Barbados: Club Cricket Round-up (7 Jun 1998)
Pickwick 229 and 95
07-Jun-1998
7 June 1998
Barbados Club Cricket Round-up
The Barbados Nation
Premier Zone Win First Match
by Louis Linton at Kensington Oval
Pickwick 229 and 95. Spartan 190 and 135/4
An unbroken 89-run fifth-wicket partnership enabled Premier Zone
champions Big B Spartan to pull off a six wicket victory over E.S.A.
Field Pickwick.
Set a victory target of 134 in a minimum of 47 overs, the Parkites
found themselves struggling on 46 for 4 but Peter Payne and captain
Jeffrey Mascoll came together and with some sensible batting saw
Spartan home.
The heavy set Payne struck the ball all over the Oval in a hard
hitting knock of 61 to follow his first innings 69. Mascoll,
captaining Spartan for the first time, compiled 35 good looking runs.
Earlier, E.S.A Fields Pickwick last six batsmen added just 23 runs to
be bowled out for 95. Veteran off spinner Tony Howard picked up four
for 22 to finish with match figures of nine for 95.
Maynard In Vain Effort For St. Catherine
By Philip Hackett at the Brewery
Banks 193 and 132. St. Catherine 196/7 dec. and 118 /6.
AN impaired pitch and a five wicket haul from pacer Dayne Maynard
(five for 65) set up a gripping afternoon session, but failed to
secure full points for BNB St. Catherine against Banks.
Maynard made the Banks batsmen struggle on a difficult batting pitch
after they had resumed on 46 without loss, 43 ahead of St. Catherine.
Banks lost wickets steadily and quickly slumped to 67 for four.
Enterprising and innovative batting by Louis Spooner (21) and
wicket-keeper/batsman Mark Estwick (22 not out) lifted them to 132.
Roger Blades took three for 21 and Julian Beckles two for 35.
Set 130 for victory with a minimum 20 overs to be bowled before the
final 15 in the last hour, St. Catherine lost both openers by the time
the score reached 32.
Darwin Brathwaite was leg-before-wicket to Winston Reid (three for 44)
while Gregory Jones was caught by Richard Carter at mid wicket off
medium pacer Sean Armstrong (two for 29).
St. Catherine found scoring difficult against Reid and Armstrong even
though the pitch had eased considerably. Banks dropped several
catches, letting off topscorer Sean Sargeant (45) at least twice.
At 68 for five St. Catherine seemed completely out of contention, but
a 48 run sixth wicket partnership between Sargeant and reliable
veteran Thelston Payne (28 not out) brought them closer than had
seemed likely.
Schools South Fall To Lawmen's Force
by Ryan Holford at College "A"
CHIC Schools South 186 & 99. Police 205 & 81/3
CHIC Schools South could not escape the long arm of the law and duly
fell to the lawmen by seven wickets just 15 minutes before the close
of the final day's play.
Resuming for an overnight position of 36 for one, the schoolboys would
have entertained thoughts of batting all day. Their reality, however,
was far different as they were undone by the pace of Emmerson Sealy
and a rain-affected wicket.
The first casualty of the innings was opening batsman Quame Miller who
was bowled by Sealy off the day's second ball. The following over his
Foundation schoolmate Kirk Wilkinson fell by a similar route, but on
this occasion to veteran Sylvester Louis. And with Franklyn Stephenson
being outfoxed by Louis for 3 and Vonrick Nurse failing to get off the
mark the South side were disastrously positioned at 49 for four.
The students showed some fight and although wickets fell steadily
throughout the day, under the circumstances their final score of 99
could be described as well-earned.
Dion Lovell played intelligently for 38 before being run out and Ryan
Nurse's attractive 26 not out were the bright spots in an otherwise
dull performance. Needing only 81 for victory the anxious policemen
had a rocky start, losing openers Feliston Gilkes and Stephen Herbert
for ducks to the bowling of Stephenson.
Stanton Proverbs and Derwin Thompson came together in a third-wicket
stand of 44 that steadied the cops and virtually took them home.
