Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Game 4 vs. Cavaliers

The day started liked most other days. Alarms went off, boners were tucked in or shrouded in towels for the morning dash to the shower. Bogel had swum, Dow was being spooned in a Marae in Grey Lynn somewhere listening to the National programme on a bedside alarm clock and Tolich was staring down the barrel of a few more hours sleep.

Clothes were on, breakfast had and it was out the door to a cloudless sky, summer was in the air, but most of all it was Wednesday, it was Crix day. The quiet anticipation of that afternoons game was creeping up, made all the more significant not only by the weather that the cricket gods had bestowed upon us, but more so due to the task that was at hand. Facing the top team in a match that a win was essentially needed to restore some momentum in the Fat Pitches season after what could only be described as a devastating loss the week before to competition middle-of-the-roaders ‘Looking to’.

The thought train was different from last week, captain Dow, possibly in a moment of blind madness had reversed the batting order – roles had been reversed and responsibilities had been shifted. The day dragged on, Auckland city sparkled in all its glory but for 8 remarkable men, the world seemed be rushing around them.

Finally it was 5pm, the rush home, bus lanes, red lights, whatever it took.

Clothes were off, undies on, another pair of undies on, where the fuck is my cricket shirt – there it is. Jimmy Buffit™ hat. check. $12.50. check.

We all pulled up one by one, if we had the chance some of us may have taken two cars down each, our staunch approach of “shove your carbon footprint up ass, homos” had us psychologically ahead from the get-go. It wasn’t until I saw one of the opposition wearing pants, and nearly chocked on the mouthful of protein gel I was sipping on, that I knew we were in for a match. These guys were jocks.

I could hear them snigger as we threw a tennis ball around waiting for the gear bags to arrive, as they swapped stories of innings past and who’s sucked who off the most in the team.

We had been designated the far field, most likely due to the fact that we had a reputation for hitting big, the longer boundaries were to ensure a tighter game.

Taji’s dad had kindly offered to umpire, but luckily he was being supervised. Just the way it should always be if you know what I mean. Surprisingly Sean Pollock-Dow lost the toss and we were sent to the field. After a impressive ten minute show of our fielding and catching ability to the other team, reminiscent of dancing birds pre-mate, the eye was in and the field set. It was a comfortable and confident field after 3 games, each man knew his place and the responsibility that came with that standing on that particular patch of grass for the next hour.

Kirschberg opened the bowling with an outstanding attack of line and length, gently working the concrete astro to his advantage and leaving the batsmen with little to grab hold of. The field was tight, controlled and every time bat hit ball there was a man in position to keep any run opportunity to a minimum. Taking for 2/26 hats off to an outstanding bowling effort.

This set the Pitches up for an exciting day in the field, the tone had been set and we all knew we had to perform in the field to give ourselves a chance with the bat. It soon became clear that last weeks high extras tally was not going play a huge part in the game.

Their middle order stood their ground, with Dwayne Barrie surprising most with a quiet, yet reflectively well earnt 50. Clypse followed through with another stand out performance of a skilled medium pace attack, with some variation keeping the batsmen on their toes. He was unlucky not to take a wicket during his spell. Conceding 24 runs in this fast paced competition is still a noteworthy achievement.

Seedow had his mind on the prize, a marked improvement from last weeks performance both with the ball and in sweeping cover of the long boundary. 28 Runs, with many of those coming off the bat of their top scoring batsman was a tough ask and a commendable effort. Captian was throwing down some serious pace and combined with the ever effective keeping of Clypse was unlucky not to take a scalp. Conceding only 13 runs, this was how the Pitches liked to play.

Tolich and Jon both taking advantage of the heat and sending batsmen back to the stands, line, length and pace variation played a significant factor in the ability both these bowlers had to surprise the batsmen at the last moment. Huge potential in these players, I look forward to watching their careers. Swanny’s two overs only gave away 14 runs, in the scheme of things this was a courageous effort against a ferocious period in the batting attack.


