Saturday, 29 September 2007

Wick Dinner 4 - The Wick xi

This year a new initiative was launched at the dinner. 12 men were picked who exemplified the playing effort on the sward during the year. Not necessarily those who played the 12 best innings or returned the 12 best sets of figures, these guys quietly or loudly delivered beyond their potential. A match winning knock here, a massive improvement shown or an impressive season there, these boys were much in evidence.

Paul Sayce - Forced his way from the 3s to the 1s by sheer weight of runs, with fifties for both the 3s and the 2s on the way up. Displaced Fudgey as best point fielder inthe club and picked up Fielder of the year at the dinner.

David Fudge - Runnnnnns at more than 40, unbeaten skipper of the promoted 2s. He led from the front, being the outstanding batsman in the team which included scoring his maiden league hundred. All this alongside 3xi organisation and all-round Wickness saw him claim the coveted Chairman's award for 2007.

Mark Mackie - consistent runnnnns including July purple patch for all teams. His ability to control the game from the middle order led to many vital partnerships and scores, especially for the 1xi where others faultered. His fielding was also consistently top drawer.

Kamran Raza - Tons of runs. Bags of wickets. Kamran was the best batsman and probably the best bowler in the 1XI for 2007. Rarely looking troubled, Kam scored vital big scores where others failed, notably against Effingham with a blistering hundred. The leading wicket taker, his bowling varied from the alarming and quick to the subtle and controlled. He is a leader on and off the field and was deservedly voted Player of the Year 2007. BOSH.

Simon Bishop - despite a quite hilarious run of ducks early season which everyone at the dinner was very pleased about, Barrell's attitude and commitment bounced him back with some serious innings and hitting only he can provide. Against Croydon, the league champs, he was quite breathtaking. His bowling was typically erratic, but he still found wickets where others were unable. Pushed Saycey very hard for best fielder in the club.

Alex Wright - Or should we call him Alex Red ink? A brilliant first season at The Wick, progressed from the 3xi with top score of 47* to score 76* and guide the 2xi home in a fantastic run chase at Old Tenisonians. Another great recruit for the club and as soon as he gets out we can start talking about his amazing average. React to Light specs meant he could always see and was often very cool.

Nick Clark - Old Iron Gloves. Did the business behind the sticks for the 2s and bashed 60 just when it counted to help secure promotion for the 2s to cap a great season.

Shaun Whinney – Bowled like a bowler and batted like a batsman which was more of a surprise. Played 90 per cent of his season in the 1s reflecting real progress at Winter nets and a keen ability to pass the outiside edge. Shaun also helped the 2s promotion push with a devastating Michelle against Old Sluts and a composed innings of 60* and 100 partnership with Alex Wright spared the blushes of the top ordure at Old Tens.

Zammack Tughral – The 2006 bowler of the year never really found his feet in what was a difficult season for legspinners. Despite stodgy decks and fewer opportunities than last year he progressed enough to play for Middlesex u19 and has been awarded a scholarship with Surrey CCC for 2008. He will do the Wick proud.

Iain Greenwood – Doc was the experienced prong to the 2s attack that helped the younger bowlers with consistent wicket taking performances. Doc found himself twice on a hat-trick this season. His agricultural hitting down the order especially his jug avoiding 48 against Old Sluts helped the side build totals on more than one occasion.

Junaid Iqbal – Junaid burst onto the WICK scene with regular impressive displays for both the Saturday 3s and Sunday team. His mature bowling and fantastic attitude meant that he took more than 25 wickets in his first season of senior cricket. If there is a game of cricket being played Junaid will be there and is a great testament to the colts section.

Tom Robinson – A popular 12th man, Tom’s commitment to the club this year has been fantastic. Ever present at Winter nets and a main player throughout the 3xi campaign, Tom finally broke into the 2xi to make his debut away at Effingham. Tom's first ever spell in league cricket was a phenomenal 7 overs for just 8 runs. Tom has a fantastic future ahead of him.

All the boys got a nice certificate and there are rumours that Clarky has framed his and it's now hanging in the downstairs Thomas at Wick Road...

Thursday, 27 September 2007

Fullers League Dinner - Roll up to watch Merrow pick up "our" cup

Wickman can think of nothing better to do with his Friday November 9th than to meet up in town, have a few Britneys, get on the train to Esher, have a slash on the common, weave up to Sandown, hoover down some lagers, swill some red wine around the old roof of the mouth and then sing "Promotione" as Fudgey wanders up to pick up our runners up pennant for being undefeated all season and playing some handsome cricket.

Wickman will then stand and applaud as the Merrow skip sheepishly wends his way up to pick up the trophy for losing lots of games and having two conceded.

Only kidding... but Wickman will be there. He's expecting to see lots of 2s faces coming along as well plus the usual club heros like Matty D, Joey etc. Please email Nips if you are coming. I know that will be difficult, but just select Keithjnicholls@tiscali.co.uk in your email "TO" box and send an email saying "yes I will be coming you great basil and will bring a cheque for 30 nicker with me on the night, it's not like I have anything in the diary that far ahead and my bird won't mind me going out on the lash with the boys one more time".

Hey look Grav might have a few racy tales to tell. And comedian David Lee could be a genius raconteur. It's good value...

16TH ANNUAL DINNER AT SANDOWN PARK RACE COURSE

FRIDAY 9th NOVEMBER 2006 7:00PM FOR 8:00PM
Carriages 1:00am

GUEST SPEAKERS
DAVID GRAVENEY ENGLAND'S CHAIRMAN OF SELECTORS
&
COMEDIAN DAVID LEE

TICKETS @ £30 EACH

Wednesday, 26 September 2007

Wick Dinner 3 - Chairman's Award

Wickman doesn't care what everyone else thinks. The Chairman's Award is special. By all means knock off 500 runs at 50 or take 60 wickets. Perhaps you could take 15 fearless catches at short leg.

What makes a cricket club special is not the cricket. Everyone at a cricket clubs up and down the country plays cricket. But some people put in hideous amounts of effort for others to be able to just turn up and play. It's the behind the scenes stuff that makes a cricket club what it is.

