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12 May 2004

Dodgers v DCMS

The Dodgers' excellent start to the season continued yesterday with a comfortable win against an above-average DCMS XI. A slow opening stand for Dodgers from McBarron and Benn lulled DCMS into complacency, rudely shattered by fireworks from Cavanagh and John Hilary in the last 10 overs as we posted 168-4. In reply, DCMS were never at the races other than for a brief period in the first ten overs. All five seamers bowled well, and the eventual margin of more than 40 runs was a fair reflection of our dominance.

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15 May 2003

DODGERS V DCMS

CHISWICK

DCMS won by 28 RUNS

DCMS: 230-6, 40 Overs (Crawford 2 – 7; Hilary 1 – 20)
Dodgers: 202-8, 40 Overs (Benn - 45; Roper – 43; Hilary 42)

Match Report: Kim Matthews

Having won the toss Capt. Carr (anticipating Mcbarron arriving in time for a match winning innings) decided to field. After an excellent opening spell by bowlers Crawford and Roper, DCMS, despite losing early wickets, kept the score ticking along and notched up a commendable 230 in 40 overs. Dodgers’ reply was in the same vein but lacking the acceleration displayed by DCMS was never in with a chance. (Mcbarron, manning the barricades against terrorist incursions, never appeared but, as was pointed out, had he done so we would have been lucky to make 150). In the end a comfortable win for DCMS.

Defeating the combined fielding attempts of both Matthews and Benn, Crawford’s first ball went for 4 wides. Thereafter he bowled with some venom and achieved the remarkable figures of 6-4-7-2 (the 7 being all wides). Benn, at first slip, in aside to Matthews said, "I hope nothing comes my way as I’ve got no chance of catching it.", then proceeded to pouch an excellent catch to dismiss opener Cove for 1. Hilary then caught the DCMS no. 3 for 0 and, with DCMS’ score on 2 for 19, Dodgers thought their luck was in. Unfortunately Malik had other ideas and scored a chanceless 63 before being excellently caught by Hilary off Benn. Despite tight bowling spells from Benn and Hilary, the remaining DCMS batsmen never eased up and aided by some lacklustre fielding in the last 10 overs, amassed the somewhat daunting total of 230.

Dodgers’ reply got off to a solid start. Benn and Roper whilst fending off some lively bowling, kept up with the run rate in an opening stand of 68. Roper was first out for 43 after attempting to hit OAP Fitzgerald back over his head and getting yorked for his pains. Benn nurdled on until, realising he was in danger of reaching 50 and having to buy a jug, he was caught on 45. Thereafter despite an excellent 42 from Hilary (before being run out by Adey) and a quickfire 19 from Crawford, Dodgers’ batting fell away and was never up with the run rate.

As was usual DCMS played to win and only gave their weaker bowlers a go when they were confidant the game was won. For the first 30 overs Dodgers’ fielding was excellent (John - I’ve lost 2 stones - Adey was a revelation!) but in the final 10 overs tiredness set in and runs were given away. An enjoyable game. Some excellent contributions from individual Dodgers but DCMS were worthy winners. We’ll have to wait until next season to get our own back.

Man of the Match: Neil Benn

DCMS Innings

Cove c Benn b Crawford 1
Malik c Hilary b Benn 65
Casselton c Hilary b Crawford 0
Lloyd-James b Benn 19
Palao not out 49
Fitzgerald B c Crawford b Hilary 4
Chamberlain c Roper b Adey 43
Findlay not out 27
Extras (lb6, w16) 22
Total 230 for 6

Bowling
O M R W
Crawford 6 4 7 2
Roper 8 3 30 0
Qureshi 4 0 33 0
Hilary 5 0 20 1
Benn 6 0 42 2
Hawton 4 0 30 0
Adey 5 0 44 1
Cooper 2 0 18 0

Dodgers Innings

Benn c Cove b Palau 45
Roper b Fitzgerald 43
Carr c ? b Fitzgerald 3
Cooper b Malik 6
Hilary run out 42
Crawford c Casselton b Dawes 19
Qureshi run out 3
Matthews lbw b Marks 1
Adey not out 8
Hawton not out 0
Extras (b9, lb3, w21) 33
Total 202 for 8

Bowling
O M R W
Chamberlain 5 1 16 0
Lloyd-James 5 0 20 0
Fitzgerald B 8 1 30 2
Findlay 6 0 25 0
Palao 4 0 18 1
Malik 3 0 9 1
Dawes 3 0 34 1
Marks 4 0 29 1
Casselton 2 0 10 0

