby.  By this time we were within a dozen or so of the target and Safwan was making quick work of closing the gap.
Richard came in having suffered ducks in both his previous knocks and finished the innings off with a cut for 4 through point.

We had taken less than half the allowed overs knocking the runs off – presumably we hadn’t found the wicket too bad!   

A comprehensive win then, built on accurate (and Richard’s case, a penetrative 4-19) bowling.  That was supported by better fielding than the previous week – the highlight being Scotch’s run out.  The batting then produced with everyone, including Mr Extras, chipping in.  

Next week is a blank week in the league and while we have our club day we’ll be watching out for results elsewhere.  Of the 4 teams above us going into the last match, 3 were defeated.  Only Thriplow – whose one loss was against us – separate us from the top of the league.   5 games to go: can we do it?  Every point will be important.

The Replacement Cricketers




When I called my inside contact to get some insight into events at Coton Rec last weekend he wasn’t his usual talkative self.  Rumours spread of a gagging order imposed by the captain after Coton lost to Burrough Green by 6 wickets off the penultimate ball of the match.  But eventually I was able to inveigle out some words, so here we go.

On Friday evening the Deputy Assistant Stand-in Vice Captain received an email to the effect that there was about 5% chance of the match going ahead as the rain of the previous days had made access to prepare the pitch impossible.  Not one to be easily deterred – and with a positive weather forecast – he turned up on Saturday morning to see what could be done.  As it turned out, the pitch (rated "good" on the match card) was very playable.  The game produced a smidge under 400 runs with only 10 wickets which bares testament.

With Dan nursing a bad back and Gabriel nursing a Long Island Iced Tea, Rob had inherited the Captaincy when, due to his advancing years, he wasn’t able to dodge fast enough.  He still just as bad as tosser as he ever was and we were asked to bat first.

Dave Simmons and Alastair opened.  Dave scratched around for a few runs but Alastair was looking back in form, hitting the Burrough Green opener out of the attack in his first over.    After the first boundary the bowler complained of a sore calf.  After a second later in the over he limped off to find some pain relief.  He did come back later, bowled effectively and took two catches.  He was replaces by another teenage left arm quickie, who Alastair greeted with a couple of imperious hooks.  It was not such a good picture at the other end.  Dave’s travails were ended when he chipped one to cover off the leading edge and later in the same over Richard was defeated by a ball that cut away and clipped the top of off.   22-2 was not what we wanted.

Safwan, and his newly discovered defensive shot, now joined Alastair for the first of several productive partnerships.   The teenage quick bowlers were tiring and our two experienced batsman picking them off.  It was somewhat ironic that Safwan now got himself to the first of the replacements chipping to midwicket.  Don’t listen to the voices in your head, Safwan, attack is definitely the way to go!

Bobby Elmes now joined Alastair.  Bobby seems to get bigger each match he plays and he was soon cutting and glancing the Burrough Green bowlers to distraction.  At first they were giving Alastair a single to get Bobby on strike but soon realised that he was going to score runs just as effectively as his partner.  The runs piled up until Alastair eventually succumbed for a career best 85.   

Bobby continued to accumulate, now in the company of Matt Chandler, who scored 18 without ever once finding the middle of the bat.  Bobby comfortably outscored him their partnership, looking ever more comfortable and confident as he progressed. 

Cameron – having waited padded up for twenty or so overs – was unlucky to get a snorter at the start of his innings and it was left to Paul Bradbury to see out the innings.  His 0 not out was a finely crafted innings despite the comedy attempt to run either himself or Bobby out.  It’s worth noting that by the time Paul went in to bat we had a crowd of over 10 people watching.  This included Helen Bradbury and Oli Bradbury: our exhortations to persuade one or other of them to take the field while we locked Paul in the officials room were passed over as jokes: they weren’t.

Bobby finished on 45 not out and it can’t be long before he is required to buy his first jug of beer so note to the senior Elmeses:  please make sure he brings £20 to the next match.

