Friday, 24 May 2024

Sunday Friendly v Anston St George

 I like these games, players from across all 6 of our teams playing against a similar team (allegedly).


Only 2 1st XI players - Weatherall our International player from Australia - Fast bowler and Lloyd Lambert; Off-spinner.

Travis 2nd XI off-spinner (All-rounder)

Lennon 4th XI wicket keeper/bat

Nishant 6th XI off-spinner/batter

Varun 6th XI bowler (Seam) batter (2nd only game with us)

Me 6th XI No.11 and Spin-bowler

Paul A McKeon - batter

Paul Mckeon seam-up bowler (Opener)

Harry - All-rounder

Pijush - All-rounder


We bowled first against an aggressive/good batter and he looked like he was taking the game away from us right from the outset, but then Harry came on and sorted him out leaving an older geezer (Younger than me) who played in a more considered manner. 

I came on surprisingly early given the situation and the strength of the batters and the fact that the Aussie captain has never seen me bowl. I had a ropey first over where I was hit for a couple of fours through the covers bowling too wide of the off-stump. The Aussie bloke moved a player into the short cover position and that then plugged the gap and the runs dried up.

I then got another wicket caught at slip (The Aussie) Kieran. Two balls earlier he almost took a catch in slips - but only got his fingers to it and dropped it. Two balls later the ball went right at him and with a bit of fumbling as he fell, he kept hold of it. I bowled a couple of relatively tight overs with singles going down to deep mid-on and then was replaced having bowled 6. Because of the earlier 4's I didn't think I'd done that well, but then at the end of the game when I had a look at everyone else's bowling I saw that I hadn't done that bad.











Running total below - Differs from the official figures as the scoring has been shocking with the use of the on-line app thing. The logic seems to be 'It's easy - let some kid so it, they know about technology'. But they don't know about umpire signals and scoring in the first place. 







Another diagram - This time analysis of where I'm getting hit and leaking runs...























https://captaincalculator.com/sports/cricket/bowling-strike-rate-calculator/





Saturday, 18 May 2024

B&PCC 6th XI v Westcliff on Sea 6th XI

 18/5/24 - Belfairs park 'North Pitch'. 

This was a win for us by 5 wickets. Again a slightly different team. The core members seem to be Nishant Khare who is now the official captain, Me, Lee Thompson, Akash Kale and Jake Wright. 

The line-up today...


As it was a Friendly the coin wasn't tossed, we wanted to bowl, they wanted to bat, so that's what happened. We didn't get off to a great start, the new captain Nishant said from the outset he was going to get the youngsters into the game early. One of the kids bowled really well and got his reward with a great wicket hitting the top of the stumps taking one of the openers out of the equation. They'd been going at 6+ an over and were racing away. The two kids bowled 4 each and then Lee "Five-fer" Thompson came on bowling his SLA. He struggled initially, but then settled. I came on at the 'Seaside' end bowling 90% flippers with the odd Leg-Break. I took 2 in no-time - possibly in the 1st over? They were youngsters not even having a look - just coming after me as though I was some kind of comedy act. One was caught at Point by Archie Monk, the next was clean bowled with the kid trying to smash me into the River Thames (Its about a mile away) and the last was an adult player "Charls D'Cruz" who hit the 4's; One through cover which was a good shot and the two through deep mid-wicket which were down to me bowling leg-side full tosses - attempting to bowl big turning leg-breaks. Knowing I had to keep away from the leg-side I opted to hang some wide of the off-side as he was flashing at them with little success and the wicket keeper Eoin Mercer is pretty decent and likely to take one if he edged it. I didn't even consider Lee Thompson fielding in slips (5) as being in the game! But then D'Cruz went after one - driving wide of the stumps and Lee did a Dwayne Leverock style dive in the world cup 2007 playing against India and snaffled it. It was a superb catch and probably one of my most memorable - I can only ever recall getting a wicket in slips previously about 10 years ago!

One of the younger kids who'd struggled at the start came on again after the 'Thompson' show (Lee took 1 wicket) and took 3. One of which was as a result of catch by me. I'd been fielding at backward square inside the ring, but having seen the batter intentionally targeting the gap between me and fine leg (Between 6 and 11 below) I moved to a position closer to 11 and outside the ring and within a few balls took the catch. 


The image above is the analysis of where I get hit in the games, this currently is an accumulative version showing what I recall of the three games so far. The catches have been taken at 5, 6 and 10, I've never had so many catches taken off my bowling!