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03 September 2002

Dodgers v DCMS

Thursday 3 September 2002

Dodgers batted first. Ringer Conway opened with Westhead and took advantage of the pace of Towers to score 8 from the first over. Westhead was then left to face the swing and accuracy of Malik. Fortunately he only had to do this for one ball as he was comprehensively bowled by the second (he then proceeded to moan on for an eternity to the hapless scorer that he couldnt see the point and was seriously considering giving up the game we live in hope!). Priest then joined Conway and the score briskly moved to 45 before Conway also deceived by swing, became Maliks 2nd victim in the 10th over with the score on 65. Ringer Whitrod strode to the crease promising to end his recent crap run by smiting the ball to all parts of the ground. Unfortunately he only managed to smite 1 in a stand of 25 with Priest before being stumped. Benn, not bothering to trouble the scorer, fell to the impressive Malik and Cooper, caught for 2 off Palao, soon followed.

At this stage the score in the 17th over stood at 71 for 5 with Priest on 37 and, given the perceived quality of the tail, it was generally feared (not least by the tail itself) that Dodgers would be lucky to scrape to 100 in 40 overs. All was not lost however as Ringer Block, whilst only scoring 4 before being stumped, managed to occupy the crease long enough to share in a stand of 40 with Priest. Matthews then strode to the wicket with the score on 111 and Priest on 67. Taking Benns advice not to get out (and also taking advantage of Whitrod not giving him out caught off the toe of his boot) Matthews miraculously shared in a stand of 52 with Priest; during the course of which Priest, having being dropped by Malik on 98, became the first real Dodger to score a century. Overcome with emotion he was of course promptly caught without addition but who cares - with the score on 163. An excellent innings highlighted by 15 boundaries (all 4s). Hawton was then bowled for a 1 and Pope and Matthews remained undefeated. Final score was 168 for 8 from 40 overs.

Dodgers were reasonably optimistic that theyd be able to protect this score. Especially when Malik was out early caught by the sprightly Matthews off Benn for 4. He was soon followed by Scott caught and bowled Block for 0; Vine bowled Hawton for 5, and the helmeted (fearful of Popes pace) Robson, caught Block bowled Cooper for 8, with the score on 50. Dodgers had however been unable to remove opener Cove and this coupled with the arrival of Towers at the wicket and Pedestrian McBarron in the field proved to be the turning point. McBarron announced his arrival by throwing the ball over his head whilst attempting a return to the bowlers end. Cove and Towers then proceeded to tonk the ball all over the place until McBarron, managing to get one ball to pitch in line and on the right length, bowled Towers for 31 with the score on 122. Unfortunately with Palao now joining Cove, this didnt provide the opening that Dodgers had been hoping for and the quick scoring continued. DCMS finally reached their target in the 36th over and Dodgers had lost. Priest reflected that this was the first time hed scored a hundred and been on the losing team but failed to mention how many times hed been on the winning team.

The evening was rounded off by Priest buying jug(s) in the bar and smoking cigars (I dont remember him doing that when he became a father!!) and Terry Hawton having his bag nicked - Ill let him tell you about it. Have they got the Armani thieves yet Terry?

Dodgers Innings

Conway Bowled Malik 24
Westhead Bowled Malik 0
Priest Caught Cove Bowled ? 100
Whitrod Stumped ? Bowled Palao 1
Benn Bowled Malik 0
Cooper Caught ? Bowled Palao 2
Block Stumped ? Bowled Palao 4
Matthews not out 15
Hawton Bowled ? 1
Pope not out 0
McBarron did not bat
Extras (7b,6lb,7w, 2nb) 22
Total (40 overs) 168


DCMS bowling

Towers 8-1-39-0
Malik 8-2-17-3
Palao 8-2-19-3
Fitzgerald 8-0-45-0
Vine 7-0-32-1
Scott 1-0-2-1


DCMS Innings

Cove not out 74
Malik c Matthews b Benn 4
Scott c&b Block 0
Vine b Hawton 5
Robson c Block b Cooper 8
Towers b McBarron 31
Palao not out 28
Extras (1b,1lb,19w) 21
Total (of 35.3 overs) 172

Dodgers bowling

Benn 8-1-17-1
Block 7-1-26-1
Hawton 4-0-20-1
Cooper 3-0-16-1
Pope 3-0-21-0
McBarron 6-0-43-1
Whitrod 4-0-16-0
Conway .3-0-2-0


Man of the match (obviously) Neil Priest

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14 August 2001

Dodgers v DCMS

Tuesday 14 August
Chiswick

DCMS won by 58 runs

The Dodgers' recent poor run of results continued with a comfortable win for DCMS in our second encounter of the season.

