Monday 5 May 2014

Clapham Nomads v Barnes Occasionals - 4/5/14

Excellent bowling and fielding saw Nomads (116 all out) close out a 22-run victory over Barnes Occasionals at an unusually idyllic Nursery Road.  Abdul Khan top-scored with 44 for Clapham.  For Barnes, Keith Seed proved almost unplayable with 5 for 13 (? the best bowling figures in Occasionals v Nomads / Open University games.)  Scores, report, analysis and trivia to follow.
Barnes inserted Nomads on a beautiful spring afternoon and the reliable pair Mark Bradshaw and Mahesh Vyas dug in against Tom Hooker - just above Medium - and the flight, swing and trickery of Ollie Hogg.
7 overs were seen off.  17 for 1 with few alarms on a Nursery Road pitch that behaved well but was a touch slow.  I got the impression that the track might benefit Occasionals' bowlers whose average pace is a notch below Nomads' but whose accuracy is sometimes a notch above.
Hogg in particular can be a handful.  He does a bit with the ball at below Medium and he chucks in the occasional loose ball to tempt the batting side.  A judiciously-set leg-side field prevented Vyas from cashing in on two of his favourite full tosses and, perhaps frustrated, our opener holed out on the penultimate ball of Hogg's 4th over.  18 for 1.
This brought Hassan Khan out to join Bradshaw and an air of calm assurance descended as the pair went about their usual business of building a major stand.
I was starting to think we were fortunate not to be facing Keith Seed on a pitch that looked tailor-made for him but I was aware that Barnes had only 10 men on the field.  As this thought crossed my mind, the legendary maestro himself appeared through a gap in the fence from the adjacent Abbey Rec. Once he had the ball it didn't take him long.  Mark Bradshaw, who had played well for his 19, tried to drive back over the bowler's head and Seed held onto a smart catch.
No. 4 Darwin pulled Gohar for an emphatic 4 but Seed had him in his second over.  His third over accounted for Hassan, who sportingly walked after a thin edge to the keeper, and Riaz Khan, who has not yet recovered his form of last September.  He surely will soon and it will be worth watching.
At this stage - 60 for 5 - Seed was 4 for 4 from 14 balls and Nomads were on the slippery slope.  Fortunately there was depth to our batting as Abdul Khan was joined by Gul.  Abdul was the one batsman to cut loose in this match.  Unfortunately I missed most of his innings because of tea duties but the figures tell the story; 44 runs including eight 4s (the other Nomads only managed 3 boundaries between them.)  Gul was struggling with a neck injury but gave Abdul solid support before being hit and retiring on 89.  Sami continued the good work for a while as did Emil Todorow and, when he bravely returned, Gul.
116 for 6 with just under 3 overs to go and Nomads hoping for 130 (slightly above par for the pitch), but Tom Hooker struck two mortal blows, removing Abdul and Abbas.  Keith Seed secured his "Michelle", trapping Todorow leg before.  John Crossland was No. 11.  He talked last week at great length about people blocking at the death and that is just what he did this time, but the 4 dot balls he played at least enabled Gul to take strike for the final over.  A fully-fit Gul would surely have knocked 5 or 6 but Hooker was offering nothing for free and snapped up the 10th wicket with the catch taken by Nigel Pettitt.
The last 4 wickets had crashed on 116.  There were a few tea-time whispers from Nomads that this might be enough but my feeling was that a vastly-experienced Barnes line-up would eat 3.4 an over for breakfast if we were at all wayward.
Roger Price and A.Metcalfe opened for a Barnes batting order that looked full of experience, but lacked their batting stars of recent fixtures against Nomads; Rohit Benjamin and J. Bunyan.  Hassan Khan bowled Metcalfe early on and, as the batsman put his kit away, he told his team-mates that he doesn't really enjoy playing against the Nomads anyway.  On seeing 2 members of the home side behind him, he assured us that this was because of our fearsome ruthlessness.... and that was even without Emil Todorow opening the bowling.  The ever-reliable Price - who has made several large scores against us - began to hit it around nicely without getting full reward for his shots on the slowish outfield.  No. 3 T. Edwards proved an able partner and steady progress was made up to 40 with the asking rate flickering between 3.5 and 4.5 throughout economical spells from Hassan and Sami.  Abdul and Emil replaced these two and just as Barnes were looking slight favourites, the 2 Nomads stalwarts combined for an absolutely vital wicket; Emil inducing an uppish, though powerful, drive from Edwards which was very well caught by Abdul deep behind the bowler's head.
At drinks there was an amazing festival of facial hair as one of the Barnes umpires, who had a debonair waxed/shaped moustache in the style of a Victorian Lieutenant-Colonel or an Edwardian Dandy (or possibly the other way round), was deep in conversation with John Crossland, who has such an excellent 'tache himself that he has appeared as an Extra in Film/TV Productions featuring large crowds of Victorians, and Emil Todorow whose hair has been commented on favourably, in terms of both quantity and quality, many times on this blog.  Soon John praised the Barnes man's lip furniture; "I would love to have a moustache like that, but I would be worried I would get comments."
The cricket would have to go some to match that and the game hung quite excitingly in the balance as Price and Barnes's keeper pushed the score up to 67 but both men fell to Riaz Khan in the space of four runs.  Carey (predominantly defensive but played a a couple of nice shots) and Nigel Pettitt came together.  Four or five of the mighty blows Pettitt has shown us in the past could have won the game quickly. He played well enough for 8 but couldn't cut loose against some Nomads bowling and fielding which just got better and better as the innings progressed.  No 7 was Dan Hogg, nephew of Ollie and son of Adam (the Hogg dynasty must rival the Hunters as one of Sunday Cricket's foremost families).  Dan is left-handed and with a couple of fine leg-side shots looked the last real hope of scoring at the 8 an over required by this stage.  Fortunately Riaz Khan deployed his uncanny knack of dismissing left-handers.
90 for 6 and Nomads kept the jugular firmly grasped.  Back came Hassan and the innings petered out rather similarly to Nomads' with wickets falling on 91, 91, 93 and 94, climaxing with Hassan and John Crossland combining well to run out Man of the Match Keith Seed.
This was a really impressive team performance, especially in the field, from Nomads.  Our Man of the Match, despite excellent bowling figures from Hassan, Sami and Riaz, was Abdul with by far the largest score and a crucial catch.  The fielding was great to watch.  Abdul was excellent as always as was John Crossland.  Mark Bradshaw was sharp, made a fine diving stop and kept us on our toes with vocal encouragement.  I will give Fielder of the Day to Emil who stopped everything that came at him and showed one nifty piece of footwork which had one of the Barnes spectators purring; "Ooh I say!  Hristo Stoichkov!"