Unfortunately the opposition were scoring on one of those poxy tablets digitally and at the time of writing they'd only posted the final score...
So at the moment I only know that I took 3 wickets and a catch, but have no idea of how many runs I went for. I've sent the details of their bowling and our innings and they photographed it at the end of the game, so there's no reason why the couldn't have copied it up and posted it. I've asked Nishant to chase it up and see if he can get them to rectify the situation and he's said he will. Hopefully the analysis with show up in the next couple of days?

Update, after a lot of faffing Nishant got something together that is an approximation rather than the exact record, but I'll go for it. The details relating to my catch are wrong, I took a wicket off Taylor Millar. My figure 6-1-18-3 which I concur with. 




Other than that, at the end of the games, I'll have to get their scorer to stay behind and read out the details so I can add them to our book. 



Here's our batting. The high-point here is Jake Wright. He also bowled today and got at least one wicket (Details to come apparently). But... look at his batting. This is his 2nd game and he batted recklessly in the first for about 8 runs and was disappointed with himself. It looks like he's learned and he batted really well today scoring 28 not out off of 34 balls and enjoyed it. I reckon with more games he'll get so much better. The only thing is he's just secured a job where he's expected to work Saturdays. 









Friday, 10 May 2024

6th XI v Eastwood 4th XI

 This isn't looking like an easy game either. Last weekend this mob bowled out their oppo for 30 runs, with one bloke who's only played one game for them taking 5-0-4-6 (Hasnain H). Hopefully someone at the club has seen that and moved him up to the 3rd XI or banned him from friendlies? One other geezer (Justin Blenes) who I don't know either, took  2-0-6-3. 

So hopefully our captain will see sense and bowl first so that the bowlers can have a game. I'm not optimistic though as its Mitchell Robinson and he's a batter. 

https://bowlingplans.blogspot.com/2020/01/eastwood-cc-wagon-wheels-and-bowling.html

The only player I recognised from last weeks game is Armitage.

The game...

Lovely sunny day, probably a bit hot given the fact that its only May 11th (25-27 c). The opposition won the toss and decided to bat. I had no idea how that was going to go, but given their performance last week with the ball I was happy that we'd be bowling, meaning that at least 6-7 of us will get a game!

Stumpgate. The game had to be restarted mid-way through the second over after one of our junior players Ali Abbass had just bowled his first ball and taken a wicket with it. The captain Mitchell had put the stumps in before most of us arrived and now mid way through Ali's over noticed that he'd put them in on the popping crease! So, what with it being a friendly we just re-started the game, which was a real shame for the kid Ali. 


Bowling figures above (Note my figures are wrong I didn't take a wicket) One of our new blokes (Lee Thompson) SLA dibbly dobbly, took five wickets, this is his 2nd season! He had the Yips last year, but this year has come back with vengeance. He bowls differently this year, loopier and slower, but seemingly more accurately. 


So we were happy to have restricted them to 89 and felt that we might have a chance. I'd figured out who the bowler was from the previous week and he was a junior player and he'd apparently bowled 'Slow out-swingers'. Some of the other players in the opposition mentioned that the wicket was 'Sticky' inferring that it was favourable conditions for the bowlers, whereas today it was dry bright and sunny. 

With the dry wicket the kid (Hasnan) was ineffective going for 4-0-11-0 and wasn't at all threatening. In the same game he took 6, the other bowler J-Blenes took 3 and similarly Blenes in this game came away with 4-0-20-0. 

Our batsman after losing the opener Mitchell Robinson cheaply took their bowlers to task.

I've not done a good job here on the score-sheet missed credited the bowler Reid with his wicket, although its in the analysis. 

















Basildon & Pitsea 6th XI

Front left to Right -  Dave Thompson. Lee Five fer Thompson, Jake Wright, Ali Abbass.

Rear row L to R - Mitchell Robinson, Matt Cruse, Shashank Shekhar, Nishant Khare, Akash Kale and  Asad Abbass. 

Pitch for this match (The un-numbered pitch "The sewage farm pitch).



B&PCC v Newham cc 4th May

 Don't know If I'll be to keep this up, but I'll give it a go, I'll try and keep it short.

Home game (Friendly) for the 6th XI. This is quite historic for the club as its the first season that it looks like we're going to get 6 teams out on a regular basis. I captained one game last year and that was the first ever 6th XI. The club is going from strength to strength. 











The game was played on ground 1 on the image above, normally we'd play on one of the other 2. Today the 5th XI were on ground 2. 