In hot and humid conditions on a typical Chiswick batting track, the toss was always going to be important. Unfortunately JC insisted on calling himself and lost for the umpteenth straight time. Opposition skippers have got wind of his unbending dogmatism in this matter and you can hear the sniggers as the doubled-tail coin goes up while their opening bats are getting their pads on.

Dodgers did not have a potent looking side, especially on the bowling front, and veteran medium-pacers Neil Benn and Phil McBarron opened the attack. The pitch was quite slow, though, and DCMS struggled to make headway against tight bowling. After 6 overs they had struggled to 8-1, with Mitchell (4) bowled by McB. The second wicket pair inevitably found their feet and the scoring rate accelerated slightly, but Dodgers fielded surprisingly well on the whole and kept the lid on the situation up to the drinks break.

Darren Bultitude – another rare bowler for us – performed respectably and picked up opener Cooper for 39 to a sharp catch behind by The Cat just when the danger signs were apparent. When star bat Palao only succeeded in hitting David Pope in the air to mid-wicket our hopes were raised. These hopes went even higher when Benn returned to the attack and picked up two (slightly fortuitous) wickets and Matt Leach bowled the DCMS number 6.

But Barry Fitzgerald has been our bogey man before, though not so often with the bat. Despite being unable to run much faster than Adey, he picked up 44 runs from nowhere, principally in collaboration with Scattergood before the latter was bowled by Cap'n Carr for 21, leading DCMS to a competitive but not unassailable 204-7 after their 40 overs.

Dodgers would need to bat well, but Chamberlain was in his usual vein tying down openers Bultitude and McBarron before having Darren caught low down at first slip for 13. Benn was promoted to three in the order but he and McB predictably failed to make much progress against accurate bowling, particularly from That Man Fitzgerald.

Attempting to break the shackles with a swift two, Benn was run out by a direct hit from short third man for 7 and the scoring rate didn't improve much as Carr (10 overs for 12 before attempting an ugly slog across the line) and Whitrod (5) came and went. McB was finally caught behind off Fitzgerald for a good 55 to leave Dodgers 126 for 5 in the 31st over. He had played with increasing fluency but without finding the exceptional form necessary in the circumstances.

The last rites were more interesting than usual as John Cooper played a very promising knock, hitting two fours in his (career best?) 25 before being beautifully deceived by a slower ball from Chamberlain's return over. Matthews had used up one life when caught off a marginal waist-high full toss no ball, a decision umpire Benn regretted deeply as The Cat bored the pants off everyone in a nine-over stay for 5 not out. Matt Leach played an excellent lofted cover drive off his first ball from Chamberlain – the champagne moment for me – but this was short-lived joy as his stumps were re-arranged from the next ball. David Pope was then dismissed twice and we finished well short.

A comprehensive defeat all-in-all, but there was something for Dodgers fans to take away from this game. We were always going to struggle with a badly weakened side against the class of Chamberlain – 7-3-8-3 – and the unvarying accuracy of Fitzgerald, coupled with Palao's batting among others. But we were in the game for a long time and but for Fitzgerald's knock might have got an awful lot closer. The fielding was good and McB's bowling and John Cooper's batting were both encouraging.

If only JC could learn how to say "tails"...

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15 August 2000

Dodgers v DCMS

DODGERS V DCMs
15/8/00

A day where dodgers got out there and got busy with doing what they do best "Winning".

Our all mighty JC strode out to do the pitch inspection, brimming with confidence (some had whispered it was the three pints before hand and not the quality of the side that brought on this emotion).

From the make shift pavilion, dodgers watched the rise and fall of the coin, wishing that the Capt., would get one right and we would field in the second half of the game, as the sun and heat was taking its toll on the British in the side.

JC turns from the pitch with his head down (another loss toss) and suddenly the dodgers we seen scampering for water as we knew we were to take the field for the first half, and by the efforts in the field later on in the day, showed we should of been some where, any where else then fielding in an Oval, where safe hands and technique were unspoken words during most of the dodger fielding.

This is where it seemed that the Skips bad luck had ended. Bringing Paterson on with the opening over, with the usual fire in his eye and a passion to suit, banging balls in all over the wicket, causing the batsmen to call for a new supply of nappies to catch the excess caused by the Blond Haired Bandit. From the other end, Roper, with an eight of the size of Paterson's run up(DCMS must of thought this was the Loral and Hardy show), but never the less an equal amount of fear was produced in the oppositions eyes as Roper with his custom inswingers and newly developed outswingers, landing them on the spot and causing more trouble than a Japanese phrase book in Greece.

The two lads keeping the run rate to a minimum, with excellent bowling spells. Roper was rewarded in his second over with the wicket of McCowan who looked a lot more comfortable out in the field later in the day after a change of briefs.

Paterson egged on by Roper at the change of ends took his solemn wicket with the help of Matthews gloving it perfectly, and was unlucky not to have another when our beloved VC (Priest) thought that he would give the opposition a hand in putting down a dolly in the slips, which JC than thought it better to place him where the ball might come to him a bit slower, (like out near the bar). Roper was rewarded again through his consistence. Two wickets for Roper and two boundaries to help his temper along through some unhealthy fielding which would have produced better figures for the big guy.

With Paterson rested, a new bowler was to come storming in, Crawford was his name, kept it tight he did too, for an over or two. 20 overs came and Dodgers having held DCMs to 65, should not have taken the drinks break as the batsmen had magic potion, with Dodgers drinking something from the Thames if the second half performance was anything to go on.

With Drinks done and dusted the Dodgers set out to keep the opposition to a low total, with the sun setting behind the ever appearing clouds the fielding technique should have been on the improve.

Crawford and Benn took up the bowling duties, but with Graffie settled at the crease and seeing the ball like a young lad on the beach spotting sets of white pointers, Graffie found the runs easy to come by and a dot ball became unfamiliar to the scores.

Crawford being told to have a Kit Kat, Bultitude took the well beaten ball, bowled a couple of tight overs and even had Graffie walking back to the pavilion until the Skip realised that he didn't have his bucket with him and was unable to hold the catch. Benn from the other end struggled to find line and length and bowled out his overs with a run rate that he would rather see next to his batting figures rather than his bowling figures never the less picked up a wicket.

The Skip decided to rest Bultitude and bring back Crawford who picked up a wicket on the way to completing his 8 overs. Leach took the place of Benn, not much difference in the pace of the bowling for the batsmen just Leach had a quicker ball that Matthew's found harder to handle than a hot potato. Leach & Benn later teamed up well to engineer a run out, but DCMs were well settled and seen out there 40 overs with 181 on the board, looking smug DCMs thought that this total would see them through.

Bultitude and McBarron were sent out to get us off to a go start, but with Bultitude swatting at the ball like he had a chop stick in his hand it looked like the evening was going to be a long one. Mc Baron played his usual steady roll as the anchorman and knocking the ball around nicely, until, he waltzed halfway down the pitch where the ball struck him on the front pad (where some one shouted Howz that!!! The umpire in shock from the noise, thought they said " Lager is that" rose is finger, for yes I'll have one, leaving McBarron walking back to the team with amazement written all over his face.

With McBarron gone, and Bultitude finally seeing the ball, he started to find the boundary on a regular occasion the field was quiet quick, which made the boundaries alot easier to come by, a little easier that stay out of the way from the visually challenge umpires that seemed to be standing at either ends of the wicket. Priest in the same frame of mind as Bultitude who had struggled to find runs next to his name, had no problem out there today, playing some glorious strokes, and for this writer was man of the match. The run rate quickened and by the 18th over, the score was at the 120 mark with Bultitude notching up another 50, and Priest not far behind, Bultitude at 59 had a ton on his mind, but others had different ideas as yet again a shout for leg before came and with the visually impaired umpires looking any where but at the wicket, went to the guide dog for help and with more shouts than a Bon Jovi concert, the umpire got catch up, raised the finger and Bultitude was gone not to mention liveried.

To replace him was Cooper, with a quick fire 7, he was catch behind to end his days play. Carr was next up and with runs being seen next to his name on a regular occasion was no stranger out there today, but it was Priest who was conducting this Band today, and played many of his favourites, grabbing his 50 in fine fashion and ending the day with 72 not out and hitting the winning runs. Well done Neil.

The Dodgers over all performance was good although the fielding needs some attention and I'm sure that people getting out to play the next match will be looking to redeem them selves. Once again Dodgers WELL DONE, a convincing win.