Clapham Nomads 116 from 34.1 overs

M.Bradshaw   c and b Seed  19
M.Vyas  c             b O.Hogg  5
H.Khan  c Makahewicz b Seed  24
D.Gunawardena  c           b Seed  6
R.Khan  c             b Seed  0
Abdul Khan  b Hooker  44
Gul  c Pettitt  b Hooker  1
Sami  b D.Hogg  3
E.Todorow  lbw b Seed 3  
Abbas Khan  b Hooker  0

J.Crossland  not out  0
F.O.W. - 18, 45, 58, 60, 60, 108, 116, 116, 116, 116

(Barnes bowling)
T. Hooker  6.1-1-10-3
O. Hogg  7-1-20-1
D. Hogg  7-1-22-1
G. Akhtar  4-0-27-0
K. Seed  7-2-12-5
N. Pettitt  3-0-24-0

Barnes Occasionals  94 from 33.2 overs

R.Price  c Abbas Khan b R. Khan  39
A. Metcalfe  b H. Khan  2
T. Edwards  c Abdul Khan b Todorow  13
P. Makahewicz  b R. Khan  7
P. Carey  b Abdul Khan  4
N. Pettitt  b Sami  8
D. Hogg  b R. Khan  10
T. Hooker  b H. Khan  0
G.Akhtar  b H. Khan  0
K.Seed  run out  2
O. Hogg  not out  1
F.O.W. - 8, 40, 67, 71, 73, 90, 91, 91, 93, 94

(Nomads bowling)
Sami  6-2-10-1
H. Khan  6.2-2-7-3
Abbas Khan  4-0-19-0
E. Todorow  5-0-19-1
R. Khan  7-0-15-3
Abdul Khan  5-0-23-1 

Since we've been going down Memory Lane lately, I found an old scorecard which I think is the first time some of us (in the guise of Open University cc) came up against the Occasionals.  This was 21 years ago, pre-Nomads even, on 18/7/1993 at King George's Field, (?)Tolworth 
OU made 120 all out.  The line-up was; Nick Lefebve, John Chance, Robert Reader, Dave Hunter (Capt), Graeme Douglas, Dave Stevens, Sai To, Mick Hunter, George Jeffrey,  Ian Redmond, Joe Chance.
Barnes made 100 for 6 when the rain came (probably a winning draw for them - just.)  Their order; Ollie Hogg, Adam Hogg, Frank Hanmer, Mike Webster, Tagg, Keith Seed, Steve Flower, Williams, Ian Haddow, Merriman.
Keith Seed took 5 wickets in this match as well (nothing really changes) but at least OU managed to take 20 runs from him.  I think his 5 for 12 last Sunday might be the best analysis in any Occasionals/OU/Nomads match
Dave Hunter described the 1993 game in the scorebook as a "horrible, bitty, rain-interrupted match."  When you think that OU only won 1 game that whole summer, I think this was one of the better performances.  Perhaps he was just upset by the surprising absence of Emil Todorow.

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