This year any number of people struggled valiantly to make the club a success. And Wickman has forgotten a few no doubt. Chairman Nips spent more man hours than anyone at the club over the summer. Golby took over the running of the bar and got out Sunday sides. Hibby organised and compered socials. AJ did fixtures. Ali scored. JT and Frank Lips umpired. DBW expended energies on egg sandwiches. Cransey rolled and organised. Kirky, Mooray, Joey, Lloydy, Tun-Up, Doddy, Del, Mackie and, hilariously, Garf, DIYed. Others did too. Coley did kit. Garf worked with the Colts and did the website. Massive efforts all.

Matty D did just about everything you could ask. Leafletting in the Winter. Nets. Selection. More nets. Calling people to beseech them to play. More beseeching. Skippering the 1s. Opening up. Closing down. The small matter of hewing a tour from the solid rock. What a year. Well played.

And Dom Lowns and Clarky were the ones who were nominated despite others putting in just as much. On behalf of all those others (and countless who Wickman forgets, his fourth glass of ving rouge swilling down his purple gullet) these two were picked out as representatives of the general effort. Dom because, as the Chairman said, he is the Wick's Mr Fixit. He's delivered TWO Wick Dinners in six months, organised countless events, dragged Poles in to cleanse the club, made deals with printers and sourced ingredients for all sorts of socials. Clarky was mentioned in dispatches for painting, plumbing, blogging (who IS Wickman?), compering, burger cooking and generally making life on the committee a bit lively.

The winner was Fudgey. Fudgey is the exemplar of Wickness. His year started in November with the planning meetings for recruitment. It continued through Nets in January. He didn't let it lie there by playing almost every pre-season game. He attended and ran socials. He Djed. He revitalised the 2s and took them to promotion. He socialised. He cajoled. He selected. He stapled together 3s sides. And he demanded the same commitment from others. What a year he had. Well deserved. Take a bow... You are Wick and you are LIVELY.

Must (tryh) ard (er)

It had to happen. How could someone resist the opportunity to write this crappy headline? Anyone would think this site could do better. Metro could surely afford a better sub? And what of The Star - this is a national daily - surely THEY could find a different angle? NO!

And you know what's worst about all these mind numbing headlines? They didn't even come up with them. They merely used what the brain dead PR at the ECB came up with in the first place. And Wickman knows all about brain dead PRs...

Tuesday, 25 September 2007

Wick Dinner 2 - Awards

The handing out of trophies is always eagerly anticipated at awards dinners. It's an honour to be nominated etc blah blah blah. But who WON those babies? As far as Wickman can remember it went thus:

Fielder of the Year: Nominated: Jimmy C, Barrell Winner: Saycey
Bowler of the Year: Nominated: PE Man (Shaun Whinney), Kamran Winner: Junaid
Batsman of the Year: Nominated: Fudgey, Mackie Winner: Kamran

Of the prizes for cricket, Junaid's fantastic performance as a young star of the future was difficult to ignore for the judges. This boy's a talent and no mistake. Similarly you couldn't ignore the weight of runs - including a big ton which was later described to me by Bobby in almost breathless terms - and the other "minor" knocks that Kam put together when it came to the batting award.

And of course with Kam being close to the bowling award too it was really a very good all round performance that was going to keep him out of the cricketer of the year top spot. Shuan was recognised for his all round performances with bat and ball alongside Junaid's bowling... but it really did HAVE to be Kam.

Monday, 24 September 2007

Wickman Loves Indian Cricket

...which all takes Wickman back to a one day game he watched at Lords. Tickets were purchased at the last minute and he sat under cover in the bowels of the Mound Stand. At some ungodly hour the game started and Wickman was subjected to a most un-Lords and un-Wickman experience.

Sat amongst the Indian supporters by 11.27 he felt like he had tried to attack a VIP Merc in Iraq only to find it was protected by Nichollsaway the new anti-insurgent protection system he is marketing. Drumming, shrieking and whistling the Indian support had something to loudly celebrate off every ball. A leg bye was whistled to the rafters. A chinese cut was greeted with a sound similar to that greeting the final whistle at Wembley in 66. It was unbelievable.

None of that "oh good shot" stuff. No slightly sniffy response to an outside edge between slips one and two. No, sheer enjoyment of every ball, every nuance.

Wickman bantered with a close neighbour when a leg bye was cheered as would a returning hunter laden with a deer be following a long famine and was put firmly in his place. "Cricket is FUN. We're having FUN Loosen UP!"

Wickman did. It took another bottle of wine. But he did... these guys were not at Lords by the way...

2020 Final Won By Inja

Back in February Wickman was a big fan of the Indians. How, Wickman said, would the rest of the world's top orders outscore India? You might imagine that Wickman sees this splendid victory as some sort of vindication...

But how could Wickman? This was not the sexy Indian top order that a billion Indian fans have become intoxicated by. Oh no. Sachin, Sourav and Rahul didn't make the flight. VVS was busy bashing 53 and 100 for Lancashire to almost deliver the title to the Red Rose boys.

No, what's worrying or exciting depending on your score in Norman Tebbit's cricket test (that's RACIST) is that there's hardly an oldster in this side. Crikey boys they didn't even play one of the world's finest EVER leg spin bowlers Anil Kumble (yes, yes I know some people say you had to play him as a bowler of induckers yawn yawn). Don't try to tell me that if Chris Schofield and Shahid Afridi are being feted for their abilities in 2020 that Anil couldn't have been THE bowler of the tourney....

No. They did it with a couple of attacking bowlers who are younger than Pete The Lord Culham's bat, the genius offy Harbhajan who is considered not good enough to have a regular test place and RP Singh. Yuvraj actually failed by his standards in the final. Sehwag didn't play. Gambhir anchored the innings. This bodes well for India. Really well. And for those of our countrymen who fail the cricket test? Enjoy it, really enjoy it, because it was a really good tournament and you brought it to life...