DCMS 

Mitchell ct. Matthews b Paterson 2
McCowan b Roper 5
Scott b Benn 48
Robson b Roper 0
Graffie not out 79
Brand b Crawford 1
Fitzgerald not out 9
extras 15
total 181

dnb: Gillan, Marks, Jackson

Bowling

Paterson 8 4 16 1
Roper 8 1 29 2
Crawford 8 1 51 1
Benn 8 0 45 1
Bultitude 4 1 18 0
Leach 4 0 23 0


Dodgers Batting

McBarron LBW b Gillam 11
Bultitude LBW b Fitzgerald 59
Priest not out 72
Cooper ct W/K b Fitzgerald 7
Carr not out 10
extras 13
total 185

dnb: Benn, Leach, Roper, Paterson, Crawford, Matthews

Bowling
O M R W
Bond 6 0 30 0
Scott 6 0 33 0
Gillam 7 0 52 1
Fitzgerald 8 3 26 2
Jackson 2 0 13 0
Marks 3.1 1 16 0

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07 June 2000

Dodgers v DCMS

Dodgers v Department of Culture, Media and Sport
2pm
7 June 2000

Dodgers beat DCMS by four wickets

The two teams assembled in the best weather of the year to date for this encounter, thankful at least to be playing on grass rather than the threatened (and lively looking) artificial strip alongside.

DCMS were pegged down early on by the pace of Paterson and Crawford, the latter picking up two helpful lbws. Replacing Rod, John Hilary bowled an admirable spell, mixing away swingers and off spinners/cutters at will and was not flattered by his figures. John Cooper also generated a great deal of swing but tended to drift too many deliveries down the legside. Sian made light work of a catch at mid-on off his bowling, though, to leave DCMS struggling a little at 52-3 at the mid-innings break.

Matt Leach bowled quite fluently and picking up one victim, as did Phil McBarron thanks to a good low catch by stand-in keeper Neil Benn. DCMS opener Sean Cove had batted steadily and was still there when the arrival of Neil Bond at number 8 threatened to de-rail the Dodgers' effort. Bond was particularly savage on David Pope's first over, but had difficulties in the second before being dropped off a difficult chance by Benn.

The drop had little cost, however, as Paterson returned to the attack. Bowling very quickly, he sent Bond's leg stump cart-wheeling back with a yorker – the "champagne moment" for sure - before bowling a hapless tailender and trapping another lbw to finish with fine figures of 3-19.

The target of 157 looked within range and despite losing Westhead early for a duck lbw, veteran grinders Benn and McBarron kept the board ticking nicely against the DCMS second string having been rightly cautious against the openers. 56-1 after 16 overs was a very satisfactory start, but Benn then got out paddling a high full toss to backward square for 17 and John Cooper followed soon after playing a horrid shot across the line of low straight delivery. Cap'n Carr righted the ship with McBarron expertly, taking the score to 114 in the 29th over with some good running and three excellent straight fours. His dismissal was..... err.... controversial, lbw a very long way forward. [Umpiring from square leg, JC was 4 feet down; with the bowler delivering in-skidders, the chances of it striking him in line and still hitting leg stump were about zero.]

Two more wickets fell in horrific fashion quickly: Crawford wiping across a triple-bouncer for 1 and Paterson (having hit an attractive straight drive for four) wiping across a double bouncer for 8. At 130-6 with 7 overs left the victory seemed in doubt, but ice-man Hilary combined with McBarron sensibly to win the game with 6 balls to spare. The sight of the three musketeers (Pope, Brown and Leach) all padded up simultaneously no doubt providing the spur he needed to stay in. McB's 52no – with no boundaries – was an excellent effort, proving the adage that success sides have someone who bats for a very long time in these 40-over games. Out of touch, Phil had batted resolutely throughout, offering no chances and blocking the better bowlers effectively where necessary.

This was a good performance from the Dodgers, though our batting was unconvincing at times. It was no coincidence that, on a pitch with little bounce, our three straightest batters scored best and there were some horrid dismissals among the big hitters. DCMS had been unable to resist our opening bowlers in the way McBarron, Benn and Carr had done to theirs. Our support bowling – especially John Hilary - was far better, conceding 18 fewer wides. Our fielding was good too, especially John Cooper at long on; an improved performance from David Pope; and one memorable stop from Matt Leach. Benn conceded 10 fewer byes than his DCMS counterpart behind the stumps, and 25 fewer extras overall made a significant difference in the end.

DCMS won the toss and elected to bat.

DCMS Innings

Cove lbw b Paterson 63
Bradshaw lbw b Crawford 6
McGowan lbw b Crawford 0
Paragreen c Brown b Cooper 9
Coster b Hilary 2
Scattergood c Benn b McBarron 9
Fitzgerald D b Leach 8
Bond (c) b Paterson 26
Fitzgerald B not out 12
Jackson b Paterson 0
Dawes not out 2
Extras (w16, b2, lb2) 21
Total (40 overs) 156 for 9

FOW: 20, 22, 52, 54, 85, 104, 137, 141, 141


Bowling

Paterson 8-1-19-3
Crawford 8-2-20-2
Hilary 8-0-17-1
Cooper 4-0-18-1
Leach 4-0-24-1
McBarron 4-0-22-1
Pope 2-0-19-0
Brown 2-0-13-0


Dodgers Innings

Benn (w) c Scatt'd b Fitz'd D 17
Westhead lbw b Bond 0
McBarron not out 52
Cooper b Bradshaw 1
Carr (c) lbw b Fitz'd B 21
Crawford b Paragreen 1
Paterson b Dawes 8
Hilary not out 11
Extras (nb1, w34, b12) 46
Total (39 0vers) 157 for 6
dnb: Brown, Pope, Leach

FOW: 11, 58, 59, 114, 118, 130

Bowling

Bond 8-3-13-1
B Fitzgerald 8-1-17-1
Bradshaw 8-1-22-1
D Fitzgerald 3-0-10-1
Jackson 4-0-23-0
Paragreen 3-0-18-1
Dawes 2-0-11-0
McGowan 2-0-11-1
Scattergood 1-0-5-0

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13 May 1999

Dodgers v DCMS

DODGERS V DCMS
35 OVER MATCH
CHISWICK
13 MAY 1999

Dodgers won the toss.

DCMS: 160 all out (Scott 47, Palloa 40, Priest 4-34)
Dodgers: 131 all out (Jacobs 32, Carr 22, Priest 21, Pallao 3-21)

DCMS won by 29 runs

Dodgers man of the match: Chris Jacobs

Having just read the Perm Sec's new guidance on writing documents I'll keep this brief!

I could almost send out last year's match report for this one as it was a very similar game. DCMS set off at a cracking pace before losing a couple of quick wickets and being pegged back to a gettable (for most teams anyway) 160. We bowled well and the fielding showed some improvement - although Daddy Adey might disagree, four dropped catches off his bowling helping him lose his Golden Arm status.

Our batting was the all too familiar story when chasing reasonable scores. After McBarron and Matthews had done a good job of seeing off the opening quickies Jacobs, Carr and Priest all got a start before getting out - a 50 by any of them should have seen us home. Aussie ringer Shaun Feast hit some good shots at the end and John Adey was set to win it before running out of partners.....

Another loss, but I predict a win against DTI next week with John Carr man of the match. Fiver Doylee.....?

NEIL PRIEST

DCMS

Scott b. Priest 47
Fitzgerald LBW b. J Hilary 19
Pallao c. Adey b. Priest 40
Mitcham c. Matthews b. Feast 34
Jackson b. Priest 2
Chamberlain b. Priest 0
Gillam c. McBarron b. Roper 7
Williamson LBW b. Feast 0
Chamberlain (again) NOT OUT 6
Jackson c. McBarron b. Roper 0
TOTAL (32.5 overs) 160

FoW: 1/25 2/106 3/118 4/136 5/136 6/153 7/153 8/159 9/160

Bowling
O M R W
Feast 6 1 21 2
Roper 5.5 0 26 2
Hilary J 4 1 21 1
Adey 7 0 46 0
Priest 7 1 34 4
Leach 3 0 9 0

DODGERS

McBarron c. Fitzgerald b. Chamberlain 8
Jacobs c. Chamberlain b. Gillam 32
Matthews LBW b. Gillam 3
Carr c. Scott b. Pallao 22
Priest LBW b. Fitzgerald 21
Roper b. Pallao 8
Hilary J c. ? b. Fitzgerald 4
Feast c. Scott b. Pallao 12
Leach b. Chamberlain 2
Adey NOT OUT 3
TOTAL (33.2 overs) 131

FoW: 1/25 2/46 3/53 4/94 5/99 6/110 7/113 8/126 9/131

Bowling
O M R W
Chamberlain 6 1 23 2
Williamson 4 0 16 0
Gillam 7 0 31 2
Mitcham 5 2 13 0
Fitzgerald 6 1 20 2
Pallao 5.2 0 21 3

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