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DEVON
gave Somerset a run for their money in yesterday's Twenty20
challenge match at Budleigh Salterton before going down
to a two-run defeat.
Devon have played enough
of these games over the years – this one was sponsored
by Budleigh chairman Malcolm Baker through his Heathfield-based
catering firm – to know what the ground rules
are.
Somerset rack up 220 or more, the professional flog
the bowling to all parts of the ground and out it, then
Devon roll over tamely and lose by a hundred runs or
so.
The script must have been lost at Ottermouth as that
wasn't how this game went at all.
Somerset had to work hard to make 145 for eight –
Marcus Trescothick top scoring on 38 – the Devon
made a real effort on the chase.
The target came down in leaps and bounds in the
last five overs – 32 off four, 21 off three, 15
off two, until it was nine to win from the last over
bowled by Steffan Jones.
Any Devon League player would fancy that on at Saturday
afternoon, but in front of an 800-plus crowd on a sunny
Bank Holiday the pressures are slightly different.
Jones came up with the goods and four to win of the
last ball with a new man on strike proved just too much
for gallant Devon. It was a cracking finish to a cracking
game though which swelled the Devon youth coffers by
several thousand pounds.
The early demise of opener Carl Gazzard, who walked
past a straight ball from Trevor Annning, focused a
few Somerset minds as they took it nice an easy for
the first 10 overs.
Trescothick was caution epitomised as he had 16 to his
name in ones and twos before launching Rob Newman for
six over mid-wicket.
Peter Trego and Ian Blackwell came and went before Trescothick
misjudged Andy Procter's slower ball and was fourth
out on 84 with seven overs to go. Only then did Somerset
start to raise the tempo.
Wes Durston belted a bright and breezy 33, then
Jamie Hildreth assaulted the Devon bowling to make 30
not out from 16 balls. Hildreth hammered three sixes,
one of which left an expensive dent in the roof of a
parked Toyota behind the poplar trees at deep mid-wicket.
Bowling is secondary to batting in Twenty20, but Devon
pacer Anning deserves a pat on the back for his three
in a row – Gazzard, Trego and Blackwell –
at a gross cost of 17 runs. Procter had three
for 46 when the slog was on.
James Hudson's four overs for 21 runs deserves a plaudit,
as does the return catch to remove Durston. To be fair
to both parties, Hudson risked being disembowelled
if he didn't catch it, Durston had hit it hard, so there
was an element of self-preservation involved.
Devon got just the start they didn't want when
opener Rob Holman was out for a duck, Trego persuading
umpire Matten to raise a finger, but they fought back
through Sandy Allen and David Lye as 55 went up for
the second wicket.
Allen (36) was rough on Trego, who was pulled from the
attack after going for four fours in his third over,
and played a full range of drives and dabs before holing
out to Blackwell.
Lye kept going to make 29 and hastened Blackwell's removal
with a couple of big hits. When Lye went Devon wobbled
briefly, dipping from 72 for three to 74 for
five as Omari Banks (2-30) and Arul Suppiah spun through
them.
Steve Spoljaric and Josh Bess put Devon right
back in the game with a stand of 57 that took them within
touching distance of victory.
Bess (27) had his middle stump pinged back by Jones
with 15 needed, but Newman shuttled between the wickets
as Spoljaric kept whittling away.
Nine to win off the last over was gettable until Jones
fed Spoljaric a single, got Newman on strike and knocked
his middle pole out of the ground with one ball to go.
Anning had to hit four to win and could only manage
two.
Somerset 145-8 (M Trescothick 38, W Durston 33, J Hildreth
30; T Anning 3-17, A Procter 3-46), Devon 143-7 (S Allen
36, S Spoljaric 34no, J Bess 27; O Banks 2-30).
Somerset bt Devon by 2 runs.