A groggy MDCC made it to breakfast the following morning to be met with an even nicer, warmer, sunnier day. Advil Omlettes and Aspirin Muffins were consumed, and we set off for an 11am game.
Sarasora International CC vs Mad Dogs CC - 1/14/07
JPM takes up the story again...
Chanderpaul did not, in fact, turn up. Apparently, his wife had objected to his
abusing the small boys of the Mad Dogs' bowling attack for a second day,
insisting he stay home and mow the lawn, wash the dishes and generally spend
time with her before the West Indies left for their Indian tour on Tuesday.
This
scenario would, of course, never arise with any of the Dogs, all of whom are MEN
who wear the trousers in their households and can play cricket or golf, and
drink beer with the boys, just any time THEY want to.
Banerjee and Knight then put on 78 for the 2nd wicket during the first 20
overs, a solid enough start. Banerjee was fairly sedate and solid, but was just
starting to find his timing when he ran himself out for 14 (35 balls, 1 x 4).
Knight had survived an early chance to the slips which turned out to be very
costly to Sarasota, and settled in to play another glorious array of drives,
dominating the stand with Banerjee.
He was joined by Kimberley who, after a
night on a saline drip and supplementary oxygen was clearly feeling with oats.
He laid about the Sarasota bowling with his usual array of strange shots,
exploring the stratosphere and the outfield and, once again, displaying the
uncanny knack of identifying what fielders couldn't catch (on today's display,
that was pretty much the entire Sarsota side..). With Knight scoring more
classically, 74 more runs were added in only 7 overs, both batsmen scoring off
pretty much every ball, Kimberley mowing one huge six, Knight several fours.
Eventually, Kimberley achieved the seemingly impossible feat of actually being
caught, another skier being held onto, to leave with a glittering 36 to his
credit, scored from only 23 balls (1 x 6, 2 x 4). Who needs Prasanna and
Thornton?
Wilson played himself in and ran himself out (1, 6 balls), but Knight
was still going strong, scoring absolutely at will and all around the ground and
reaching a century in fine style with a 6 over wide mid-on. A few runs later he
top-edged vertically to the keeper, leaving with 102 from 98 balls (2 x 6, 8 x
4; 50 from 65 balls, 100 from 94 balls), a great knock for the second day in
succession.
Thaker kept the score ticking over in the closing overs,
contributing a useful 14 not out (14 balls, 1 x 4), Santosh used his feet
aggressively to pick up 7 from 6 balls before hitting a catch, and Simon struck
his only ball for a nice 4 through the covers, as the innings closed on a highly
commendable 216 for 6 from 35 overs.
Simon then had McGregor snicking a
cut to keeper Banerjee for a duck, so the Sarasota innings was in trouble, off
to a slow start with two key batsmen out. Lomesh and Kellston then put on 60 or
so, mostly off the change bowling off Kojima and Moore, the former bowling quite
well, the latter delivering a load of old tosh and getting punished accordingly.
Kojima dismissed Kellston, the batsman charging and missing for Banerjee to
flatten the stumps, inelegantly but effectively. Harrison brought himself on for
Kojima, and struck two killer blows in his first over to end all hopes for a
Sarasota recovery. Lomesh drove hard and high to long-on where Kojima ran in and
dived forward to take an excellent catch, smashing his head into the ground in
the process and stunning himself The very next ball, Persaud smashed Harrison
hard and high to long-on, where Thaker held on to a hard, low catch on the run.
So, what would have been two big sixes at MDP, became two wickets at Sarasota,
the benefits of a big ground to bowlers are very clear.
Harrison's hat-trick was
straight but blocked - still, he had done the business, removing the last two
batsmen capable of winning the game. The rest of the Sarasota innings was an
anti-climax, as the remaining batsmen, with the exception of Bates, were simply
not up to the task of scoring the required runs. Consequently, and rightly,
Harrison rang the changes with his bowling attack, as several people were given
one or two overs.
Wilson bowled Bacchus, Kojima removed Greenway courtesy of a
lobbed catch to Moore at gully, and in the last over of the innings, Knight
caused Ronnie to snick to Banerjee, thereby suggesting that if he would only
take the trouble to work on his batting a bit, he could become a genuine
all-rounder. Hart remained at the end 10*.
The Sarasota total of 175 for 8 from 35 overs left the Dogs
comfortable and worthy winners by 41 runs, and the weekend series split at an
appropriate 1-1. Harrison did a nice job winning the game and keeping everyone
involved, and the Dogs' fielding and keeping was excellent, with every chance
taken (a huge difference from the Sarasota effort). As always, thanks go to Neil
K. for organizing everything - after his efforts with the bat, he'll no doubt
want to visit Sarasota again next year (or even next week..).
Simon 5-0-24-1
Wilson 7-1-18-2
Kojima 6-0-29-2
Moore 6-0-40-0
Harrison 5-1-15-2
Santosh 2-0-11-0
Thakar 1-0-5-0
Kimberley 1-0-7-0
Farriker 1-0-7-0
Knight 1-0-11-1
Simon 5-0-24-1
Wilson 7-1-18-2
Kojima 6-0-29-2
Moore 6-0-40-0
Harrison 5-1-15-2
Santosh 2-0-11-0
Thakar 1-0-5-0
Kimberley 1-0-7-0
Farriker 1-0-7-0
Knight 1-0-11-1
A great win for us, and a great conclusion to the weekend! We drank at the ground until night fell, then had a bite on the St Armand's circle before dropping into bed - a job well done.
One interesting note: Today Johnathon Hart played for Sarasota. This is the same Johnathon Hart that played for the Mad Dogs back in 1992 (some of our earliest days). great to see him! He has also promised more MDCC photos from the days yore.