2020 Final Watched By Audience of Truants

Organisers of the World Twenty 20 final scheduled it for a South African Bank Holiday Monday. Genius. Well done. That's guaranteed that the only people who will be able to watch it live are in time zones about 6 hours ahead or who are prepared to get out of bed in the middle of the night. Additionally there are bank or religious holidays in Cambodia, Dominican Republic, Guinea-Bissau, Japan, New Caledonia, South Korea, Taiwan and Trinidad. So that's good for them then. All those cricket fans in Cambodia... Yesterday, a Sunday, had no play. Please.

So today anyone who is not the unwaged, pulling a sickie, students and anyone prepared to lig off for the afternoon is struggling. The best we can hope for is a furtive earpiece and the dulcet whine of Graham Gooch. Well - its only hit and giggle after all...

Wick Dinner 1 - Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?

The Wick dinner was a great night and no mistake. There will be more to follow this week but who, who was there, will ever forget The Chairman's rendition of Culture Club's Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?

Wickman can answer in the affirmative that he did want to hurt the Chairman once the song began. If Wickman had been able to reach his weapons broker on the phone and secure a handheld missile (a Stinger, Redeye or Dragon are amongst Wickman's favourites) he would have taken out the Chairman to end the extraordinary aural assault...

In fact, Wickman has contacted a secretive friend who "does a lot of work in Iraq". This "friend" runs a security company which is currently working on defense mechanisms for VIP cars. Essentially you press a button when your armoured Merc is under attack and something nasty happens to deter insurgents from removing your hub caps, forcing open your doors and mussing with your barnet. He's been working on releasing offensive gasses. Wickman has now suggested fitting some major speakers to the underside of the car and running through Chairman Nips howling his vocal stylings at a dangerous level, say 150db, which should first deafen and render unconscious any attackers.

Wednesday, 19 September 2007

Yuvraj Broadside Sinks England

Yuvraj Singh is good. In fact he's very good. Wickman noticed this in February. But Yuvraj had a stinking world cup and largely looked out of it in the recent one day series between England and India. He also has an odd hairstyle that makes him look like a bizarre Lown. Wickman can't find a picture of him looking like this, but here is surrounded by veg. He looks about as clever as some of it. But he's very popular, rich and probably knobbing a hot Asian babe. Which would probably be what he'd tell Wickman if he was confronted with Wickman's views.

But today he seriously handed it out to Stuart Broad. It was tough to watch the youngster as he seemed powerless to do anything about the mauling he was handed, not even trying a bouncer, slower ball or anything cunning whatsoever. He just ran up, stuck it up there and then watched, with a tinge of sadness, as he was deposited in the stands, out of the ground etc etc.

England leave the tournament with the same playing success record as Zimbabwe. But at least Zim beat Australia. We've been humbled. Dicked on in this game. There's no comfort to be taken because Graveney et al even picked what everyone thought was a good side. It's hardly as if we missed Straussy, Cook, Bellend and Monty for example.

The only thing that is keeping Wickman sane tonight is the astonishing thought that no one has come close to emulating James Hibberd's knock of a couple of weeks ago. Even Yuvraj would have struggled to keep going at that rate...

Monday, 17 September 2007

More innovation needed in International Cricket

After a chastening weekend in front of the box for the smash and grab stuff from South Africa, Wickman is demanding more innovation in International cricket - and sport in general.

The time was when a couple of shepherds could smash a ball around a field using their crooks, a couple of stools and some sheep for fielders, make up some rules and turn it into an International game. Obviously they needed a bit of help from Hambledon and later the MCC but they invented the game. It then took the best part of 500 years before we started getting regularly beaten at it. And it wasn't until mid way through the last century that it was more than the Australians (let's face it they were exported Brits too) took us apart. Now any Tom, Dick and Hamed fancies having a pop at us and we're powerless to resist.

A couple of years ago we were the only ones even bothering with 20-20. No one cared. Now we're amongst the worst teams in the world at it. It's taken the Aussies a couple of stabs at it and they already look ominously good.

Look at Football. We were fine with that until last century. Whipped everyone. When Billy Webb-Ellis picked up the ball and ran with it so began the slow decline in English rugby prospects too (briefly stemmed in 2003).

The domination cycle in sport has shortened considerably. It only takes a couple of months, maybe a year, for us, as inventors of all the world's great games, to get dicke on. No, its about time we came up with a new version of cricket. I am thinking something innovative (Wickman likes to be outside the box) like 10-10 and then 5-5 and finally let's sell the world boundary bowls. If we practice like billyo in private, suddenly call a world championships with a couple of weeks' notice (having written up a really complicated rule book) we might lead the world for a couple of weeks at least. Although the current world champion of Boundary Bowls is a South African... damn.

Friday, 14 September 2007

Dinner Time... A note from Treasurer Lown

For those of you who have not yet made your mind up about the end of season dinner, why the Barry not? For those of you who are coming, event details are below.

If you are still undecided, final numbers have to be confirmed on Tuesday 18th. So we need to know before then. Please email Dom, or let either Keith, Matty D Clarky or Fudgey know. We already have over 55 confirmed numbers, and can only seat 80 so please let us know ASAP!!

For those that are attending, we will take your word as honour and payment! Due to people pulling out of the last dinner, the club had to pay over £600 to cover the original invoice. Ideally I would like you to pay prior to the night, but will be taking cheques or cash on the night (£35, £25 under 21s). If you have any dietary requirements (apart from lots of food - thanks Hibby) please let me know (dominic_lown@hotmail.com)

Details of Hampton Wick Royal Cricket Club end of season dinner

Saturday 22nd September.

Beaufort Suite, Hotel Antionette, Beaufort Road, Kingston, KT1 2TQ - http://www.antoinettehotel.com/kingston/location.html

Map - http://www.streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=518292&y=168346&z=0&sv=kt1%202tq&st=PostCode&lu=N&tl=Hotel%20Antoinette&ar=y&bi=~&mapp=newmap.srf&searchp=newsearch.srf

Drinks reception from 7pm courtesy of this season's duck tax collection (many thanks to Barrell, Ford and Clark)
3 course dinner served form 7.30pm
Awards for the season (and some other special "prizes") The traditional "Amooray" Disco / Karaoke
Bar closes at midnight
Local taxi number - 0208 977 9999 (Kam's cars)

Look forward to seeing you all there for a great night. If anyone is in need of a babysitter, I think Barrel said he was back and free this weekend and keen to help out.