Thompson was undefeated on 35 . Sealy's Man-Of-The-Match performance
was clearly the deciding factor. He took five for 22 in the second
innings giving him match figures of ten for 66.
Empire Wrap Up Maple's Tail
By Chris Gollop at Trents
Maple 102 and 94; Empire 213/3 declared
JUDGING BY last week's batting collapse, Maple's Romain Benn should
have known better than not to turn up on time for the start of
yesterday's third and final day's play at Trents - even if he was just
half-hour late.
For that was all the time that Empire needed to wrap up the Maple
tail, and ensure the Bank Hall men full points in their opening game
of the season.
Benn never made it to the crease as former Barbados fast bowler Victor
Walcott quickly added another two wickets to the three he took last
week to finish the innings with impressive figures of five for 30 off
9.5 overs.
Yesterday, he only needed 1.5 overs to have Gregory Simmons caught at
forward short leg for a duck, and to knock back Matthew Moore's off
stump.
The match had effectively been won on the second day when the Bank
Hall men gained a handy 111 run first innings lead, and then put
Trents on the run at 77 for seven in a dramatic second innings
collapse on a good batting wicket.
After the match the visibly disappointed Maple captain Andrew Payne
was quick to admonish his batsmen in a behind-door team meeting.
"I told them we could not afford to be bowled out for 102 on the first
day on a good batting pitch like this one against a side like Empire."
He accepted that the side fielded for this opening game was a
relatively inexperienced one that missed much of the experience that
carried the St. James-based team to its only Division 1 title in 1992.
But even the old guard of Derrick Skeete and Pedro Agard failed to
produce, scoring less than 25 between them in two innings.
"We will have to look at the middle order. The younger players have
ability, but I think some of them went out there too over-confident,
and did not stick to the game plan. I expect things to get better as
the season goes on, but right now we have to go back to the basics,"
Payne said.
Lavine Sparks For Spartan
by Philip Spooner at Queen's Park
Spartan 317/8 dec. YMPC 152 and 162
Big B SPARTAN kept their nerve when it mattered most and inflicted
an-innings-and-three-run defeat on Sports & Games YMPC. Led by the
allround talents of Mark Lavine, Spartan captured 14 YMPC wickets to
snatch an unexpected victory with 7.4 overs left.
It was not easy - actually as YMPC fought hard and Spartan made a few
puzzling tactical decisions.
Captain Ronnie Griffith, in his first game at the helm summed it up
this way: "It was rough, rough, man," he said with a relieved look.
"But we stuck together and that's what mattered."
He praised the efforts of pacer Lavine who captured seven wickets for
35 runs as well as taking two fine catches at crucial stages
yesterday.
Overall Lavine took 10 for 87 in the match, including six for 61 in
the first innings and four for 26 in the second. The drama unfolded
after tea with YMPC, after falling 165 short on first innings,
wobbling in the second innings at 25 for five.
Hopes gone
By then the main batting hopes were gone with Sherwin Campbell, Leon
Layne and Adrian Jones falling to Lavine and Roger Coward and William
Lashley perishing at the hands of veteran seamer Dexter Toppin.
However YMPC showed some backbone, with Terry Rollock (33) and Anthony
Hurley (36) adding 51 for the sixth wicket in 36 minutes.
However both departed in quick succession to catches by Lavine -
Rollock brilliantly taken at point as he tried to cut and Hurley's
slog pocketed at mid-wicket. At 91 for seven Spartan seemingly had it
covered.
Kenrick Marshall then jumped in and caused a change in plans. He
launched a brutal attack on spinners, Dave Marshall and Aaron Barker,
striking seven fours and three straight sixes in a whirlwind 63.
Dave, the national leg-spinner, lost hit wits and was clouted for 46
in six overs, while off-spinner Barker kept probing but he could not
keep thing quiet.
Kenrick's blows took the visitors to within three runs of making
Spartan bat again, but in trying to thump another boundary he fell
victim to Barker.
Rodney Broomes then succumbed to Lavine at 5:12 p.m. and all Spartan
rejoiced.