We were always going to be a bit light on the bowling front (not literally, given that Rob and Dave bowled, but in terms of numbers).   Matt and Rob opened, while Safwan complained about the inequities of only using one ball per game and invented ever more complicated schemes to allow us a 2nd new ball. 
The opening bowling was steady but we didn’t look too much like taking a wicket despite pegging the required run rate back up to 5½ per over.  Scotch replaced Rob and Richard took over from Matt.  Still we couldn’t get out the opening batsmen.  The fielding got sloppier.  Twice in the course of one Scotcher over chances went to Matt on the cow corner boundary.  The second was a difficult running chance where Matt, in an effort to stop himself carrying the ball over the line, only succeeded in parrying the ball for 6.  The other was less difficult but also yielded 4. 

We needed a breakthrough and Rob called first on Safwan and then on Cameron to bowl.   We had one blatantly obvious stumping turned down of Richard’s bowling.  Yes, the bat was in the crease but shouldn’t the batsman actually be holding it at the time?  Anyway, the same batsman then advanced down the track to Safwan and missed.  The ball appeared to lodge in Alastair’s armpit, precipitating a convention of the wicket keeper’s union (the Burrough Green batsman was their keeper).  Alastair seemed to take an age in getting the ball to the stumps as if to allow his fellow keeper a chance to get back.  Meanwhile the batsman/keeper was taking equally long to get back as if to say, “go one mate, have a stumping on me”.  Rob checked his watch: if this went on much longer maybe we would have to abandon the game for bad light.  Eventually the reverie was broken, as was the opening partnership, by now worth 154 runs.
We were into the tail!  

In successive overs Cameron, showing no nerves and bowling straight, removed three opponents and we got to the last over with Burrough Green needing 6 to win.  I should mention the fine diving catch by the Scotch for the third of these.  The ball was entrusted to Safwan who had been keeping the runs in check. 
The first 3 balls were tight and only yielded 2 runs.  4 needed off 3.  The 4th ball was hit hard but close to Rob at mid on.   As the aging bones creaked - almost drowning out the shouts from Alastair (“keeper’s end”) and Safwan (“bowler’s end”) - a player who should be experienced enough to know better let the ball squirm through for 2 runs.  The next ball was almost an action replay but this time it was Dave Simmons that allowed the ball to escape, this time for 3.  

The Burrough Green opener was left stranded on 99 Not Out, having been out for 96 the previous week.  As he also took 3-26 in our innings he was definitely the man of the match.  Cameron came out with credit for holding his nerve and bowling well to take 3-24 as the more experienced colleagues failed to take a wicket.  Rob only conceded 15 runs in a tight spell at the start and perhaps missed a trick by not bringing himself back on.  Who would be a captain? Apparently the answer is the other 10 members of the team.
We lost, but it was a well played game against friendly opposition.  One of the drawbacks of the league format this year is that we don’t get a return game and a chance to renew acquaintances at what is a very picturesque village ground.  The last two unbeaten teams lost so it’s very tight at the top with just 2 points difference between 1st and 5th (us).  See you next Saturday!

Rain Men by Raymond Babbitt

Scorecard
Table



At around 1:00PM last Saturday the skies opened over Fowlmere, home to Thriplow’s 3rd XI.  My informant gazed forlornly over a cricket ground that could barely be made out through the rain.  He wondered where his teammates were, where the opposition were, wondered if the match had been called off and cursed at forgetting his phone. The home team arrived and, in stark contrast to what had happened on the previous Saturday, expressed confidence that the game would go ahead.
Slowly the skies cleared and even more slowly other Coton players arrived.  Captain for day Gabriel brought two new recruits – Arshiq and Tejasvi.  We were fortunate that the start was delayed to 2:15 as Adam Wright was still to arrive and Chirayu was lying in a ditch somewhere in South Cambridgeshire having come off his bike.

When we did get underway Matt and Rob opened the bowling.  The captains had agreed to a 36 over game to compensate for the lost time.  The rain came back for the first few overs but passed on and we had dry conditions for the rest of the game.  Matt was having difficulty with his footing on the greasy surface but the slower, heavier Rob was coping OK.  The ball was in the air – and in and out of hands a couple of times - before Rob broke the opening partnership with a ball that moved back in to clip the top of off stump.  The other opener didn’t last much longer, obligingly prodding another delivery from Rob into Adam’s hands at short cover.  

Matt clearly wasn’t relishing conditions although he had beaten the bat several times and induced edges on others.  He gave way to Adam who got the born to turn quite sharply and generated some extravagant bounce.   Shortly thereafter one lumbering behemoth (Rob) was replaced by another (Dave).  The former was still havering about the three dropped catches and the three successive deliveries that had been edged between wicket keeper and slip.  That Alastair immediately held on to a sharp chance off Scotch didn’t make it any better.  