Punter Ponting's Poker Face

Wickman would love to play poker against Ricky Ponting. Take yourselves back to the Ashes series at Old Trafford when Punter gloved one down the leg side and exposed Australia to a nerve-shattering final 24 balls with Glenn Pigeonshouldbeduck McGrath at the wicket.

As he stood there waiting for the umpire's finger to go up (he was a guilty as a puppy next to a pile of poo) he started gulping. It was like he was Gollum from the Hobbit trying to swallow a live fish whole. If you are English or Welsh you will recognise that moment. It was pure despair. It was good. It was only a shame, frankly, taht we didn't win the game. He would have looked like a science lab peristalysis experiment.

Wickman had forgotten how much pleasure that could give until he saw old Punter swallowing harder than a whore with a blow job specialism trying to service a centre of town Saturday night taxi queue in record time (get that for a simile) as Zimbabwe scored the winning runs yesterday. Wow. It was like watching Deep Throat. Not that Wickman's seen it. Oh no.

Let's hope we see it tomorrow... or next time Wickman is having a poker evening. So Punter, that card on the river, perfect was it? (Watches Punter gulping like a performing seal in a fishmonger's store cupboard) All in then I think...

Thursday, 13 September 2007

Aus vs Eng - Preview

Muahahahahahahahahahahaaaaa. Can you believe it? England have the chance to dump the Aussies out of the 2020 cup thingy. Muaaaaaaaahahahahahaha. Well we never. Tomorrow was supposed to be about Australia humbling us into second place and sending us to play someone hideous like South Africa nice and early in the tourney. Now the Bruces have to thrash us just to get past the mighty Zim...

Wednesday, 12 September 2007

Aus vs Zim. Bwa ha ha ha ha etc

Look. Wickman knows that England hasn't played Zimbabwe yet in the 2020 thingy. But Bwahahahahahahahaha etc that Australia have been humbled. Let's hope Zimbabwe's win has given some cheer to its poor beleaguered population. Frankly, probably not. The country at home is starving. Children are dying of malnutrition. Watching the 2020 world cup is just what a hungry nation needs. Erm... not. Well done ICC for continuing to allow cricket to be played though... perhaps the cricketers will send tea home. Let's hope they don't leave any because Wickman's Mum used to say that African children were starving and he should finish his greens / swede / cold mashed pototoes. It's probably the cricketer's mothers that are starving in this case...

Oops sorry Wickman forgot himself there. This is not a political blog. England, should they beat Zim tomorrow, could dump Australia out of the tournament later this week. Fabulous. Bwahahahahaha

When the Stewarts met Zammak

HWRCC is delighted to announce that Zammak Tughral has been awarded the Jim Laker Spinners Scholarship from Surrey County Cricket Club.

Neither Zammak or the club were entirely sure what this entailed so we lifted this from Surrey CCC website:

"The Jim Laker scholarship aims to improve the technique of existing, talented spinners. Unlike many scholarship schemes, which tend to focus on the development of young cricketers, this is open for any gifted spinners aged from 11 to 35. Pat Pocock and other former Surrey spinner bowlers will provide a twelve-month, one to one, coaching programme for those selected for the scholarship. The Jim Laker scholarship programme is firstly aiming to discover talents for the future of Surrey County Cricket Club".

At a presentation last in the India Suite of the OCS Stand at the Oval last night, whilst Surrey and Somerset slugged it out for Pro40 points, Zammak (plus other spinners from the county) were awarded their scholarships by a party of dignitaries including Micky and Alec Stewart, Lilly Laker (Jim Laker's widow), Pat Pocock, and a few others who I failed to get the names of.

As you can see it was a dream fulfilling moment for Alec Stewart to meet Zammak, and he was later overheard to comment, 'Meeting Tugger is like a dream come true - It's just heart-breaking that I never had the priviledge to keep to him. Although maybe thats a good thing as I hear he has a reputation of making both batsman and keepers look rather silly'.

Before the presentation Zammak, his family, and a few of the Wick boys, including MattyD (who collected a transfer fee rumoured to be the highest ever paid to a club by a professional club), enjoyed the bar and food laid on - on the DBW scale this was a 10. Salmon Bagels, king-prawn sandwiches, homous wraps, and fruit freshly robbed from an African Pygmy, including Pomegranite. Surrey have very kindly offered to give DBW a work-experience placement for the winter, so fingers crossed for next year everyone.

Zammaks nerves finally calmed a little, after some engaging conversation with Mickey Stewart. It was revealed though that Zam had unfortunately failed to do his homework when he commented to Mickey, "I've just been told you are Alec Stewart's father".

Mickey, a bit non-plussed replied: "Well last time I looked I was still Mickey Stewart but yes he does have something to do with me"

Meanwhile, Alec was waiting nervously in the wings to meet his Leg-spinning hero, but MattyD put his mind at rest:

"All you need to know Alec is that he turns it square - FACT"

Congratulations to Zammak on his fanatastic achievement, and hopefully this is further indication that the club is moving towards a very bright future.

It's Winter. So what do you do? HOWZAT 2

So you've mastered HOWZAT basic style.

But after a while situations where Willis B scores 8x6, 16x4 etc to make a career best 192* lead you to refine the rules somewhat.

As we know Willis is a charisma-free vortex that sucks the joy from television reporting. This evening Wickman saw him giving the mic to do the presentations at the Oval in the exciting Pro 40 game that guaranteed the Wurzel-lovers promotione...