Carlton Cash In On North Boys
by Petra Ann Peters at St. James Secondary
Schools North 265 and 86, Carlton 252 and 101/3.
United Carlton crushed CHIC Combined Schools North by seven wickets to
start their season on a winning note.
Set 100 runs in 18 overs, Carlton got home with three balls to spare.
The Black Rock team lost hard-hitting Jason Clarke with only 11 runs
on the board but they found the right tonic from the bat of veteran
Wilbur Bruce. His unbeaten 55 contained two sixes and four fours.
Earlier Schools North needed just 16 balls to take Carlton's last two
wickets and gain a first innings lead of 13. Lanky left-arm spinner
Sulieman Benn took them both to claim career-best figures to seven for
86.
The schools' second innings showed nothing of the discipline displayed
in their first as they succumbed to poor shot selection and immense
pressure from Carlton.
The only batsmen to show any form of fight were opener Jason Parris,
who survived the swing bowling of experienced seamer Hendy Broomes to
score 28, and Rohan Nurse who scored an unbeaten 24. Broomes bagged
four for 17, captain Shirley Clarke had two for 13 and Allan Rogers
nabbed two for 28 with his left-arm spin.
Hutson Shuts Out Pickwick
by Bernard Babb at Wildey
BET 283-4 dec. and 112-4 dec., ESA Field Pickwick 235 and 101-5.
A four-wicket haul from veteran seamer Lonnelle Hutson secured first
innings points for BET over Pickwick as their match ended in a
predictable draw.
Bowling accurately on a somewhat rain-affected pitch, Hutson swiftly
reduced Pickwick from their relatively strong overweek position of 204
for four as they added just another 31 runs.
After left-armer Ian Bradshaw dashed Rondell Yearwood's hopes of a
century, having him caught by Floyd Reifer at first slip for a
responsible 85, medium pacer Hutson wrapped up the Pickwick innings as
he grabbed his four wickets for 12 runs off six overs.
Ian Watts, Wayne Yarde and Adrian Jones did not trouble the scorers
and it was all over for Pickwick in less than an hour.
BET, with 48 runs lead on first innings, then quickly knocked up 112
for four declared in their second innings, setting Pickwick a target
of 161 for victory.
Reifer, who missed his team's first innings on the opening day as he
was attending a West Indies camp in Antigua, gave the BET innings
momentum yesterday with an aggressive 45, which included four sixes.
He shared a productive second-wicket stand of 52 with opener Ron Bates
(25) which laid the foundation for BET to post 100 runs off just ten
overs.
Pickwick were not expected to challenge the total and predictably held
out for a draw, although they lost five wickets by the close.
Captain Adrian Griffith top scored with 35, which included five
boundaries, while Graham Bethell, who was last out for 54 in
Pickwick's first innings, contributed 26 when they batted a second
time.
Collins Cuts Down BCL
by Ancille Inniss at Blenheim A
Wanderers 121 and 118, BCL 124 and 92
fast bowler Pedro Collins bagged five for 25 as Cockspur Wanderers
defeated BCL by 24 runs.
Set 116 in almost an entire day, BCL were undone by the left-arm swing
of Collins and did not help their cause by some injudicious batting on
a slow pitch. The match was over at tea.
The West Indies "A" fast bowler send down 18 overs pausing only once
for a two-over rest.
He set the tone for Wanderers' victory when he bowled opener Sherwyn
Codrington in only his sixth delivery without a run on the board.
Richard Foster, batting at No.3, received one ball when he was
leg-before. The hat-trick was averted by Dave Clarke but he did not
survive for long as a wild swing ended with a catch off fast bowler
Irwin Armstrong.a
Collins kept up the pressure on the hapless BCL and was rewarded
further with the wickets of Testa Baker - trapped leg-before, Carl
Chapman caught by wicket-keeper Corey Glasgow and Winston Herbert
caught at second slip.
Some resistance came through Kamal Turney who showed much promise as a
top order batsman and Stephen Brathwaite. Turney topscored with a
valuable 31, while Brathwaite contributed a useful 20.
BCL finally surrendered in the first of the mandatory 15 overs.