Surrey thrive in the school atmosphere
Is there a venue where you can get closer to your heroes than Whitgift School
Emma John at Whitgift School
11-Aug-2004
Surrey 148 for 2 (Ramprakash 55*) trail Lancashire 210 (Schofield 69, Mahmood 4-40) by 64 runs
Scorecard
Scorecard
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Is there a venue where you can get closer to your heroes than Whitgift
School? The question came to mind at lunch, as impromptu games took place in
front of the hexagonal brick pavilion and Surrey players shouted
encouragement to the young players from their balcony. The kids soon
returned the favour. When Surrey returned to the pavilion having bowled
Lancashire out for a mere 210, the children lined up on the outfield to clap
them off. Gloriously, not a single steward told them to get off the pitch.
By the end of the day you sensed that the Lancashire players would have
happily have given Surrey directions off the pitch, and added a few other
instructions too. Surrey went to their beds with a deficit of only 64,
thanks largely to a partnership of 102 between Mark Ramprakash and Scott
Newman. It wasn't always a barrel of laughs - there was a certain amount of
sheer grind after tea - but both played some classy drives. Newman in
particular delighted the crowd; so much so that when they applauded one fine
shot he thought he'd reached 50 and celebrated a run early.
The Whitgift ground is almost in miniature, with a pavilion so small that it
can hold only the home team - the Lancashire players have to change in tents
alongside. The bank that slopes down to the pitch teems with picnickers who,
meander around the pitch at the intervals, rubbing shoulders with the
bowlers as they do their stretches.
Not that Martin Bicknell or Jimmy Ormond needed much warming up. Bicknell
took the first Lancashire wicket in only the third over of the day,
straightening Mark Chilton up with a good length ball that carried to first
slip. Ormond followed up in the next over, sneaking the first ball back
through Iain Sutcliffe's defences.
There is no doubt that the pitch here undulates - from one angle it looks
like a badly laid rug. But although the bounce was variable it never stayed
particularly low and it was the amount of lift that the Surrey bowlers
generated that seemed to throw Lancashire into confusion. Jamie Haynes and
Dinesh Mongia were both out to poor shots and suddenly Lancashire were four
wickets down in only the ninth over.
Only Chris Schofield prevented a total rout. After his false coming as
England's Messianic leg-spinner, Schofield is now re-defining himself as a
batting allrounder. He rode his luck today, dropped in the covers on 7
and in the slips on 8, but refused to let the team's situation get him
down. He hit eight fours on his way to a half-century, more than a couple
with a powerfully swatted pull shot that the slip cordon mimicked him
admiringly.
For a while Schofield had the company of Glen Chapple, who set about ruining
Ormond's figures, including six boundaries from just two overs. The
Schofield/Chapple partnership doubled Lancashire's total, but when Chapple
wafted to second slip, Azhar Mahmood moved in and picked off the stragglers.
Emma John is is deputy editor of The Wisden Cricketer.