20 overs, 147 for 5. We knew we had a job on our hands, but after a much improved effort in the field, combined with our reliable, proven batting line up – beers were opened, dart sparked and some boisterous confident banter was thrown about. It was Dow and Tolich padding up, progress was slowed somewhat as Tolich attempted to find a small to medium size box to ensure maximum comfort on the field. Tim Bogle, the well presented son of Harsha Bhogle, the famous Indian cricket commentator and journalist born in 1961 padded up to head to square leg for quick entry upon the first wicket, or should I say entry upon the quick first wicket.

Surprisingly it wasn’t pants who opened the bowling, it was woolly jersey who marked our his 27 pace run up first – and 3 balls in it was a well placed Yorker at 2 meter Peters toes that found its way onto the stumps. 1 wicket down for none. Bogle jogged in, ready, 3 weeks worth of mental preparation had left the big fella a little nervous. Straight bat, bat to pad, eye on the ball, block the first ball no matter what. It was all flooding back from his secondary school rep cricket days. After a powerful elegant defensive drive to mid on, the confidence of getting the first two balls out of the way was abruptly shattered with a viciously fast, Yorker no-ball onto the stumps. The second wicket down before the chalk had even touched the scoreboard or so we thought until the official committee deemed Bogle had a conciliatory run against his name. Bogle 1 off 4 balls, 4 first grade level balls.

Kirschberg, reliable, defiant, competent Kirschberg hadn’t even made it square to leg yet before he was called upon. This was also to be short lived, with a poorly called LBW from an obvious bat on pad sending him to the showers early. We were surprised we didn’t see men in camo gear with shotguns hung across their forearms arriving in the car park – [insert funny duck hunting joke here] Seedow held the fort, welcoming several new batsmen to the crease and plugged away with some magical cuts, and a dominating drive for 4 runs down to long on. Eventually being caught (?) for 11 runs and the highest strike of the day.

It was a collapse. But we had a Ca-lypse. Sliding into an instrumental role in the middle order, away from the fanfare and glitterati of the opening pairing of previous weeks. He effortlessly carved out a respectable 13 considering the circumstances, with a strike rate of 72 – this was sensible cricket at its best. Jon, eased into his innings but soon found his stride in front a gaggle of female fans – gracefully directing the ball around the park to secure a much needed total of 9 pity it wasn’t 89 – we may have been in with a chance. Before finally succumbing to the heat, and constant media harrasement over the ‘nun gate” fantasy saga that has dominated headlines in recent weeks. Sceptics are crying foul, accusing Jon of a deliberate move to gain himself an average.

Captain Buffit himself took the crease, and threw everything into an outstandingly fast paced innings - with a lucky slip from the bowler, saving himself from a near certain run out after a communication error left him wanting in the middle of the pitch. A combination of boundaries and hard yakka sent him home with the days top scorer certificate at 18. Excellent efficiency with an SR of 120 – how efficacious can you get? It was Swanny who held the fort at the tail, and giving great emphasis to the comepetition name – last man stands, he stood and he was a man. Craftily weaving around a still hardened bowling attack, he managed a noteworthy solo effort for 11 installing some dignity in what was a patchy effort by half of the Pitches.

But he was only a man, and the reality of batting solo will hunt you down and snatch you without warning, and this is precisely what happened – it was all over after a lucky caught and bowled, The Fat Pitches we all out for 64 after just 15.4 overs. We all felt the pain of being bum raped that afternoon, and in years to come nothing was really the same. The pitches all lost touch, and never really spoke of the day they got bum humped by the Cavaliers down by the bushes at Cox’s bay.

Captain – 3
Seedow – 2
Jon – 1

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Game 3 vs. Looking to




The weather teased the Fat Pitches all day for the much anticipated match up against the likes of Looking To…. And when no email was sent around confirming a cancellation excitement levels crept up, not only because we were leaving work early to pursue the passion that is 20/20 cricket.