Willis: Aaaaannnnnd let's welcome Justin Langer to the stage the winning CAPtin.
Langer: Hiiiiiiiiiiiiyaaaaaa. Like Zen mannnnnn. Oval duuuuuuuuuuude finally won something heeeeeeere...
Tresco: Listen man it's cool to be here. I need to get right back home tonight in case the wife thinks I am touring but its cool...
Willis: dribble dribble dribble bore bore bore annoying voice. looks like a tall old lady. stops talking
Langer: My Kung Fu skills got me through. Hiiiiiiiiiiiiyaaaaaa (stares with big eyes)

Giving up on this filth you change the rules on Howzat. On the first role if you get 1, 2, 3, 4, - or 6 you note it and then roll again. 1+1 is a single. 1 + anything else is a dot (Tests only). 2 + 2 = 2, 2+1 = 1. 2 + anything else is a block.

Now, when you roll - and then roll - again you are out. UNLESS, in 2007, you roll Run Out or Stumped. Then you can ask for a TV replay (odd out, even in). Very occasionally (if you have your favourite batsman at the crease such as D I Gower) you can appeal a catch too as the cheating oppo will have tried to claim one which might have been grassed.

This means scores are more realistic. However. You can revert to the original method if the oppo require 77 in the final innings. All of a sudden its a Bunsen, Underwood is bowling, and its so difficult to bat that he can get a wicket if it rolls a 3 or 5.

Or was Wickman taking it too seriously?

Tuesday, 11 September 2007

It's Winter. So what do you do? HOWZAT 1

Wickman is devastated. There are three whole months until Winter Nets start. What will he do? As a young man, faced with a lull in cricket (and let's face it, in those days the only thing to do in the winter was to throw a ball against the wall at various speeds and hit it back again) he played HOWZAT.

What is HOWZAT?

HOWZAT is the cricket equivalent of Dungeons and Dragons. It's a game. At its most basic level the sad young pre-pubescent would take a hexagonal pencil to act as a die. With a bic biro (normally) he would press the nib of the pen in once on the first flat side he came to. Rotating it once sixth, he would press the nib in twice. Another sixth and three times. Then four etc. Then a thin line in lieu of five (of this more later) and finally six and six dots!

This pencil became the focus of the game. Finding a notebook one drew up two teams of 11. The real geek would seek out The Telegraph for versimilitude and choose two teams (preferably TEST teams) and begin a sad pencil battle between them.

Given Wickman's vintage imagine an England vs India Test. Opening the batting for England would be Boycott G, and Gooch G. Attempting to uproot their stumps would be Ghavri and Dev. The pencil would be rolled. 1, 2, 3, 4 or 6 would mean RUNNNNS for England. A 5 would mean a wicket for India. Roll the pencil again and 1 = bowled, 2 = lbw, 3 = caught etc etc. Six was always "freak dismissal" such as obstructing the field.

So totally unrealistic games of cricket were played out. The first over of a Test, Dev to Boycott might go: 6,3, 2, 4, 4, OUT (hit the ball twice). Then Roope, Knott, Cowdrey, Grace would all be bowled first ball and Underwood would score an improbable 347* to leave England to declare on 400-9 off 32.1. Or something.

India - owing to skilful rolling by the biased pre-teen, would be all out for 20 (beating New Zealand's all time lowest score) and would have to follow on, this time scoring a regrettable 19 (beating their own lowest score, this time all out obstructing the field in a world record disaster).

What was Wickman thinking?

Monday, 10 September 2007

Chairman’s xi vs President’s xi - Match Report

Chairman’s 194 (Stephen 47, Mackie 40something) President’s 195-7 (Culham 55*) Man of the match: Culham

Chairman’s: Fudge, Goulborn, Davies, Mackie, Hibberd, Stephens, High+, Tughral, Whinney, Nichols, Soppitt, Cameron, Ford

President’s: Ewen, Smith, Moore, Kamran, Lofting, Sissen, Culham, Clark+, Ewen, Godhania, Unsworth, Collier

Chairman’s xi vs President’s xi – or why you can’t beat experience

ex·pe·ri·ence // Pronunciation Key [ik-speer-ee-uh ns] noun, verb, -enced, -enc·ing. knowledge or practical wisdom gained from what one has observed, encountered, or undergone: a man of experience.

Saturday’s game was a classic match up between youth and experience. The youth, as is their wont, were keen to teach the old fellas a lesson and talked loudly of it. The Experienced were stoic but ready. This year the fashion has been for “vintage” cricketers to play on a Wednesday, leaving the youngsters to do much of the work while the rheumy eyed and stiff hamstringed occupy the close catching positions and hope that the ball goes elsewhere. Saturday though saw a stiffening of the sinews, not hamstrings, a summoning up of the blood, the action of the Tiger was imitated and the eye, not rheumy, was lent a terrible aspect.

There’s nothing like an inter-club match to get the juices flowing. It’s all very well sledging in a league game, but if you are reduced to enquiring who consumed all the meat-filled pastry comestibles because you don’t know much about a bat and have to settle for poking fun at his rotundity it’s not much fun. It’s so much more fun when you know the oppo, their foibles, their mental strength (or lack of it) and tensions are high because there are people you don’t want to get out to under any circumstances…

In the red hot environment of Saturday’s encounter only clear heads and low pulse rates would survive. And any mental frailty was to be ruthlessly exploited. Sissen had banked on experience to pay dividends, and, when the chips were down (poker, not potato) one of the wisest heads in the club eased the old guys to victory after a spirited declaration from Chairman Nips at 193-9 left 49 overs to chase down the target.

And all this in the face of terrible provocation. With Ford, Whinney and Tughral to defend the total (not to mention Soppitt, Cameron, Nipples and even Hibberd on show), the youngsters were confident that they would clean up and that the Chairman would take the spoils for the third straight year. In fact a bet was loudly announced round about teatime. It went like this. Kamran would top score for the President. If he didn’t make a ton then that would be that. The next highest score would be byes… money exchanged hands. This was a jab in the ribs that All the President’s Men could not ignore. The bet was loudly discussed in the changing room and steely resolve was the order of the day. But more of this later.