Previous few days it had been raining and this year has been ridiculously wet. It had rained all day yesterday from first light to about 4pm. But today the sun came out and there was a bit of a breeze. Time we got there it was OK, but a bit soggy.

I'd checked out the form of the opposition and some of the batters in the games last year had strike rates of around 100! So my thoughts were that we needed to bowl otherwise we ran the risk of being skittled for 30 or 40.





























A lot of the players in this team I've never played with before

Just home from the Saturday game, I haven't got the exact scores yet as they did them one of those bloody tablet things rather than doing it properly. But Ball park I reckon I was 8-1-22-2. Bowled a few Leg-Breaks today and they came out well, one resulted in a catch at square leg. I must have bowled 6-7 Leg-breaks of the 48 balls, all the others Flippers.

 I batted long today too. The oppo we suspected was quite strong and I was happy when we fielded first - everyone at least got a bowl and we restricted then to 120 odd, They then turned us over 9 for 50 and I strolled out and joined the captain for the 10th wicket partnership and we put on a another 50 + and fell 19 short with 9 overs in hand. My fault played a more aggressive shot outside of the off-stump and it caught the inside edge and went on to the stumps. Retrospectively I look back at that and think - 9 overs left - 2 an over even I didn't score anymore runs the captain may have got those on his own. The oppo were running around like they'd just won the world cup whooping and jumping up and down like crazy! To be fair they could see the game slipping from their grasp and they were trying everyone and everything. 

A couple of days later when they'd posted the scores on the playcricket website, the opposition with their dumb digital scoring got it completely wrong with regards our bowling

On-line I was credited with an extra wicket, but take that out of the equation and I've started the season with 8-1-19-2 which I'm happy with. Actually I've just checked and it looks like they've rectified the score book...









Check out Adam Walker 4 overs for 0. I think Taylor Millar with 2 has been credited with one of Jakes wickets? I'm not sure though. 

Tuesday, 2 April 2024

Pre-season nets

 A few more weeks till the start of the season. Winter nets has just finished and I'm on my Easter break from teaching and so despite the horrible weather I've made a start on general fitness and agility. Hopefully I'm going to get out and do some running and interval training but I'm only too aware of all the people in the papers croaking or having heart attacks around my age and younger!

What with having a bit of a scare a few years ago... panic attack that I thought was a heart attack I ended up having my blood pressure read at the hospital and found out that it was high. High enough to require medication for the rest of my life and for me to sit up and say 'Yikes'! I then bought a blood pressure monitor and changed my diet a bit. My readings these days are pretty good and when I'm exercising consistently they're very good. But I will ease into having read John Crace's account of having a heart attack recently in the Guardian. 

The weather though at the moment and over the next few days is wet and windy, so much of the exercise is going to be indoors I reckon. With some luck I might get down the nets with a new bloke at the club for a bit of a bowl and a work out. I want to do some work on throwing from the outfield as that's always an issue and just needs a bit of work and training and it should be good by 3 or 4 weeks time?

The last 6 weeks in the nets I've bowled Flippers and Top-spinners and they're coming out OK. I want to get more variation with the flipper in terms of the speed and length - combining it with better accuracy. I reckon with bowling more top-spinners with their added bounce, I'll have more batters looking to step back into their crease looking to cut me through the point region. This was evident in the nets to some extent and I'd have hit the stumps more if I was a little more accurate with the Flippers, but I also reckon a slower flipper will bring LBW's as the amount of back-spin I get stops the ball and batters play all over the top of it, just the accuracy missing at the moment, so that's what I need to work on. Leg-Breaks I'll reserve for games where I'm playing with better players who can run and catch in the outfield and where the batters are slightly more respectful. 

Tuesday, 20 February 2024

Tilbury Cricket History - Tilbury Interknit cricket club Siley Weirs

Work in progress  (Updated 23/05/25).

Tilbury cricket history - the lost Tilbury cricket ground - Tilbury/Thurrock Interknit cricket club Siley Weirs

The information below in italics used to be easily accessed on the SECDB website, but is now only available through archive sources. There's not a lot of info there and it only vaguely describes where the cricket ground was...

Interknit cricket club was formed in 1918 by William Bannister with his friends from the firm of R. N. H. Green and Silley Weir.  They first played on a ground at Dock Road, Tilbury.  The pitch preparation on the ground was done by the club’s own members in their spare time, as this was a time before the days when the local council began maintaining pitches.

The ground was let to them by a Mr. Bill Stickings, who, in order to avoid paying higher rates on a developed field, let cattle graze on it!  Mr. Bannister recalled: “The outfield was a bit rough, but we enjoyed ourselves, both clearing it and playing on it!”