After arriving at the infamous Pitch 14, it was with welcome arms that we received our team shirts, appropriately coloured in Jimmy Buffet blue… a little baggy on some, but a team that looks like a team is a team that plays as a team, and enjoys the perks that come with bonus points.

In a shock turn of events, Captain Cory won a toss after two previous failed attempts, and chose to follow with our winning ways of bowling first, trying to limit the runs, and ultimately chasing them down.

The opening pairing of Dyl and Jon proved to confuse the batters with the left/right arm combination, as the opening batsmen struggled to find any sort of rhythm and were quickly split after some edgy results that Timmy managed to pull in with Chris Harris ease.
Swanny was happy with taking a couple of wickets, to go along with his economy rate and ball of the day goes to proud sponsor Jimmy Buffet with a near unplayable pearler that had the batsman in all sorts, eventually leaving him trudging back to the pavilion after his off stump was toppled, wondering what had just happened.

Dream team bowler Cory persisted with the short and straight long hops theory after picking one up in the deep, and after a few more were dispatched to the boundary you could hear the familiar sound of a Saturday morning youth of “line and length! … At his toes!” Not to be discouraged with his new tactic that was thought up after one to many beers the weekend before, Cory decided one more wouldn’t hurt, and left the field speechless when the ball came down on stumps dislodging the bails.

In a bold move by the captain, Timmy was given the ball for his time to shine, and was unlucky with the umpire calling some very questionable off side wides. Matty stepped up and was very consistent, summing up much of the bowling effort from the Fat Pitches.
With two wickets and two overs to go, opening bowler Nard was called back into action, and you hear the call from the square leg umpire (next batsman) “It’s his last over, play him out” Not a smart move in 20/20 and you could physically see his legs folding at the knees.
In a great showing of line and length, the batsman played and missed, and finally got the edge that Dyl was looking for throughout the frustrating spell, and Toby behind the stumps reaped the rewards, holding onto his first catch of the season, only to get another two balls later with the exact same delivery and the batting team were all out for 158. (After facing 146 deliveries – where only 100 should have been bowled, and even with wides 120 should have been bowled. Questionable umpiring has to come into play?)

All in all, wides were the winner on the day and will need to be cut out of the bowling repertoire.

A solid turn out in the field, with a new category being added to the points system designed by our very own stats man D-Larn – with 4 overthrows earning negative points. Backing up is essential, but not as much as throws over the stumps.

With a quick turnaround, Toby and Dyl had to combine once more and set the platform for the run chase, the biggest total the Fat Pitches have had to try run down. Pushing singles, quick running two’s with the odd boundary to boot, a firm platform was set when Dyl was found short of the crease with a direct hit, although there was a thought that the bat was down, but without the technology of the Channel 9 commentary box, one can’t be sure. 90 for 1 and in came Swanny, and after another over Toby was retired after reaching the half ton milestone with a cover drive off Beavis. Rab and Swanny kept the scoreboard ticking over, until Rab was caught on the boundary, and in came the toughest man to get out in the comp, the one we call “The hard hitting wall”, Jono.

Beers were being sunk on the sideline and the mood was jovial, especially with the support of Dug back from his expedition on the boats. There was anticipation of a great victory, until the call came from Courts that 20 runs were needed off the last two overs. This shocked the team and we looked on in anticipation, yet unfortunately even a max 12 run hit on the last ball from Swanny left the Fat Pitches 2 runs short of victory (1 short of the draw) and gave Looking To a lucky escape beating the better team, just not on the day. Maybe we were missing the motivation of having Yok.com there to encourage the team.
Gutt(er)ed is the only way to describe the feeling.

With Timmy and Matty yet to have a bat, and Courts not being needed for the last two games, there will need to be some time at the crease for these fine players in the coming weeks.
Fat Pitches still hold their place at the top of the table and are ranked 289 in the world with only three games under their belt.

Congratulations go out to Rab, Nard and Courts for retaining their place in the Dreamteam.