The Chairman won the toss and decided to let his boys set a total. This caused much grumbling in the older camp as only Ewen Jr and Runsworth are in their 20s, Kamran round about the 30 mark and the next youngest in the side could very well have been Clark. At 39 Clark still has a bit of nip in the legs on some Saturdays, but a lengthy binge on Friday down on the South Coast had rendered him unable to operate heavy machinery and it’s a moot point whether he should have driven to the ground never mind donned the ‘keeping gauntlets. The thought of these venerable Gentlemen, four of them having raised their bats for a half century of years in 2007 or before, chasing the leather and cork caused much amusement.

But little leather was chased. A very tight start for The President came from openers Ewen Jr and MS. It is some time since your correspondent has played in the same side as Ewen and he had forgotten the sheer pace that the impossibly tall and incredibly ginger one can generate. He was sphincter-looseningly fast.

Clark had a torrid time behind the timbers, rendered less mobile than Heather Mills McCartney at a barn dance by the previous day’s over indulgence, he was pinged on the left little finger (pre-broken a couple of weeks ago in a keeping accident) by an early leg side delivery. He had his right hand so bruised in taking some deliveries that were “left” by the openers that after a couple of overs he was thoroughly miserable and praying for someone to actually middle the ball so that he didn’t have to take anything. Sadly this did not occur much and he found himself taking a series of balls over head height and scrabbling around on the floor picking up spilled takes.

Fudgey and Golby opened up against this threatening barrage. With MS keeping it tighter than Luciano Pavarotti’s coffin lid at the other end but at least not threatening serious injury it was clear which end the batsmen preferred. Golby mentioned, after one LBW shout, that his pads were inadequate for this level of cricket. Fudgey lofted a few into the on side and even middled an off drive, but eventually succumbed clipping one too many up into the air.

Davies came, looked Daviesish for a while, but played down the wrong line to one of MC’s arm balls following the end of Lofting’s spell. Pouched at first slip he was replaced by Mackie. Golby played some crashing off and cover drives and looked in fine nick but was undone eventually in a way that has escaped me. Mackie too was in top form and together with Stephens scored heavily. Kamran bowled beautifully to both of them and was unlucky not to take a hatful of wickets.

This was the most profitable partnership of the match for The Chairman. Stephens, although he played and missed occasionally to Kamran, hit the ball as hard as usual at both ends and threatened to take the game away. However he was undone by Unsworth – who bowled beautifully – who found his edge. Clark made a hash of two attempts to catch the ball and finally managed to get a glove under the third attempt to send him back. High was quickly undone three balls later (quack – another duck tax victim) dismissed by the same bowler / keeper combination although Clark decided that the Custardo the Clown routine was a little bit outré and caught it first time on this occasion. Mackie also finally perished around this time lobbing a catch to Moore in the ring. Which is not a medical, but geographical, description.

Nicholls came and went, much to everyone’s amusement, dismissed by the returning Godhania who bowled very well for someone who had not picked up a ball in anger for 18 months. He removed a couple of others too, probably Hibberd and Tughral. Jimmy C and PE Man then added a valuable 20 or so and the declaration came with 9 down and after 46.5.

Tea was the usual, but with smaller quantities, DBW concentrating on the barbecue to the detriment of mid game snackage volume. Shocking. 5.

So then that bet was made. That bet was made in full hearing of the older gentlemen. And that’s the difference between youth and experience. Do you remember the story of Icarus? Icarus and old man Icarus (Daedalus) were in chokey courtesy of King Minos. Things looked bleak with no chance of parole etc. Now Daedalus was an inventor cove. He had access (unexplained by the source I consulted) to wax, feathers, something that could be used as a frame and some straps.

That’s pretty lucky in a prison. Perhaps, as it was pre the post office there was little use for sewing mailbags so they were busy stuffing pillows and making candles. Whatever. Daedalus made a couple of pairs of wings and handed a set to Icarus. The wings worked. They were able to put them on, flap about a bit and escape gaol. Pretty crap guards you might think. How could they NOT spot some old geezer knocking up the wings? And when the two of them started flapping around like sneezing turkeys in a Bernard Matthews plant worried about what the man with the stun gun was doing, surely SOMEONE would notice? Nope.

Anyway, Daedalus mentioned in no uncertain terms that it would be unwise for Icarus to fly too close to the Sun. Experience told him that flying too high and too close to the Sun would melt the wings. Did Icarus pay attention? No, he soared impetuously, the wings melted and he spiralled down into the sea and drowned. For flying too close to the Sun, read bet about runs and byes. IcaFudge was about to part with £5… That’s not to say that the bet was poorly judged. In fact after about 20 overs it looked like a nailed on cert. The Chairman opened up with the old ball and an all spin attack, rotating himself, Zam and Delboy for 18 overs. In tragic circumstances Smudger left one from Nipples only to have his stumps rearranged. Ewen Sr, his eyes lighting up like a pinball machine at “TILT” was hit on the back leg and perished LBW to the same bowler. Moore didn’t survive long either (memory fails me). Only Lofting and Kamran looked at ease.

In fact Kamran was leathering the ball all over the oval again and proceeded quickly to thirty-something in some style. Nipples turned to the new ball and Whinney. Kamran wasn’t made aware that it had been taken and Whinney’s first ball bouncer came on too quickly and he spliced a pull to square leg. Matty D. Strawberries. When Lofting then creamed a long hop from Ford to Zam on the edge of the square the President’s Men were in some trouble at 70ish for five.

Voices on the balcony offered scorn. The younger generation felt that the game was there to be taken. However it wasn’t. Culham and Sissen together could offer a great deal of experience and went about their business with some authority. There was plenty of time left in the game and both set about the target with great gusto. The Lord absolutely SMASHED Ford back over his head to the Kingsfield end, the ball crashing into the sightscreen, and while Zam twirled away he couldn’t rid the youngsters of either.

There was cheerful talk on the sidelines of the President having enough batting to make 194 with ease. When Sissen eventually perished Clark joined Culham and together they brought the rate down to four and below with some excellent attacking cricket, a few boundaries and some well run ones and twos. When Clark perished naffly patting one back to Whinney, only 20 or so were required and Ewen Jr accompanied the Lord right through to the penultimate over when the winning runs were struck. Culham had reached a well deserved 55* and delivered victory on a plate.