Adam’s spin induced a false stroke to Matt at mid-wicket and we reached half way with the score on around 50-4.  As so often happens, the drinks break precipitated another wicket.  The first ball after the break was lobbed back to Scotch who held on to the return catch with a minimum of fuss. 
Thriplow then affected a fight back.   The young tyro coming in at seven decided to attack Scotch’s bowling.  It wasn’t exactly elegant (I mean the batting, not Scotch) and twice the bowler was denied a wicket from difficult chances offered to Arshiq at mid-off.  Both would have rated as “brilliant” if he had hung on, the second in particular was a great running, sliding effort.  It was on another of these aerial shots that our other debutant Tejasvi pulled a hamstring whilst turning to chase.   

The runs were coming steadily.  Richard replaced Adam, the latter having beaten the bat regularly without reward.  Scotch was finally rewarded when the Thriplow batsman chanced his arm once too often and directed the ball straight at Rob, now positioned at long on.  Rob tells me that as the ball sailed towards him two equally unpleasant thoughts crossed his mind: which was worse, the verbal abuse from Scotch should he drop it, or the physical abuse for a successful catch?  He took one for the team and ran off to hide behind Gabriel and other team members before Scotch could express his appreciation.

A brief experiment with Chirayu’s spin could have yielded a wicket as the ball passed the advancing batsman to Alastair.  But on both occasions the batsman was able to regain his ground before the bails could be removed.  Chirayu then got a bit of tap and in was left to the veterans to bowl out the last overs.  Rob had stiffened up and started with a wide and rank ball that got smacked away.  The next one was lofted back over his head in the direction of Gabriel positioned at mid on.  In anticipation of the dropped catch, Rob got ready to swear to himself.  But what’s this?  As Gabriel wavered there was a decisive call of “mine” from Chirayu, sprinting around.  Some say he came from as far away as third man to take the catch.  More realistically it was wide mid-off, but still about 3-4 times the distance that Gabriel would have needed to make to get there: a great running catch.  The innings then drifted to a close with Rob and Alastair having a private game where the former bowled, the latter caught and the batsman didn’t look like hitting it.   

Thriplow got 140-7 which probably represents 40-50 more than they should have if we had taken our chances.  Rob finished with 3-24, Scotch with 3-31 and Adam got the 7th.

We took tea in the well equipped social club.  This is something we lack at Coton.  It says something about the age of the team that several of them think that a club house, and teas, rate more important than improved practice facilities…

Then we batted.  Gabriel opened with Adam and with considerable help from our old friend Mr Extras put on 49 for the first wicket in quite quick time.  Adam was mainly responsible for these interposing some cracking drives with a few less convincing shots.  Gabriel was, well, Gabriel.  It was during these opening exchanged that Rob felt obliged to warn the young Thriplow opening bowler for running down the middle of the wicket on his follow through.  It’s only a J6S game so the warning was only ever a friendly one, but we could legitimately have had him removed from the attack for the rest of the game.

As it was, the opposition removed him from the attack.  He was pretty quick without ever threatening to hit the stumps but his replacement did figure out how to bowl straight and removed Adam after a promising 29.  In the next over, Gabriel followed a low full toss from the other change bowler.  The opposition had been giving their slip fielder a lot of guidance on how and where to stand and it paid off as he took the catch.  49-2.

Alastair and Safwan were now at the wicket.   The opposition remembered Safwan from last year abd soon had 3 men back on the leg side boundary.  Alastair has had a frustrating season with the bat but this time his dismissal wasn’t down to batting.   Another ball slipped down the leg side and evaded the keeper who had insisted on standing up to the medium pacers.  Alastair and Safwan had completed one run and Alastair turned for a second.  The throw was accurate.  The keeper took the ball and broke the wickets with Alastair very short despite a despairing dive.  

Safwan was now joined by Arshiq who announced his presence with a six over square leg off the first ball he faced.  There’s nothing like playing yourself in!

