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BELSTONE vs STICKLEPATH
PEARSALL TROPHY
BELSTONE BEAT STICKLEPATH BY 29 RUNS

 

 

Name of player

How out

Score

 

 

Name of player

How out

Score

1

WOODS

ct DAVEY b BRADBURY

31

 

1

BOARDER

ct WALPOLE b HALL

9

2

GROSS

ct BAKER b BOARDER

38

 

2

BUTLER

lbw b WALSH

3

3

DRAKE

lbw b LETHEREN

5

 

3

TYLER

ct PATERSON b ROWLANDS

15

4

TREMAIN

b BRADBURY

9

 

4

BAKER

b ROWLANDS

19

5

PATERSON

RUN OUT

3

 

5

LORAM

ct WOODS b WALSH

4

6

ROWLANDS

ct BOARDER b DAVEY

7

 

6

BRADBURY

ct WOODS b WALSH

1

7

WALPOLE

ct LETHEREN b BOARDER

0

 

7

DAVEY

ct DRAKE b PATERSON

11

8

DENNIS

ct TYLER b BOARDER

1

 

8

LETHEREN

b ROWLANDS

0

9

HALL

ct GEERING b BOARDER

13

 

9

TRIPP

b ROWLANDS

11

10

PARSONS

RUN OUT

0

 

10

GEERING

NOT OUT

8

11

WALSH

NOT OUT

4

 

11

MALLETT

b PATERSON

3

 

Extras

 

22

 

 

Extras

 

10

 

TOTAL 

for 10 wkts

133

 

 

TOTAL 

for 10 wkts

104

 
BOWLING ANALYSIS
BRADBURY: 9-0-29-2
LETHEREN: 9-1-54-1
DAVEY: 9-3-15-1
BOARDER: 8.2-4-10-4
BUTLER: 3-0-8-0
TRIPP: 2-0-6-0
GEERING: 2-0-7-0
BOWLING ANALYSIS
PARSONS: 7-0-18-0
HALL: 6-3-8-1
ROWLANDS: 9-2-25-4
WALSH: 5-0-25-3
DENNIS: 2-0-11-0
PATERSON: 2-0-8-2

Belstone and Sticklepath met for their first ever afternoon game at Rew Meadow last Sunday, playing for a new trophy presented by WJ Pearsall, the long-established Okehampton jewellers at the top of the Arcade.  In a match dominated by bowlers the only partnership of note came right at the start of the Belstone innings and even that would not have happened if Liam Bradbury had managed to hang on to a sharp return catch from Phil Woods off the very first ball of the game.  Woods took advantage of his let-off to dominate a half hour opening partnership of 44 with Pete Gross, hitting five boundaries and bringing up his 600 runs for the season before being well caught on the midwicket boundary for 31 by Ben Davey off Bradbury (9-0-29-2).  A familiar Belstone pattern followed as wickets fell steadily with none of the middle order getting into double figures.  Richard Boarder was most effective in this passage of play, taking four for ten but Davey also kept things quiet at the other end, only conceding 15 runs from his nine overs.  Sharp Sticklepath fielding also contributed, including two direct-hit run outs, so that Belstone slumped from 102 for four when Gross was out for a valuable 38, to 110 for nine with 16 of the 45 overs still left.  Chris Walsh (4 not out) then joined Rob Hall (13) to drop a dead bat on the next 13 overs while they scraped together another 23 runs for the last wicket in what turned out to be a very important partnership.  As a result Belstone used up almost all their overs in reaching 133 all out at tea.

With only a lowly run-rate of three an over required Sticklepath could afford to take their time, playing out the opening 13 overs from Jonathan Parsons and Hall for 26 runs and the loss of Boarder, smartly taken in the gully by Chris Walpole for nine.  Andrew Paterson clung on to a hard hit pull to dismiss Phil Tyler for 15 at the start of an effective spell from Neil Rowlands (9-2-25-4) which also included the wicket of Sticklepath skipper Julian Baker for 19, just as he began to attack the bowling.  In a day of good catches Woods pulled off the best, airborne at midwicket to send back Loram (4) off Walsh (5-0-25-3).  Sticklepath kept in contention as the lower order of Mark Tripp (11), Anthony Geering (8 not out) and Davey (11) pulled the total into three figures but the late introduction of pace from captain Paterson  (2-0-8-2) ensured that Belstone emerged the winners by 29 runs.
 

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