Man of the Match – Toby Yonge (as voted by Fat Pitches)
3 points – Toby
2 points – Dyl
1 Point – Swanny

Thursday, November 5, 2009

My mate Darren

kewl business cards for crix academy

Match day #2 Vs. Le sec shockers.




Buoyed by the arrival of their final two members MIA from the previous week the fat pitches embarked on victory no2 and what a magnificent performance it was that was turned in

The left arm right arm attack combo of Jon and Nard reminiscent of Waqar and Wasim made quick work of both openers thanks to the safe hands of Timmy in a floundering 3rd man position and the surprisingly well cupped supple hands of C Dow deep and straight on the off – Wasim being slightly on the spency side thanks to Boglesque opposition opener!!

Glenn and Cap took reigns after the 6th over – Glenn provided multiple edgy moments behind wicket with his varied line and length getting the crucial breakthrough with a ripe back leg LBW. It was C Dow that bought about an erratic first few overs from the Captain as he had risked life and limb to come up short in a boundary bounding effort that would have had Skippy Sinclair bulging in his jocks. Dazed and bloodied captain trucked on only to make amends in his latter spell and again with the bat.

Riss relieved Captain of his 1st spell bowling duties to deliver what can only be called a rubbish delivery that arrived at Clypse fairly close to being if not on the full.IDIOT!! After his first ball woe he was let down in the field by a jittery Jon who fumbled what was a rather straight forward catch in the covers. Timmy was reported later to have said that Jon had blamed it on a wonky contact and some stray sun in his eye. Riss was understandably be disappointed with this schoolboy error. A fat pitch debutant accompanied Riss in the middle to late overs in form of Two Meter Peter and delivered what was a reliable and wicket taking line and length having one of the opposition fumbling all over himself like a nervous virgin or Jon attempting intercourse with Millie Holmes and playing onto his wickets. A commendable effort Matthew!!

Timmy was squeezed in for an over that was something he would rather forget im sure conceding runs through numerous wides – to me a debutant victory to Tolich which was later confirmed on the sideline when Tim forfeited his coveted 7th batting spot to go talk to females on the boundary.

Nard was then bought back in to close out the last couple of overs with Captain. Nard once again was accurate and inexpensive but came up wicketless in his final over. Captain having overcome his headache thanks to his heroics in the outfield off a C Dow half tracker arrived back at the crease to have 2 batsmen cleaned up neck and crop and on their way back to pavilion in successive balls. The hatrick wasn’t to be with Clypse putting down a dolly behind the stumps. Maybe time to rethink our keeper – George is probably mean at keeping??



All in all a solid bowling/fielding performance by the fat pitches. Practice this week will consist of perfecting long barriers and bowling at the top of off!!
After a fast turnaround to avoid any light issues later in the piece, Riss and Clypse arrived at the crease and eased their way into their innings safely pushing singles and rotating strike as talented openers do. Unfortunately Riss lost his castle in the first handful of overs and left C Dow with the pondering thought of promoting Tolich to opener for the next match or bringing back the endlessly talented George Springroll.

Enter Captain who began to score freely after a handful of balls only to lose his partner Clypse with the score being around 40. Nard was to come in and guide James Afridi through to what was a well deserved half ton at a strike rate well above 200 and three sixes and the man of the match trophy in his pocket in his pocket. He did manage a life on 48 thanks to some awesome umpiring from our South African friend. Having to retire on 52 it was left to Nard and Jon to bring it Milly Holmes. Nard ending up with a solid yet speedy 41 not out bagging a couple boundary clearers and a free ball faux pas and Jon on 3 proving to be the competitions toughest batsman do dismiss.

The Fat Pitches claimed a bonus point thank to free flowing runs which topped off another thoroughly enjoyable 20/20 encounter. Fark im into crix!!!



MVP”s this week Captain - 3
Nard?? - 2
Captain - 1
(seeing as ive docked him 2 points for his dropped catch – ha ha sucker)