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Above:
The victorious Devon team - and scorer Rachel Tozer
- surround Devon captain Bob Dawson after he collected
the Minor Counties Trophy. Below: Devon celebrate after
Ian Bishop dismissed Steve Naylor.
MINOR
COUNTIES TROPHY FINAL - AUGUST 6, 2008
Devon
v Berkshire at Lord's
A
FOUR-wicket salvo from paceman Ian Bishop put Devon
on course for a 40-run win over Berkshire in the Minor
Counties Trophy final at Lord's.
Devon had
blazed away to 290 for four in their 50 overs –
skipper Bob Dawson falling four runs short of a century
– which always marked them as favourites to win
the game. 
Bishop took four for 40 and Neil Hancock three for 63
as Berkshire were dismissed for 250 in reply.
Berkshire came out all guns blazing – they had
to faced with an asking rate of nearly six an over to
win – and lost opener Dave Barnes to Bishop in
the first over.
Mitchell Stokes (42) and
Craig Crowe (21) set a blistering pace and at 67 for
one Berkshire were ahead of the clock.
The game turned when Bishop picked off Stokes and Crowe
in successive balls, then followed up with dangerman
Jono McLean as Berkshire slipped to 82 for four.
Berkshire skipper Bjorn Mordt kept out the hat-trick
ball, but Devon were in the driving seat now and eager
for the next big wicket, that of McLean.
The South African took a ton off Devon earlier in the
competition, but was in and out for four yesterday –
caught out on the cover-point boundary trying to uppercut
Hancock for six.
At 82 for four Berkshire's hopes of winning the game
were pretty slender. When Bishop plucked out Naylor's
middle stump it should have been game over. The target
was 186 to win and half the side was already out.
With Naylor out of the way, closely followed by James
Morris at 113 for six, the game should have meandered
to its predictable conclusion. It didn't.
Berkshire captain Bjorn Mordt isn't the type to run
up the white flag and gamely battled on when all seemed
lost in a stand of 91 for the seventh wicket with Paul
Carter.
Carter (31) was first to go to a one-handed pick-up
and throw run-out executed from mid-off. Mordt perished
on 215 for eight to a superb reaction catch in the cordon
by James Hudson.
Richard Johnson was bowled first ball by Neil Hancock
and it was game over when James Hudson induced Carl
Crowe to chop the ball on to his own stumps.
There was nothing predictable about the way Devon batted
as they accelerated away from a slow start to leave
Berkshire without a clue how to get the brakes on.
Opener Sandy Allen went early and Mole could have gone
for a single when he was caught at slip off a no-ball.
Mole went on to make 67 and saw the 100 and the 200
come and go before he got out. Along the way there was
a stand of 182 for the second wicket with his captain.
Dawson and Mole started to get on top of the bowling
once Lambert finished his 10-over spell, which cost
a modest 30 runs – and former Somerset and England
paceman Richard Johnson had gone off with a leg injury.
Dawson was making what appeared to be inexorable progress
towards a century with a mixture of carves through the
covers and singles here and there. Maybe his concentration
went in the face of the erratic bowling from Craig Crowe,
but he chased a wide and which would have been better
left alone and was caught behind for 96.
Ten runs later Mole's long vigil ended. He stepped out
to drive Carl Crowe and was brilliantly caught at full
sprawl at short cover by Barnes.
With five overs to go Devon were 211 for four having
just lost David Court to a catch at mid-wicket. Then
the fireworks really started as David Lye and Hancock
savaged Berkshire's flagging bowlers.
The pair added 79 in the final five overs – 41
of them in the 49th and 50th as Hancock raced to one
of the quickest half-centuries the old ground has ever
seen.
Hancock, dropped on 31, slammed 53 not out off 26 balls
with five fours and three sixes.
Devon 290-4 (R I Dawson 96, N D Hancock 53no, C M Mole
67), Berkshire 250 (B H D Mordt 79, M S T Stokes 42,
P R Carter 31; I E Bishop 4-40, N D Hancock 3-63). Devon
bt Berkshire by 40 runs.
Lost
ton doesn't bother Dawson |
Hanks' shares credit
Tim
Lambert bowling to Chris Mole at Lord's in the Minor
Counties Trophy final