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TUESDAY,
AUGUST 7
WHAT
could have been a grandstand finish to the game between
Devon and Cornwall at Budleigh Salterton fizzled out
into a dull draw when the game was quietly called off
by mutual consent with seven overs to go.
Devon, who bowled
Cornwall out for 176 in their second innings, were left
what would have been 59 overs to make 258 to win.
Ten overs out Devon were more than a hundred short with
seven wickets in hand and neither side had any objections
when umpires Guy Randall-Johnson and Bill Smith offered
to pull out the stumps.
At first glance Devon's target of around four and half
an over to win the match wasn't that steep, although
appearances can be deceptive.
Neither side had scored consistently at five an over
throughout the match and it was always a tall order
batting last on a wearing pitch against a largely defensive
Cornwall field.
Justin Stephens and Ryan Driver bowled frugally at the
time when Devon needed to accelerate. It only needed
a couple of wayward overs to bring the game to life,
but they never came.
Devon felt Cornwall weren't prepared to take to many
risks in pursuit of victory as they were afraid they
could backfire on them.
Cornwall could justifiably claim they had won more sessions
during the match than Devon did so why should they risk
losing when they had a case to claim they had been the
better side?
The writing was on the wall as far as an outcome was
concerned when the final 17 overs started as the target
was hovering around the eight an over mark then.
Once Devon captain Bob Dawson was caught at long-leg
having a swish at Ryan Driver, the game was over as
a meaningful exercise.
Devon's David Court thumped Alex Smeeth down the ground
for two sixes on his way to a quickfire 24 off 13 balls
before the plug was pulled.
Opener Chris Mole batted from start to finish of the
Devon innings for an unbeaten 57.
Earlier, Cornwall, 15 for one overnight, advanced to
55 before Devon claimed the first wicket of the morning
session.
Gary Thomas, who resumed on three not out had moved
to 35 when Tom Allin trapped him leg-before.
Having been 55 for one before Thomas departed, Cornwall
found themselves 61 for three with Matt Robins out caught
behind off Ian Bishop.
Tom Sharp and Driver put an end to any more Devon breakthroughs
during their stand of 46.
Devon captain Dawson brought himself on as a partnership
breaker and had the desired effect by knocking over
Driver for 23.
Cornwall were now in a difficult
position, largely as a result of the rain interruptions
on the second day, as they had to take chances in the
pursuit of runs.
The clock was ticking down on the time left to bowl
Devon out to win the match - and Cornwall didn't have
enough runs to declare. The only option was to hit out
and hope someone came off.
The tactic wasn't a huge success. Skipper Sharp kept
going almost to the end, but no one other than Rob Harrison
reached double figures at the other end.
Dawson dangled the bait by bringing on slow left-armer
Arwyn Jones and Cornwall swallowed it.
Chris Hunkin – bowled by Rob Newman – was
the only batsman Jones didn't get out as Cornwall slumped
from 131 for four to 176 all out.
Jones threw the ball up, the Cornish batsmen chanced
their arms and one by one they trudged off.
Sharp, top scorer with 64, was ninth out when Jones
lured him out of his crease and Sandy Allen whipped
the bails off.
Three balls later Jones bowled last man Neil Ivamy to
finish with figures of five for 14 in the innings.
Cornwall 282 (M L Robins 93, J C J Stephens 53, G M
Thomas 36, C P Martin 39; I E Bishop 4-85, R I Dawson
4-52, A Jones 2-53) & 176 (T G Sharp 64; A Jones
5-14 Devon 201 (R J Foan 31no, A P W Allen 30; D F Lye
36no, R J Newman 25; R C Driver 8-63) & 153-3 (C
M Mole 57no, N C Bettis 44). Match drawn. Devon (11pts),
Cornwall (13).
Days one and two