Once they had their ground, players began to think of what to call themselves when writing away for fixtures.  They wanted to maintain their connection with the firms for whom the majority of the team worked, but also wanted to remain independent.  They finally chose the name “Interknit” for this was the telegraphic address of R. N. H. Green and Silley Weir.  This encouraged the firm to help the club and a hut, chairs and table were provided for changing and for tea.  But after this initial aid and interest, no real notice was taken of the club, except for the annual Firm v Club match.

“The club has always been self-supporting” said Mr. Bannister. “More so when we moved up to Blackshots to play”.   This occurred in 1936, when the Council started to develop Blackshots Playing Fields, they laid the first pitch as an experiment to see if Council maintained grounds would be a success.  Blackshots, at that time, was known locally as the ‘clover field’.  With their experience of preparing pitches at Dock Road, they were able to assist the Blackshots groundsman, Harry Goodrich, a great deal.   At the time, there was no water supply and buckets of water had to be carried across the ground to water the pitch!

In those days, Interknit played teams like Grays Recreation CC and Chadwell CC, who had a very strong side before the (second) world war.   When war broke out, many players joined the services and clubs were short of players.  Interknit joined forces with Chadwell and for the duration of the war their fixtures were as one.  At the end of hostilities, the London branch of Green and Silly Weir formed a cricket club….and also called themselves Interknit!  In order to keep the clubs distinct, our local side altered their name slightly to Thurrock Interknit.  Gradually, the team drifted away from the firm to the extent that by 1960, there were only two workers from the firm still playing.  But the club was flourishing as a private, self-supporting organisation, like so many others.

The club had a bright future.  In the early 1960’s, their captain was Jim Reader, one of the best cricketers in the local area and they had the services of a promising youngster, Ivor Blows, who was an aggressive batsman.  Derek Carter was a fine all-rounder who was also a member of the strong Thurrock Interknit club.

I've not done a lot on this recently as I hit a brick wall with a lack of information . The work previously done was on another blog that I'll move over to here. I've had a resurgence due to finding a map website that had links to ariel photography and it's the ariel photography that has allowed for better analysis and evidence.

The premise of the blog initially was triggered by the loss of cricket grounds/pitches in the South Essex region and an idea to photograph the spaces as they are now. During these investigations I heard about a cricket team that was connected to Siley Weirs an engineering company situated in Tilbury docks  and they seem to pre-date Tilbury cricket club and as far as I can make out they were called either Tilbury Interknit cricket club or potentially Thurrock Interknit cricket club.

Most of the information that is available is via Tilbury & Chadwell memories, where people have been posted for the most part anonymous images with people chipping in with names of the players, but little more and despite asking I've not been able to glean a great deal.

(Fig) Click image for source
This image here supplied by Annie O'brien. The images are dated approx' 1950. If you click on the images it should take you to the website of origin where some of the identities of the players are discussed.










From the same post...
(Fig 2). Click image for source

This image I find more interesting as it features industrial buildings and the all-important heavy roller on the edge of the image (Right). This therefore appears to be a cricket pitch near the docks. Initially, seeing the very tall West Thurrock pylons? I thought that this might be a view looking west towards Grays, but on investigation found that the pylons were not constructed till 1960-65

Maps as a rule are pretty useless for figuring out the locations of cricket grounds and the best you can do is identify playing fields if your lucky.

Discussion with regards names copied across from the website... 

"To add a few names to the photo back row 2nd from the left is my brother Peter Taylor, far right of the back row is my brother in law Albert Tyson and sitting in the front row between Bert Avery and Bill Stevens is John Brownlie Albert is also in the small photo at the front with I think is his daughter Pauline.

Top Photo, Top Row. 3rd from left is Charlie Mann (my late uncle) and 4th from left John Cantwell.

I think top first right was Tom Cloak . Then bottom second right look’s like Bill Stevens Elaine nee [ Templeman ]

Wonder, if possible, anyone could recognize those included within the small photo (I myself to the right, one of the little girls). Long time ago say approx. late 40’s btw my father, Ted Thompson, is part of the “Dockers” team. Sandra Adcock"

The breakthrough came this week when looking on Facebook someone asked a question about a historic location in Tilbury. My older son is GIS expert and when he was doing his degree he introduced me to some resources and remembering these I went looking and then discovered the website that led to the breakthrough.

