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The
triumphant Exeter team celebrate their Devon Cup win
over Plympton
SUNDAY,
AUGUST 26
PLYMPTON
suffered the agony of a second successive defeat in
the Devon KO Cup final when Exeter defeated them by
five wickets at Torquay yesterday.
Jeremy Williams hit a century,
his third of the season in league and cup, as Plympton
made 230 for seven in their 40-over allocation.
Aussie run machine Marshall Hood cracked 128 not out
as Exeter won with 10 balls to spare and ended Plympton
hopes of going one better than last season, when Sandford
defeated them in the final at Tavistock.
Hood was dropped twice before reaching 50 and made Plympton
pay for those slips by batting through from start to
finish. The Western Australian has made more than 900
runs in all competitions this season and it's easy to
see why.
Anything pitched up was driven ferociously, anything
short was pulled or hooked and anything wide outside
off-stump was carved through the off-side.
Plympton had a dream start when Exeter opener Glenn
Lammonby was run out in the third over, but good news
was in short supply for a while after that.
Hood and former Tavistock
batsman Arnie Searle plundered 62 for the second wicket
in a stand that ended when Searle was bowled for 29
aiming to hit Keith Donohue's quicker off-spinner over
mid-wicket.
Tom Gower and Hood took the game by the scruff of the
neck by adding 91 for the fourth wicket and the longer
they stayed together the less likely a Plympton win
became.
Jame Pfeiffer wheedled Gower out with a catch at mid-wicket
and Plympton hopes flared again when Mark Gribble was
lbw to Danny Hawker trying to pull.
Hawker then bowled Simon Yeo round his legs and at 188
for five the game was in the balance… briefly.
Plympton's bowlers were running out of puff –
Hawker was hit around a second spell – and the
game was won and lost in a flurry of boundaries as Hood
and Will Hanson knocked off the last 42 without mishap.
Plympton's total was built around a century from Jeremy
Williams, who came in at 12 for one and kept going until
he was last man out with the score on 208 for seven.
Andy Walter went cheaply – he was caught in the
gully by Adam Gribble off Simon Bird – and Williams
was just getting settled when Dave Wrench holed out
to deep square-leg, where Hood took the catch.
At 13 for two Plympton needed to regroup and Williams,
in concert with Dan Robotham, did just that by compiling
a stand of 103 for the third wicket.
Exeter captain Tipper, back for a second spell, broke
the stand when he had Robotham stumped for 36.
Williams then saw a succession of partners come and
go at the other end as a promising 116 for two became
138 for six.
Alex Trevarthan went caught behind off former Tavistock
left-armer Tschepo Legodi, Craig Miles was caught and
bowled by a diving Mark Gribble, who followed up by
bowling Donohue for a duck.
Plympton were down to the last 10 overs when Saddiq
Mohammad came out to replace Donohue and in desperate
need of some fresh impetus. They got it.
Williams, who had got to 50 in 49 balls, added his second
50 in 43 more as Exeter's bowling got a little ragged
as the overs ticked down.
Saddiq proved a willing running mate. Matching Williams
almost run for run as he accelerated from a standing
start to 47 not out off 35 balls.
Plympton added 92 runs in the final 10 overs –
most of them in the Williams-Saddiq partnership of 72.
Bird suffered under the lash as he came back for three
overs at the death and was clubbed for 33 runs. The
usually miserly Adam Gribble fared worse: his last two
overs were milked for 29 runs.
Williams, who hit seven fours, two sixes and an heroic
number of singles on a baking hot day, was finally out
on 108 when an intended big hit off Bird ended up in
the clutches of Hood at mid-off.
Plympton 230-6 (J Williams 108, S Mohammed 47no, A Trevarthan
36; S Bird 2-48, J Tipper 2-34, M Gribble 2-40), Exeter
233-5 (M Hood 128no, A Searle 29, T Gower 38; D Hawker
2-46). Exeter bt Plympton by 5 wkts.