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Sunday 15 July 2018

Cricketer Cup - Eton wilt in the heat

OCCC 215 for 2 (Scriven 100, Bedford 86*) beat Eton Rambers 214 (Vanderpar 97, Waters 2-45) by eight wickets
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The OCCC eased into the semi-finals of the Cricketer Cup thanks to an excellent display in the field and charismatic batting from Jack Scriven and Lewis Bedford.  We now meet Bedfordians on Jubilee on July 29.

On one of the hottest days of a sweltering summer we lost the toss and fielded. But an excellent pitch had a little more grass than usual – to try to give some protection in the heat – and so played true throughout rather than crumble as the game progressed which so many tracks have done this year.  With a lightning fast outfield, a score of 280 seemed around par.

Will Rollings, lively in his first spell, struck in his first over, and Sam Dickson, introduced as an early first change, did the same to leave Eton 15 for 2.   When McDonagh nicked the impressive Ed Tristem to Callum Kent, Eton were 41 for 3 and wobbling.

Tristem is something of an unpredictable quantity when handed the ball. Some days he looks all at sorts and hobbles and grimaces around like a pensioner.  On others, when his tail is up, he is genuinely fast and all but unplayable.  Today was one such day.  His return of 1 for 30 off eight did not show how many times he beat the bat or was edged into space.

The early wickets meant Eton were reliant on Vanderpar, and he started confidently with some sublime drives off Nathan Thorpe. But thereafter he played a curate’s egg of an innings, at times looking as if batting was easy and at others poking at the seamers and skewing the spinners.

The innings really came off the rails with two run-outs in five balls, both resulting from poor calling.  Scriven scored a direct hit to remove  Ginoda and then a sharp return from Bedford accounted for O’Brien with both batsmen marooned mid pitch.  From 80 for 3 Eton slipped to 81 for 5.

Vanderpar and Halstead slowly and patiently rebuilt in a stand of 107 off 16 overs.   The momentum was swinging away from the OCs as 42 came off 17 deliveries after the second drinks break;  Vanderpar suddenly woke up and showed why he is so feared as he slammed 28 off seven balls but with the eighth, and out of nowhere, Matt Crump bowled him for 97.  Two overs later Halstead drove Scriven to Tristem in the deep and the innings never recovered.  The last five wickets produced only 26 runs in seven overs.  All seven bowlers used took a wicket with only Seren Waters picking up two. At the end of a cricket week where targets of 280-300 had proved chaseable, 215 was always well within reach as long as we did not lose early wickets.

By his own admission, Scriven’s form with the bat this summer has been disappointing and as runs proved elusive he almost tried too hard rather than play his natural game.  This hundred was him back to his imposing best. After a cautious maiden, his next six balls produced two driven sixes and a four, and then having scattered the field to all parts with his belligerent hitting, he milked the gaps for easy ones and twos.  On his way to fifty he smote three sixes and five fours.  From 50 to 70 he only hit one four but almost every shot had real power in it.

Waters was content to play second fiddle and looked untroubled until given out caught behind for 10 off a ball he seemed to miss – his habit of taking two steps towards the pavilion after playing and missing may have persuaded the umpire he was walking.  Rather than check our progress at 62 for 1, that brought to the crease the in-form Bedford who upped the tempo, mixing placement for ones and twos with some exquisite drives.

Scriven reached his deserved hundred off 93 balls in 134 minutes before skying the next delivery back to the bowler, but by then the game was all but over.   Alan Cope, who had shown his confidence by preparing for his innings by lounging romantically in the shade with his girlfriend, then produced an entertaining cameo as Vanderpar tried to knock his head off and Cope, eschewing a helmet, took him on in his OC cap.  It was the last hurrah and the winnings runs soon followed – Bedford’s unbeaten 86 taking an hour and coming off 62 balls – as we reached the target with ten overs to spare.

The day was a credit to a young side whose approach in the field never flagged despite the trying conditions.  It is also worth mentioning the sizeable contingent who took root in the shade of the trees, the superb catering provided by the School, yet another excellent track produced by Sean and his team, and the patient scoring of Heather.

So we all come back in a fortnight for what will be a tough semi-final.  Tristem has offered to fly back from holiday Portugal for the match if Eds Copleston buys him a ticket. In a week that saw Will Howard fly Matt Foster to Prague for taking a five-for, that seems a small price for the captain to pay.