Fig 2 "Tilbury Dockers cricket team" is probably the most useful image, dated 1950 it's set on a cricket ground indicated by the inclusion of the roller. It's the buildings in the background and their proximity which is the most useful aspect as this potentially places the ground relatively close to the docks. The buildings typical of the period between the dock being built and what I remember from the  1960's.

Prior to this post (2024) the trail had gone cold and since then a lot of the information that was freely available the SECDB website seems to have been hidden, the HTML links in my previous posts no longer working. Part of the reason being the organisations that held the information have amalgamated and possibly those that curated the information having passed on leaving behind others who are no longer directly connected to the period, events, people and places. I've requested information from these organisations but I'm not hopeful. 

The name of the team

At the moment this is contentious and based on this post here https://www.tilburyandchadwellmemories.org.uk/content/people/sports/more-cricket-memorabilia

"His father, Horace or Horry as he was known, was a stalwart of Interknit which had been formed, before World War 2, by workers of the dock firm Green and Siley Wier".

  • Interknit cc
  • Tilbury Dock cc
  • Green & Siley Weir cc

All possibly referring to the same team? Interknit gets mentioned during the 1950's as one of 40 friendly teams playing in the Thurrock area see here

Recap

Previously I'd ascertained some facts. 

West Tilbury had a cricket ground at the top of Cooper Shaw Hill on the right accessed via Church Rd. This is now a paddock and has horses on it next door to Condovers scout campsite. The pavilion is still there and has a preservation order on it preventing the people that use it currently from structurally changing it. I know the people and visited the site some years ago and had a look and they've built a structure around it which acts to preserve the pavilion inside. The design is unusual and not as I recalled it as a scout in the 1970's and this possibly the reason for the preservation order? (More on this below). I've been unable to find any images of the ground or any associated images. 

Tilbury Fort Scene of the only cricket match played where the opponents got so wound up over the outcome that they killed each other with a handful of people losing their lives. This is pretty well documented in a number or places  and happened in the 1700's and was probably played within the confines of the fort in an ad hoc manner?

The Dockers Fields Anecdotally, I've seen these fields described as Siley Weirs Sports Ground, but I've not been able to confirm that they were called that. I can remember these field from the late 1960's when Sexton Road was just being completed, from my recollection, the areas coloured red in the map below around about 1969 were all field prior to the Adelaide Road estate being built and completed by 1974. I recall the football fields, rough areas of grass, disused allotments and a large area of occupied allotments where my Dad had a plot. The area was marshy in places with ditches criss-crossing it, where we'd go ditch-jumping.

Unfortunately, as previously mentioned maps are commissioned on an irregular basis and jump from one quarter of a century to another and differ in detail massively. The only really high-quality map that is available on-line is dated 1880's to 1913 and doesn't identify things such as sports fields.

This post here on the subject of cycle speedway talks about a track on the Siley Weir sports fields and says that they were all built over with a housing estate. They also mention that the track was in the area that later hosted the Go-Kart track which is at the top end of my map here. 

My suspicions looking at maps and the buildings in this area and the fact that people spoke about the cricket pitch being off Dock Road lead me to believe if there was a ground/pitch it would have been where the S Bend is in Adelaide Rd today. 

The Daisy Filed (King Georges Fields) This field was used for cricket during my life-time and was used by Tilbury CC and is fairly well documented. Tilbury CC disbanded and the players dispersed to other local teams and I played with Alan 'Fozzy' Fulbrook at Grays & Chadwell cc who'd previously played for Tilbury cc on this ground. I lived across the road from The Daisy field in South View Avenue. 

The mystery field Seen in fig A above. The field/ground seen in this picture is the one that I needed to establish where it was. It's not the Dockers Field or any of the others, so it had to be somewhere else and this is where I drew a blank. The buildings suggested it was somewhere close to the docks, but where? 

The Dockers Fields_______________________
Built over between around 1970 and 1974 I only knew them as football fields. I'd walk from my house in South View Avenue up to the Circle onto the road that is now known as Hobart Road. Here the road coming off the circle turned into dirt track 'The Manorway' dead opposite was the allotments and these were in use, my Dad had one there and on the allotment there was an impressive club house which had a bar. The bar had optics, settees, carpet the works, I remember being very impressed how homely it was. 
If you turned left on the Manor way it went past the council depot on the left and in front of the depot was the green bins and an open area just in front of the gates for the allotment where people threw their rubbish, there were skips and as kids we'd dig around in the rubbish looking for pram wheels to make trolleys with or search for brass and copper to sell and get some money.  