Safwan looked confused.  Here was someone who could smite the ball as hard as he could.  For a while Safwan couldn’t make clean contact with the ball.  But eventually the runs came and we cruised past 100 with lots of time left and 7 wickets in hand.  But we are Coton.  Why do things the easy way when you can do them the hard way?   After the drinks break (again) things changed.  The first two balls were a high, wide, no-ball beamer, followed by one that was almost a no-ball that Arshiq pulled for 6.  Safwan had played more defensive shots in this innings than all of this season, and probably last, combined, isn’t naturally suited to that game and another forward defensive went straight back to the bowler.  Still, 108-4 meant only 33 needed in about 12 overs, so we couldn’t muck that up, could we?

Well, 4 overs later it was 118-7.  Richard, Matt and Chirayu all failed to trouble the scorers.  Chirayu’s was first ball.  The clatter of wickets meant that out number 9 (Rob) & 10 (Dave) had to sprint off (sprint is probably the wrong word for these two) and get ready quickly.  Thriplow could quite legitimately have had us timed out at this point however, sportingly they didn’t.  I can suppose that was in return for us not insisting their left arm bowler be removed from the attack and he had just taken two wickets in two balls.

Rob won the race to face the hat trick ball: the first that he has faced this season.  It was a bouncer, and a no-ball, and was hooked for a single: a virgin bat no longer!  But Rob didn’t survive much longer, clipping a rank leg side full toss straight to square leg.  Perhaps those practice facilities are more important than the bar!   
 
Scotch went in almost identical manner and we were 129-9, still 12 runs short of the target. Tejasvi now came in, with Chirayu running for him (good tactics that, having the team’s fastest mover as the runner).  It soon became evident that Tejasvi was a proper batsman, and one that could give Gabriel a run for his money in slow accumulation.  It must have been disheartening for Thriplow to see him come in at #11.  Arshiq eased the nerves with his third 6.  Thriplow ringed the boundary to let him have a single but that just meant Tejasvi could play the ball out for the rest of the over.  The score crept up with these single.  With us one short of parity there was a scare with an appeal for LBW.  Richard kept his composure with 11 opponents imploring him to raise his finger.  He didn’t, two balls later Arshiq slapped the ball away for the 4 runs that took us home with 10 balls to spare.  In the excitement we hadn’t noticed that he had passed his 50 a few balls earlier.

So, 5 wins out of 6 (with once abandonment) puts us 3rd above Thriplow for whom this was their first defeat.  Great Shelford and Barrington remain unbeaten above us as both got victories at the weekend.    

One Flew over the Coton Rec by R. P. McMurphy




Coton got back to winning ways with a victory over Newport that kept an enthralled crowd of approximately 4 people on tenterhooks to the end.  After a stutter against Balsham this makes it 4 wins out of 5.  My anonymous source in the team would like to think that this was because he missed the Balsham game.  He is deluded.

We welcomed Roger Harding – a Footpath resident – for his first game, and Rob was back, “fresh” from Heathrow and 35 degree Texan weather.  

From this reporter’s perspective, the match pivoted on an incident in the 31st over of the Newport, Essex innings.   Cruising along at 131-2 chasing a target of 180, their opening batsman faced up to Matt Chandler back on for a 2nd spell.  At this point the aforesaid batsman was 73 and looking very comfortable.  He was coming out to his crease to get to the pitch of the ball but on this occasion overreached and the ball went through to John Bason behind the stumps.  Turning quickly the opener lost his footing, and John – standing back – threw down the stumps.  I know what that batsman will want for Fathers’ Day: new spikes on his shoes.  Meanwhile we sensed that it might be game on.  Still, Stumped Bason Bowled Chandler looks good in the books.

But how did we get to that point?  4 hours earlier, Dan lost the toss upholding the Coton tradition of our Captains being useless tossers and we were inserted by Newsex (Esport).  Gabriel took first ball while Richard watched the birds skimming the outfield.  The opening bowling was steady and the ball moving around under the cloud cover.  The skittish Coton pitch was creating the occasional low bounce and it was a combination of this and the movement that caused Richard to play on.  Gabriel lasted a little longer but we weren’t too far into the game before former Royston colleagues Safwan and John Bason were batting together.  

Safwan was soon into his stride smiting both the persisting opener and the change bowlers high and handsome over the straight boundaries.  John was a little less confident to start and got some early runs off the edge.  There were several midwicket discussions on the conventions and protocols of calling for runs, it looked like umpiring intervention may be needed at one point but the two batsmen sorted out their differences and applied themselves to the task.  In Safwan’s case, application included 4 x 6s, the last of which sailed over long off from a seemingly effortless drive.  John’s approach was more classical but just as effective and the score had reached 83 when Saftwan played over a straight one that (he says) kept a bit low.  