Tuesday 10 July 2018

Cricket Week summary

An excellent cricket week saw the sun shine (almost) throughout, some good matches, four individual hundreds and more young players take part than ever before.  Here are the reports of the seven matches which produced four wins, two losses and only the one draw

Old Malvernians 253 (Waters 4-51) lost to OCCC 254 for 4 (Jordan 91, Bedford 78*) by six wickets
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This game was notable for the first rain in a month. Rain is a little of an overstatement, but a few heavy drops accompanied by distant thunder sent the umpires scurrying for safety. The players remained in the middle and the umpires had to rapidly return.   Malvernians recovered from 64 for 4 to reach 232 for 6 before Waters spun through the tail.

On a brown and fast outfield this was unlikely to be enough, and Will Jordan, in his one game of the year, played some lovely shots and appeared set for a hundred before he ran out of steam. Ed Tristem hit 34, including two massive sixes, before reverse sweeping into his middle stump, and then Lewis Bedford batted as if he had a colts session to go and coach (he did) hitting an unbeaten 78 in 40 minutes to end the game with 16 overs remaining.


OCCC 299 for 6 dec (Kent 100, Tristem 58, Hannah 41) beat Free Foresters 286 (Blain 91, Reingold 82, Horsey 4-55, Hannah 3-56) by 13 runs
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A cracking game which went down to the wire thanks to the Foresters chasing to the bitter end, a tactic which saw them come close to winning a game which at tea seemed dead and buried.   Callum Kent’s 100 (106 balls, 122 minutes) and Ed Tristem’s brutal 58 formed the basis of our innings although Elliott Hannah (41), Sam Langmead (34) and Eds Copleston (32) provided good support.

A target of 300 looked impossible when Hannah took two wickets in his first over to reduce the Foresters to 11 for 3 which became 58 for 4 shortly before the interval.  But the Foresters always bat deep and a Blain and Reingold savaged the bowling in a stand of 112 in 11 overs, and when Blain fell to a juggling catch by Kent , Reingold continued to flay all comers before he was superbly stumped down the leg side.  At 235 for 8 that should have been that but Babbs and Saul got the Foresters to within touching distance with plenty of overs in hand before Horsey polished off the innings.  There was earlier drama when Ed Henderson announced he was now a spinner; he bowled 6.1 overs for 56, his mauling ended by the umpire who banished him to the outfield after a second beamer.  Back to the drawing board.


Grasshoppers 240 (Horsey 3-42) lost to OCCC 244 for 3 (Bugler 110*, Kent 63, Chase 43*) by seven wickets.
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Jack Horsey put the skids under ten-man Grasshoppers with three early wickets and it took a last-wicket stand of 65 to enable them to post a defendable target.   The oddity of the innings (ever day has one) was 57-year-old Mike Chase deciding to field silly point to the very occasional offspin of Sam Bugler, 39 years his junior.  One offside long hop later and he departed back to gully.  Chase had also turned up at 11.30 rather than 11 “as that’s the time we used to start”.

We lost Max Richards and Ollie Trower early but Callum Kent and Bugler scored with ease, and when Kent was stumped, Chase belied his years with an attacking innings as he added 117 with Bugler in 53 minutes.  Bugler reached his deserved maiden hundred off 93 balls and then finished the game with a four and a six.


OCCC 178 (Copleston 50) lost to Old Georgians 224 (Foster 5-54, Kennedy 3-51) by 46 runs
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A slightly surreal day and, for us, a rather uninspiring game of cricket which we lost after seemingly being set a very gettable target.   OGs started well to reach 148 for 1 before the innings fell away to the seam bowling of Matt Foster.  Will Howard, who usually finds unusual ways to impact on a match, told Foster if he got a five-for he would take him to Prague that night – Howard was going there en route to the World Cup semi-final in Moscow.  So a second ticket was booked with the only snag both had to leave by 4.30 to get to Heathrow.  Howard hit a breezy 26, Foster a less breezy 13 and they were off.  By the time normality returned we were in trouble. Eds Copleston kept us interested with a 63-ball fifty but nobody was able to stay with him.

OCCC 278 for 5 dec (Bedford 150, Trower 57) drew with Flashmen 172 for 5 (Crump 3-15)
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A match which promised much ended in a rather dull draw as Freemen, after losing early wickets, decided to play out time.

The OCCC innings started with a bright stand between Lewis Bedford and Ollie Trower (57); after Trower fell, Bedford took the attack on with a barrage of pulls and drives and became only the seventh OCCC batsman to reach 150. A flurry of wickets as the declaration loomed caused some urgency in the dressing-room; Matt Crump hurriedly kitted up and strode to the middle only to be met by the fielders coming off as Cope declared.


On his day, Crump has been devastating with the ball. Of late, that devastation has tended to be inflicted on the slips. But he has shown signs of late he may be back as a bowler and three early wickets left Freemen wobling and then a suicidal run-out on the stroke of tea left them 32 for 4. Another wicket after the resumption ended their challenge and in the remaining 25 overs they scored 120 runs for the loss of one wicket against increasingly generous bowling.


OCCC 258 for 4 (Cowdrey 118) beat Old Etonians 256 for 7 dec by six wickets
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Over the past three decades we have had some cracking games against the Etonians on Jubilee.  Sadly, this was not one of them.   The day was all but decided before we took to the field. At the appointed start time there were three visitors on the ground; by the time the first ball was bowled there were eight and that's how it stayed.

Given the numbers, Eds Copleston felt he had no choice but to stick Eton in but even then the game seemed likely for an early finish as Eton lost two quick wickets.  But they battled back, aided by some enterprising bowling changes, and were able to declare, although after a long session in the field the captain's sense of humour was tested to the limit when the seventh - and what he thought would be the final - wicket fell only for the OCCC tea lady (in reality an UVIth leaver from last summer) strode to the middle to prolong the suffering.

On a normal day a target of 258 would have been a challenge, but with no OCs willing to go straight back out in the heat to field, Eton were left with a lot of space to defend with eight men.  Most batsmen made the most of this, with Rob Cowdrey scoring his second OCCC hundred.  The game was done and dusted with 14 overs remaining.


Old Millfieldians 248 (Tristem 4-45) beat OCCC 244 (Harris 64, Copleston 40) by four runs
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This was a superb start to cricket week and a match which went right down to the wire.  Millfield recovered from 110 for 5 (Ed Tristem doing some early damage) but the star for us was 14-year-old Tommy Ealham who, with his older brother George, was making his debut. He took two wickets and deserved more.  Our innings was not helped by two shocking decisions - Lewis Bedford adjudged caufght behind off his pad and Tristem somehow given lbw to a ball down the leg side and which the keeper was preparing to take a chest height.  Nonetheless, both sides pressed for the win and firstly Eds Copleston and then Jamie Harris kept us in the chase.  We still looked down and out before  Tommy Ealham and Max Bell (both in the School XI) brought us to the brink of victory before Ealham fell with five needed.


Sunday 1 July 2018

Cope and spin sink Sherborne

OCCC 261 for 9 (Cope 89) beat Sherbourne Pilgrims 160 (Waters 4-10) by 101 runs
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A potentially difficult visit to Dorset to face Sherborne was overcome thanks largely to an excellent innings of 89 by Alan Cope and some nagging spin bowling from Jack Scriven and Seren Waters. In a searing hot summer the match was played under leaden skies with a downpour always looming. As it was in stayed hot and humid but dry.

We started cautiously with few alarms on a pitch which provided uneven bounce.  Jack Scriven (16) holed out to mid-on after struggling to find his touch and then Seren Waters played an uncharacteristly loose shot to cover to leave us 64 for 2.  Cope and Angus Dahl (25) put on 98 for the third wicket, Cope unleashing some sublime pulls and drives, and then found support from Lewis Beford (32) who was aided by some poor catching.

Cope eventually fell leg-before and Bedford was crazily run-out after a mix-up with Nathan Thorpe, after which the innings fell away, with us adding only 48 in the final 10 overs for the loss of five wickets.  We ought to have put the match to bed in that time, but as it was we left the door open for Sherborne.

Sherborne's reply started dismally as they slid to 1 for 2 in eight balls, Elliott Hannah and Scriven striking early blows.  Walsh (41) and Cheal (29) then steadied the ship with some aggressive hitting before Walsh holed out to Cope at long-on.

It was the spinners who were always going to pose problems and so it proved was Waters (4 for 10) and Scriven (2 for 29) ended Sherborne's challenge.  Thorpe, who took an outstanding running catch at backward square-leg to remove Cheal, was unlucky not to take a wicket, and it was heartening to see Dahl's legspin return after his serious injury sustained over the winter.  He took the final wicket to wrap up a convincing win and set up a quarter-final at home to Eton.

During the course of his innings Waters passed 1000 Cricketer Cup runs for the club.  What was also so pleasing was the age of this side.  Four were in the Cranleigh XI last summer and only one - the ageing Cope - was over 30 (just).   Other than Waters (28) everyone else was 23 or under.   The future is bright.



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