And that was that. Experience, in the form of Culham and Sissen in particular triumphed. Culham’s innings was a fine effort. Despite his bat containing so much retaining metal that he couldn’t take it onto an aeroplane and much muttering about age this was the stand-out performance of the day. Without his stickability for the lower order to play around him this could very well have been a humiliating third reverse for Bobby. It’s a shame he has all but hung up his boots. What with his MOM on tour and this, he is growing in most estimations despite the progress of time… Awards were handed out in the form of nasty drinks, Fudgey’s backfiring bet ensuring one of the most unpleasant fell to him. DBW’s Barbie was better than his tea, we ate and drank our way through Keith and Bobby’s generous bar and food tabs and, once again, it was a painful dawn which greeted Wickman on Sunday morning. Thank heavens the season is over. He’s not sure his liver could take another month.

Sunday, 9 September 2007

Sledging. When it's right, it's right

When Hibby arrived at the crease on Saturday he was reminded of the James Ormond classic sledge to Mark Waugh that at least he, Ormond, was the best cricketer in his own family by the close fielders.

You aren't kidding. Today little brother James Hibberd hit 157 from 47 balls in a national 2020 competition. He took four wickets too. He guided his side into the final.

In one over he hit the first five balls for six, the sixth was a wide and the seventh went for a one-bounce four. Awesome stuff.

Amusingly this might make Hibberd J a world champion as organisers believe that 157 might be the highest 2020 score made at the level being played... A Hibberd as world champion... where have we heard that before...

Thursday, 6 September 2007

Chairman's vs President's - Match of the Season II

Here Chairman N is overcome by the fumes of victory last year. He's hoping for a repeat. So he has picked... Chairman Nicholls, Fudge, Stephens, High, Golby, Mackie, Lown, Hibberd, Davies, Ford, Whinney, Zam Tughral, Cameron

Tuesday, 4 September 2007

All the President's Men

Sissen, Lofting, Moore, McCarthy, Culham, Smith, Ewen, Ewen, Godhania, Clark+(ats), Collier, Unsworth, Kamran

Chairman's vs President's - Match of the Season

Chairman's vs President's is this Saturday at The Wick. This is the format. Accept no substitutes:

PLEASE NOTE START TIME
Start time: 12.30
13 per side with 2 nominated as specialist bats/bowlers (can only do one or the other)
Captains have to participate 100%
Fullers League rules
Duck Tax applies
JT to umpire Tea: Charge £5
Chairman and President providing BBQ + drinks (£250) (ww)
DJ Fudgey Fudge on the decks
Invite to all members + females

Monday, 3 September 2007

The world hasn't stopped turning

Wickman is surprised. On Sunday morning it felt as if the world had stopped turning. We were up. Promoted. Chased down a winning draw total when the confidence was draining away. It seemed just slightly possible that Lingfield could win and dump us back down in 2divII and then half the team would have resigned from the club and drowned themselves in the Thames.

It felt good.

But by Sunday afternoon the prospect that the World had stopped turning was frightening. Good God! If the world had stopped turning and Olinda Vandals and Valley End had first use of the Wick strip what kind of nightmare Groundhog Day would that be? Imagine that Bill Murray was a venerable Wick member. Let's say Bill Murray was playing Sisso in the story of The Day The World Stopped Turning At The Wick.

What would happen to Sisso? The first time he turned up and couldn't get a game he'd have had a couple of sharpeners, placed a few bets and wandered home. And then, if you'v seen the film, it would start again the next day. And the next. And the day after that. Sisso would be drinking and placing bets for days on end. In fact, knowing Sisso, it would be quite some time before he tired of it.

Eventually though, he would. And what then? Try to get a game for one of the sides? Hope, as Wickman used to do against hope, that he would turn up to a cricket game and find the oppo one short? A call would go out to the crowd for a decent player and Billo (see what Wickman did there) would volunteer, crack a brisk 60 and take 4 for?

Or, finding that there were 22 players, umpires, scorers and even a surfeit of drinkers, would he then be forced to nobble an oppo player? How would he do it and cover it up? Dump them down the cesspit?

Luckily the World hasn't stopped. Which means its Chairman's vs President's this weekend and that there is only half a year to go until the new League season starts in May.

Perhaps the World will be hit by a meteorite, speeeeeeeed up for six months and then get hit by one going in the opposite direction and be slowed down on May 1. Or something. Please.

Sunday, 2 September 2007

2s Promoted in run a ball finale

Old Hamptonians vs HWRCC 2xi HWRCC won the toss and chose to field OH – 230-4 Speakman 95, Carson 91* Ford 25.5-4-110-3 HWRCC 216-6 Clark 60, Fudge 47, Goulborn 40

HWRCC Winning draw, 7 points and promotion

Wick seal promotion the hard way with thrilling run chase

So let’s get it over with at the beginning. After topping the table for every day of the season apart from the last HWRCC didn’t quite deliver the killer blow to Old Hamptonians that would have mad them champions. Does it matter? It certainly didn’t yesterday evening as the champagne and Britneys flowed as we celebrated a richly deserved promotion. And today, through the blur of a monster hangover, it doesn’t matter either. Okay – so we don’t get a shiny bauble to go on the club shelf for a year – but we’re up to 2ndxi Division 1 and hopefully we’ve left behind the boring, negative cricket of Division 2 for ever. See ya Mellett. NOT.

Would we have taken promotion at the expense of the championship at the beginning of the day? Hell Yes. Did we fight our arses off to stay in the game and try to win? You bet we did. Was it the best game of cricket of the season? It was certainly up there with the Guilford City and Lingfield games – perhaps though – because we only drew – it isn’t quite as satisfying as those two results were. Ultimately we got out of gaol in this game and could have taken a nightmare beating if it wasn’t for some do or die batting at the death.

Yes, with seven overs to go, we were 50 runs adrift of the Winning Draw total of 204 and 75 runs away from a win. The only things in the Wick’s favour was that OH’s strip had been under the covers for a week and was a dry as a bone. For some reason, despite cloud cover, the ball hadn’t swung much all afternoon and the boundaries were generously short. But how had we got ourselves into this position?