Captain Dan now joined John at the wicket and the scoreboard kept ticking over as Newer, Sexpots ran through an array of bowling.   Another promising partnership was broken when Dan became another Coton player that could have done with a longer bat and succumbed to a low bounce.  Prior to this there had been an incident where the Neesox, Twerps bowled broke the wicket in his delivery.  Richard – knowing the rule change precipitated by Steven Finn – called no-ball and Dan cantered for a run.  There was then a debate, a reversal and Dan’s run was taken away as the no-ball became a dead ball.  The rule change only applies to international cricket until October 1st.  Whilst Essex is a different county (in so many ways) it doesn’t count as international.

Matt replaced Dan whilst John continued to accumulate steadily.  Having overcome what looked like some early nerves, Mr Bason was playing strokes all around the wicket.  He wasn’t helped by the long grass in the outfield which turned several boundary bound strokes into singles and doubles. 
Matt perished to Western, Expos teenage spinner giving Roger a chance to show us what he could do.  It turns out that this was (a) hit sixes and (b) get injured.  We managed to avoid all the comedy possibilities that having a runner brings.  But it did give Richard a chance to get some more exercise after his early dismissal.  John farmed the strike expertly in the last few overs and together with Roger – bravely hanging in despite the injury – they brought the innings to a close on 179-5.  John finished with an accomplished 72 not out and along with Safwan (42) provided the backbone to the innings.  Dan, Matt and Roger all made useful runs but as so often happens were outscored by Mr Extras who provided 17.

Rob made some more jokes about his virgin bat which fell on deaf ears.  Again.  Time to give that particular topic a rest I think.

After tea provided by Janet Scotcher and featuring egg rolls (Scotcher Eggs?) we resumed the battle. Some very accurate opening bowling – not a phrase used very often in these reports – started to bring the required run rate up to 5 an over.  Matt and Rob kept the runs down but couldn’t take a wicket so Scotch was brought into the attack.  He immediately struck by finding the dead spot on the wicket and pinning one of the Spewer, Sexton openers palpably leg before wicket.  It was so obvious even his team mate had to give it.

The other opener was having no such problems though and although the required run rate was creeping up he started to find the boundary with increasing regularity.  Scotch was dispatched several times, as were Matt, Dan and Safwan from the other end.  Dan did manage to bowl the number 3 with a corker and then remove the number 4 with a beamer.  It wasn’t as if the batsman tried to get out of the way, but he took a nasty crack on the forearm and retired hurt.

Dan juggled his bowlers, with Matt returning for a second spell to replace Safwan and Richard replaced Scotch.  Saf’s tactic had been to get the opener to play one in the air to long off or mid wicket but despite adding more and more fielders in that area the ball didn’t go to hand.  By this time, Gabriel had left the field and Patrick Butterfield substituted.  Young Patrick gave us a lesson in fielding and he was afforded every opportunity as the opposition hit every other shot in his direction.  

It was, therefore, something of a relief when Matt made the breakthrough described earlier.  Needing 49 to win off 8 overs with 7 wickets remaining still put Western, Sexop in a good position but we had forced open a small breech in the defences. 

And into that breech we now piled.  Accurate bowling, some alert fielding and a series of increasingly panicky strokes raised the pressure on our opponents.  Richard rattled the woodwork twice and Matt struck again before ending his spell.  The other bowlers having done the hard work, Scotch returned to grab 2 more wickets and Richard struck twice more.   In the midst of the carnage the batsman that Dan had winged earlier returned and played a one handed slog that steepled to mid wicket.  The bowler, 8 fielders and the wicketkeeper all ran away from the ball, leaving Roger, still hobbling from his injury and unable to take evasive action with the responsibility for making the catch. 

143-3 had turned into 148-9 in a little over 5 overs.  There was a late flurry but Richard found the stumps one more time to bring proceedings to a halt.  Worst, Expense ended up 23 runs short of the target, Richard leading the way with 4-29, ably supported by Scotch (3-21) and Matt (2-34). 

That puts us 4th in the league.  There are still 3 unbeaten teams ahead of us, two of which meet on Saturday while we play the winless Babraham.