Monday, 25 March 2013

Final Round up


Hi and welcome to the last round up of the season.

We rounded off with the cup and it was good to get a decent  turnout despite the snow that threatens to delay the start of outdoor matters.
Congratulations to Leeds West who brought a large enough contingent to field two teams and their A team ensured they finished on a high.
There were four teams in total and all played each other in a round robin with games of 6 overs per side. There were no points at stake but instead the final positions were decided on the run rates. There was the prospect of another nailbiting climax as LWWA and JURA met in their last game when they were virtually neck and neck. Unfortunately for JURA they fell short at the final hurdle and had to settle for second again.
Ova Throws came third but still had a reason to be cheerful when they finally registered a win for the season at the last attempt.
The table and the team scores for each game are here.

And that just about brings things to a close. All that remains is to thank you one more time  for your commitment and attitude over the past few months, Players and umpires alike have all contributed to making this season of indoor cricket a successful and extremely enjoyable event. We wish you the very best for the coming summer.

Cup results



Final Table

Team
Bat/Bowl
Game 1
Game 2
Game 3
Totals
Difference
LWWA
Bat
31
50
49
130
+70
Bowl
17
17
26
60
JURA
Bat
31
53
26
110
+26
Bowl
12
23
49
84
Ova Throws
Bat
17
23
56
96
-23
Bowl
31
53
35
119
LWWB
Bat
12
17
35
64
-73
Bowl
31
50
56
137


























Match Scores 

JURA
31
LWWB
12
Ova Throws
17
LWWA
31
JURA
53
Ova Throws
23
LWWB
17
LWWA
50
JURA
26
LWWA
49
LWWB
35
Ova Throws
56


Thursday, 21 March 2013

Cup latest


Hi, I said I’d post here again with final details of next Monday’s Cup but I’m afraid I’m only keeping half that promise. We’re still sorting out the exact arrangements so, really, there's nothing new to report but I thought I'd let you know how it's going.

We want to give a game to anyone who’s been involved this season and wants another outing but we're also going to ensure it’s a properly organised competition. Some teams should have quite a few players available, others are still getting numbers together. We’ve got various options on formats that cater for all  set-ups and we’ll apply the most suitable one when we know more nearer the time. The preferred template is still the one mentioned in the last update. We may mix and match a team or two but if you want to stay in your established  ones you'll be fine to do so.

So the real purpose of this post is just to tell you not to worry about the details, if you come down we guarantee you’ll all get a decent game. We start at 6.30 as usual and  no matter if you’re a squad bulging with strength in depth,  a solo gun-for-hire, or somewhere in between, it would be great to see you there.

Tuesday, 19 March 2013

Week 8 Round up

Hello again,

The first thing to say is congratulations to CTU on becoming champions .They are  worthy winners who fully deserve it although they did it the hard way in the end. Click here to view the final table.

Over the first half of the season they set the bar really high and looked to have created something of a two tier league. But then the fates began to conspire against them as they were hit by cancellations which undoubtedly knocked them out of their stride. Meanwhile, other teams responded to the challenge that had been set and when CTU returned to action they found improved teams in full flow.
However, one of the cliches about winning leagues is that it's not just about turning on the style when it suits but also about scrapping for a win at decisive moments. That's what CTU managed to do when it counted. There's more on this theme, and other details, in the Featured Match report on CTU v LWW.

The story of how the league was won would not be half as exciting were it not for the efforts of JURA. They chased CTU right to the finish line and you can see the card from their game v Ova Throws.

It's perhaps only fair that JURA should take something tangible from the league and they can definitely claim to have had the best player. The final tables are also completed for the awards for the Batting and Bowling.
If you click on one then the other you might have a momentary sense of deja vu. Don't worry, it's not a mistake, the same player tops both awards. Double congratulations to JURA's  Hamza Mir. It's often said that a true all rounder is someone who has two disciplines, each of which they would be selected for alone. He passes that test pretty comfortably.

An exciting finish to the league was just what we hoped for from the admin side, of course, but I also think it was what every one of you deserved. You've all contributed to making it a success and we hope you've taken as much enjoyment as you've provided.

It's not all over yet though. There's still one piece of silverware up for grabs in the cup. As previously mentioned, it will be a different format with several shorter games that allow teams to use their squads. I'll be in touch with a few of you over the next day or two and will post here again on Friday with finalised details. The rough plan is 4 teams playing three 6-overs/side games (2 pairs batting 3 overs) and plenty of scope for chopping and changing personnel. It will be fun and inclusive but there will still be a trophy to be given out for it, along with the ones from the league.

As expected, we'll be winding down after March. The pitches will still be there of course, and anyone who wants to continue can just let us know. If anyone feels they've really missed out by not completing our survey they can rectify that by clicking here. Either way, Monday 25th will be the last event of this particular season and we look forward to signing off with another night of entertaining cricket.

Thanks and enjoy







Featured Match : CTU v LWW 18/3/2013

CTU v LWW     on  18/3/2013


CTU won by 8 runs

It was a fascinating game of thrust and parry with neither side ever managing to gain real ascendancy. There was some hostile quick bowling, plenty of nagging accuracy and a helping of tempting flight but there were also moments where the two attacks lost some of their control. The batting tactics ranged from reckless to frugal and the fielding varied between brilliant and frantic. In an often highly charged atmosphere there were also several opportunities to witness one of cricket’s more peculiar features – the moments where gamesmanship and sportsmanship collide over warnings about Mankaddings. Yet all of these events were merely setting the scene for the final act – the denouement of the league itself, in doubt right until the very last ball.
A month ago if anyone with a crystal ball had predicted CTU would win the league they might well have been met with a wave of indifference. Back then CTU were well clear at the top of the table and racking up a series of huge wins. This victory over LWW ensured they did indeed finish as champions but not until after they had been firmly disabused of any notions of an inevitable procession. Having seemingly won the league once, at a canter, they then had to win it again, definitively, under pressure at the death of a thrillingly close game.
Their dominance over the first half of the season should not be disregarded. Far from it – the large margins of victory they achieved in that period were, ultimately, what proved decisive in determining the final positions. But in between times they experienced a genuine scare. They may have built a series of impenetrable battlements at the front of their castle but they left the back door wide open and unmanned. JURA very nearly snuck in to steal the prize.
When LWW’s last pair came in they needed just 14 to win. Even 13 to tie would have been enough to deny CTU the title as on the adjoining pitch JURA were fulfilling their half of the bargain by winning in an unfussed professional manner. At that point CTU were even money at best but, not a moment too soon, they remembered who they were and what they did best. Trappa took 1 for 3 in his 3rd over, Ty and Saul picked up a wicket apiece too. They all returned to bowling the immaculate lines and lengths that, when supported by organised efficient fielding, make it necessary for any batsman to produce something inventive in order to score. The quicker men found consistency down the channels on or around off stump and a fuller , almost yorker length. As a team they began to communicate, think clearly and stick to a plan. The scoreboard was not compelling batsmen Danny and Ally to look for the bigger scoring strokes but they found the shackles very tightly clamped. Being restricted to scampered runs here and there they subsequently took risks and lost wickets and each time one fell the momentum seemed to shift a little back towards CTU.
Still, LWW required only 11 to win off the final over, bowled by slowie AJ. 10 would have been enough for the tie that would satisfy JURA’s ambitions. It was a stick-or-twist moment – there was a real opportunity for a decisive killer blow. Maybe a big swing that connected and beat the field for a boundary. Or perhaps flighting the ball  looking to deceive the batsmen in the air and grab a vital wicket. But neither team blinked and instead LWW edged closer and closer without moving ahead. A two, three singles and another two left 4 to win of the last ball but CTU knew that conceding any more than 2 would see their night end in heartbreak. AJ sent it down with just a hint of a loop, towards leg stump, still pitching in line. Knowing that soft hands and a sprinted single would no longer be enough, Danny used his feet to try and meet it but misread the line. The ball straightened off the pitch, the keeper took it above the bails and the fielders' yelps of delight were heard even before the stumping was completed. It was probably fitting that they finally won the league by virtue of a piece of tight accurate bowling because in the final table it was Runs Conceded where they outperformed  JURA.
CTU had needed to regain the focus and discipline that took them to the top. For large parts of this game they seemed to be trying to pull rabbits from hats instead of relying on proven science. It was not an implosion by any stretch, and there were plenty of instances of the ability that made them worthy winners overall but they were also a long way from the high standards they had previously set. When they batted Saul and Ty began calmly enough but when Ally took 3 wickets in one madcap over it seemed to affect the whole team’s approach. AJ and Trappa went after Ally, whose second over contained 2 sixes but they also lost five wickets – some caught playing uppishly, others the result of unnecessarily risky running.  That the team fell short of posting an imposing total owed much to a lack of coherent strategy, they didn’t seem to know whether to accumulate or dominate. Their last pairing, Matt and AJ, faced 2 overs from Vee which meant they were limited in their choice of tactics but there were still signs of muddled thinking in Steve’s final over, Matt being run out with both batsmen at the striker’s end.
As the teams changed over news filtered through that JURA had compiled 134 against Ova Throws. It was a strong statement and it shone a searing light on the 62 runs that CTU had to defend.
In fairness, although the closing overs of the match were especially notable for CTU regaining their composure, their fightback began before then. LWW opened with the strokeplayer Vee and this could have proved a make-or-break decision. As it happened, he added 25 with Steve, his threat not entirely nullified but neither had he given LWW total control. CTU were sharp in the field, Trappa in particular regularly hitting the stumps directly. LWW’s second pair Paul and Kenwyn posted a similar total to their predecessors, albeit via a more measured approach. Of CTU’s quicker bowlers, Trappa was the one who found the right areas most consistently while AJ was always hard to get away. The others served up the occasional freebie – not a disaster but enough to relieve some  pressure on the  batting side. As LWW’s total crept nearer to its target, that pressure fell on CTU. There was tension in the air. The bowlers lost their lines and lengths when looking to make too much happen, the shies at the stumps turned into potential overthrows and the fielders' rallying cries turned into in-house criticisms. The fightback was on but it may have been about to boil over.
It needed a cool, clear headed captain to steady the ship and that’s what CTU had. During the changing of the last pairs Ty got his troops together and got them singing from the same songsheet again. They took their time over decisions, talked to each other instead of arguing and, as if by magic, slipped back into the mode that had made them title favourites in the first place. Suddenly they were a unit again and they began to bowl and field as efficiently as the times when they were wrapping up another routine victory. The scoreboard told differently of course and when the last over began JURA were watching with their win already sealed. It wasn’t until after the final ball of a dramatic season that CTU could claim to be not chokers but champions.

 Inns of : CTU

PAIR NAME
SCORE
NET RUNS

BOWLER NAME
OVERS
FIGURES
Saul
Ty
41-3
26

Steve
3
2-26

Ally
3
5-33
AJ
Trappa
47-5
22

Paul
1
2-8

Danny
1
1-11
Matt
AJ
29-3
14

Vee
3
1-23

Kenwyn
1
0-16
                                          









RUNS    117    WKTS    11    NET TOTAL 62

Inns of : LWW

PAIR NAME
SCORE
NET TOTAL

BOWLER NAME
OVERS
FIGURES
Vee
Steve
40-3
25

Ty
3
3-30

Saul
3
1-33
Paul
Kenwyn
34-2
24

Trappa
3
2-17

AJ
3
3-19
Danny
Ally
25-4
5


















RUNS      99      WKTS      9     NET TOTAL  54         

RESULT :     CTU   WON BY    8 runs                             Umpire & Scorer : S. McVeagh

JURA v Ova Throws 18/3/2013


JURA      v   Ova Throws    on :   18 / 3   /2013  
                                        
Inns of : JURA


PAIR NAME
SCORE
NET RUNS

BOWLER NAME
OVERS
FIGURES
Chris P
Ryan J
33-0
33

Matt
2
0-24

Tim
1
1-18
Alex S
Pete C
44-1
39

Rob
3
0-34

Luke
1
0-9
Hamza M
Rich S
62-0
62

Zulfi
3
0-27

Akaash
2
0-27










RUNS    139    WKTS     1   NET TOTAL 134

Inns of : Ova Throws

PAIR NAME
SCORE
NET TOTAL

BOWLER NAME
OVERS
FIGURES
Rob
Tim
45-1
40

Alex S
2
1-13

Chris P
3
3-30
Akaash
Zulfi
33-4
13

Hamza M
2
2-15

Pete C
3
2-23
Matt
Luke
37-3
22

Ryan J
2
0-34

Rich S












RUNS       115     WKTS      8     NET TOTAL    75       

RESULT :     JURA    WON BY    59 runs                                  Umpire & Scorer : R. Bleasdale