Old Hamptonians were inserted by skipper Fudge. Last week on the same square 20 wickets fell for approximately 110 runs so The Wick could reasonably hope to have restricted Old Hamptonians to 180. However this was obviously not the same track. This one was an absolute runway. No one managed to do much with the ball all day and there was surprisingly little bounce either. Yep, it was true, flat and it soon became clear that it was a pleasure to bat on. The outfield was lush, but the grass was short enough to ensure the bats got just reward for their shots.

OH proceeded to 57 before losing a wicket and the signs were ominous. Both openers, Blair and Speakman, played their shots. Speakman was lucky to survive a spilled chance in the gully and a couple of his earlier boundaries reached third man having passed through vacant slip areas at catchable height. However he hit the ball very hard and soon raced to a 50. Blair was pretty adjacent early on but as is the fashion the appeal was declined and it took a good catch by Del in the deep off Fordy to send him back. If the Wick thought the removal of Blair would herald a wicket-fest they were very wrong. The second wicket partnership took OH to 173!

Speakman and Carson batted very well on what was obviously a fantastic deck to bat on. With the ball not deviating at all once the shine had departed we were wondering where a wicket would come from. Of the bowlers Ford was economical until Carson got after him later on. Lofting took to bowling dead straight and at the stumps. This paid off when the unlucky Speakman swept at a ball that pitched on leg stump and hit it. Lofting’s line had inconvenienced him as he had used width on the off side to great effect throughout his innings. He fell for 95.

Carson drove fiercely all afternoon and played some particularly good shots through the offside. Everything was struck firmly. He gave only one chance when he had reached 60ish but the unlucky fielder lost the ball out of the background and didn’t even get a hand to it. Fordy took two more wickets, one bowled, one a dubious LBW and OH declared after 50.5 overs. The declaration, at 230, looked to be slightly too late and perhaps ten runs too many but in fact it was perfectly judged as The Wick would come close to overhauling it in 45 overs and might have won if set 220.

The boys did well in the field, conceding only 3 wides. We could have conceded many more runs but for spirited running and leather chasing. The missed chances cost us runs and if we had not been promoted on the back of this result there would be some red faces in the wash-up because we’ve dropped far too many in the last few weeks. Let’s face it, the Championship should have been wrapped up by now were it not for the spills. But this performance was only really deficient in one area. We only picked up one bowling point and this would cost us the bragging rights and the pennant. In fact just one more wicket would have given us the title but we were not to take it. It also meant that to be certain of promotion we HAD to make the winning draw target of 204 as a minimum requirement.

Tea was okay. A bit dull. A bit tense frankly. There were donuts I suppose, but it really was only a 6.

HWRCC’s reply got off to an entertaining and breezy start. Golby and Fudgey looked in very good nick. You can always tell with Golby. If he nails one of his square cuts – which he did early on – you know he’s seeing it like a football. Some fine leg glances off middle and leg showed timing too. Fudge was in brutal form again and was seeing it like a basketball painted luminous yellow. He charged the first change man Tupilo and hit him for a flat six into the sightscreen. So it was a surprise when Golby, having made 40, missed a straight full toss trying to hit it through midwicket with the score on 78 and then Fudgey (47) dragged one on trying to sweep the impressive Blair with the score on 96. This was not going to plan.

Mackie and Hibby replaced the openers and Mackie in particular looked to be in good form. But disaster struck with the introduction of offspinner Brown. Turning his first ball from outside off just enough to encourage Hibberd to drag it on we were 116-3 and sitting uncomfortably. There was not much time for anyone to catch their breath as Mackie middled one to second slip next over and we were in serious trouble. This was not going to plan at all.

Charlie and Clarky then strapped on the pads with the Wick needing 114 for victory at round about 6 an over. Actually we needed 91 just to get the winning draw. This was tense stuff. Clarky edged Brown just past the leg stump to cause alarm when he had scored only one run. Charlie hit a massive six and exocet four and looked well set, but perished bowled trying to slog sweep Brown into Somerset. Oh dear…

Del started slowly and the game began to swing towards OH as overs 32 to 38 produced a meagre 19 runs. And then in over 39 things began to go the Wick’s way. Clarky took 12 off the returning Blair. Offspinner Brown was then despatched all over the oval to concede 15 runs in his final over, a cover driven four from Clark, all along the ground, is making Wickman stiff just thinking about it and a lofted six over cow the icing on that over’s cake.

And after that it was just a question of getting across the line. New bowler Lizeri made the mistake of pitching one up in his first over which was used to nearly decapitate Hibberd (officiating) and rattle up another four and then Del and Nick scampered runs until we were safe. There might have been time to win the game but Blair conceded only 5 runs from his last two overs as the boys struggled to get him away and there were too many needed at the start of the last. 18 were needed off the last three balls and Clark holed out seeking the first of them, draw ensured.

Wickman can tell you with some authority that this one felt as much like a win as you can without actually scoring more runs than the oppo. It was a great game which has largely restored Wickman’s faith in the Fullers format. This was no bore draw with one side blocking it out for 15 overs while the other grows more impatient by the minute. And for once both sides tried to win the game all the way through, didn’t moan and whinge, there was no threat to murder anyone or any boring cricket played all day and friendly banter all round. This was cricket played as it should be. Frankly we all remember the sides that have come to the Wick this year and played negative, dull cricket. Wickman is glad that we finished with a thriller. We wish OH all the luck next year. They, along with Merrow, Lingfield and Guildford, know how to play the game.

It only remains, for this report, to award MOM. Wickman is genuinely split between Clarky’s debut league half and Fordy’s marathon 155 ball spell. We’ll leave it there…

There will, in the fullness of time, be a report on the whole season to savour but right now Wickman would like to say a big thank you to everyone involved in the 2s this year. We set out to go through the year unbeaten and only looked like losing once. Won 8 drawn 4 (all winning draws) and 4 abandoned is a good return. Congratulations to skipper Fudgey in his first year as skipper for doing what he said he would – get us up!

Vive le Wick!

Yessssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss