Let's have a look at the new scoreboard ... |
Hopperational details
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Date & Venue
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Friday 13
June 2014 at The Oval
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Result
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Surrey beat Sussex Sharks by 10 wkts
Sussex 148-5 from 20 overs
(Joyce 45, Wright 31, Brown 33*,
Machan 21)
(Peterson 4-0-26-2, Batty 4-0-15-1)
Surrey 149-0 from 15.3 overs
(Roy 81*, Amla 61*)
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Competition
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T20 Blast -
South Group
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Hopping
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First proper cricket post for this blog, my second time at The Oval. I do not have complete records for my
occasional trips to live cricket, but I think this is one of seven venues I
have ticked off. The others would be
West Bromwich Dartmouth (Birmingham League), Lord’s, Edgbaston, Trent Bridge,
Northampton and The Rose Bowl. Match
watched in the company of several esteemed work colleagues thus ensuring top
quality intellectual conversation and debate between the overs and no
involvement whatsoever with making beer snakes, oh no.
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Pre-match preparation
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Mainly
consisting of being ready for a Le Mans style departure from the car park at
the end of the school working day!
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This match in one sentence
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Sussex, put
into bat, stuttered their way to a total of 148-5 before they were blown away
by Roy and Amla, whose unbeaten partnership won the game for Surrey in the
sixteenth over.
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So what?
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Surrey keep
alive their hopes of a quarter-final spot as they have a 3-2 win-loss record,
and stay ahead of Sussex (2-4) who now look unlikely to get past the group
stage.
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The drama unfolds
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I started
to do a ball-by-ball scoresheet but the combined effect of various porters
and ales meant that it all fell apart in the 15th over when I must
have missed an extra or the batsmen crossing or something. Oh well. Colleagues were sympathetic and commented that I was losing weight - I assume that's what "lightweight" means in this context. Respect to scorers – the level of concentration needed for T20 is
considerable!
Surrey won
the toss and chose to bowl first. Luke
Wright dominated proceedings in the early stages and Sussex reached 43
without loss at the end of the six-over power play (where field restrictions
apply). Wright took a six and a four
from Jade Dernbach’s first over and another four off Kevin O’Brien. Azhar Mahmood was more economical in his
first spell of 2-0-7-0.
However,
Wright was bowled in the 7th over by Tom Curran and then the
innings lost momentum as slow bowlers Robin Peterson and Gareth Batty applied
the brakes. Batty only conceded 15
runs from his four overs and the spin pair took three quick wickets to leave
Sussex on 66-4 just after the midpoint.
Ed Joyce
struck a few blows (5x4, 1x6) on his way to a top score of 45, supported by Ben
Brown (1x4, 2x6), but you were left feeling that Surrey would not be
disappointed with the decision to field first. Sussex
148-5
Here's a scene-setter clip which is the final over of the Sussex innings, bowled by Azhar Mahmood.
The reply
soon turned into an anti-climax, as can happen in T20 (and maybe more often
than the authorities would like us to notice). The crowd on our patch started to make
their own entertainment as Jason Roy and Hashim Amla imposed themselves on
the attack. I wonder when the physics of beer snakes will make it on to the mainstream physics syllabus - this will be vital knowledge for the next generation of cricket fans. The score was 19-0 off two
overs and then into the 60s before the end of the powerplay. Roy’s 50 came off 27 balls faced and the
team passed 100 in the 11th over. Monotonous but brilliant.
Here's a clip, including one of Roy's sixes and some slightly less coherent commentary and less steady camera work ...
Kevin
Pietersen, listed at number three, never made it to the middle.
Amla reached his 50 in the 14th over and the result was
never, ever in doubt. The final
boundary count was 8x4 to Amla and 11x4 and 2x6 to Roy. A very impressive, dominant performance and
nothing really to tell about the bowling figures except a whole line of
zeroes in the last column. Surrey win by 10 wkts
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Ground
Pix
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Match (and Beer Snake) Pix
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Sadly, Newton, Rutherford and Einstein never experienced the Beer Snake phenomenon and as far as I know there are no definitive equations covering the critical parameters such as the angle of dangle and the topple point. When they have sorted this microwave big bang background radiation anomaly, I am sure physicists will get right on it. We can confirm that the Heisenberg principle applies - a given steward can know that a snake will appear, but he can never know the exact position AND the exact momentum of the snake at the same time.
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What Next?
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No
idea. Watch @GrahamYapp on Twitter for
details!
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