The manorway at this point dwindled away to a footpath and followed the same line as the current Adelaide Rd more or less with shallow ditches either side lined with reeds here and there. To the left some bushes just outside the council yard which apparently was the remnants of a farm that was knocked down in the 1950's, all that was left was some bushes and trees and over-grown rubble. Albany Road is now in this position. Opposite Albany Rd, a track left the manorway and came out into a wedge shaped rough grass field that ran adjacent to the manorway, this field had bushes either side and the path led towards Dunlop Rd stores on Dunlop Rd. 

The rough grass bush lined wedge-shape field opened out onto the dockers fields. There seemed to be 2 or 3 football fields. To the left you could see Landsdowne Rd school and the air raid shelter situated outside the school at the edge of the school football field. Looking right along the edge of the field behind the bushes were the disused allotments as you looked towards where the Go-Kart track was in the distance. Sexton Rd at this point I think was being built and in front grass fields and building sites around Dunlop stores shops, all at the foundations stage, so you could see the new 3 story town houses of Dunlop Rd. 

But importantly no cricket pitch this is around 1968/69.

The evidence thus far... from the SEDCH website 

"They first played on a ground at Dock Road, Tilbury.  The pitch preparation on the ground was done by the club’s own members in their spare time, as this was a time before the days when the local council began maintaining pitches.
The ground was let to them by a Mr. Bill Stickings, who, in order to avoid paying higher rates on a developed field, let cattle graze on it!  Mr. Bannister recalled: “The outfield was a bit rough, but we enjoyed ourselves, both clearing it and playing on it!”
This was around 1918". 

On my own blog I comment....

The same article says that they moved to Blackshots in 1936, so it seems that this ground then disappears from sight as such and it's difficult to ascertain where in Tilbury it was. Recently though via a Tilbury memories page on Facebook one of the blokes commenting on the subject of playing fields mentioned a field in Tilbury along 'The Broadway' where cricket was being played in the 1950's. The Broadway road back in the 1950's prior to Dunlop road being built went pretty much straight towards the Go-Cart track adjacent to Gaylor Road.

1961 RAF Ariel view of Grays, Little Thurrock and Chadwell marshes - This map clearly shows the Dockers field square/wicket as well as one in Grays at the end of Gypsy Lane. 



The East Tilbury Cricket ground____________

A totally new discovery! I'd always guessed there must have been a cricket ground in East Tilbury. Again, all the people I've asked previously had no knowledge of one, but with the history of Bata and the ethos of the company e.g. providing facilities for its staff including sports, there just had to be a cricket ground...

So looking through the RAF images noted that some of the shots were taken over that area and sure enough pretty much exactly where I thought the ground was likely to be there it was. I did some research on one of those local memories sites around the Stanford Le-Hope way and pretty much in the same way as the Tilbury forums next to nothing on the subject of cricket. 


















The ground is seen clearly in this shot above and zoomed in below.

















Below a juxtaposition of the 1955 ariel view and the 2023 view. 










This then begs the question - who played on the ground and was there a Bata Cricket team or an East Tilbury team? I've messaged a couple of History groups related to Bata to see if they can come up with anything 20/10/24. 

https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/archive/collections/aerial-photos/record/raf_58_1779_f22_0342

I'd also like to see old footage of Linford and the green just north of the Railway crossing.












n the last couple of days I've found some really useful resources - ariel photography. From what I've gleaned if you include St Chads schools wicket, Tilbury had potentially 4 strips/wickets...

To be continued...


Dockers field wicket - This shot linked below looks pretty convincing to me. In the bottom left-hand corner you can see what looks like either an artificial strip (wicket) which is almost certainly not the case, more like, it's been cut and with the heat/dry weather, it's dried out in comparison with the surrounding grass? The date though is quite early 16/4/1954.































The unfortunate thing is with these images, you'd have to have been born in 1938 and be kind of 16 years old to potentially be aware of this field and the fact that it's used for cricket which would make you 86, the chances of you being alive are slim and whether you'd be interested in cricket more so, so it's unlikely I'm ever going to get confirmation of these investigation by anyone alive. 

If you know Tilbury, the track at the top of the image is roughly where Adelaide Road is these days and it would sweep down towards the buildings on the R/H side joining Dunlop Rd in the corner of the picture. 

https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/archive/collections/aerial-photos/record/EAW053607

This shot here below (click on the image to find the origin) shows 3 of the 4 potential cricket pitches in Tilbury around the start of the 1950's if your not counting the West Tilbury wicket at Condovers. 


Link here with three wickets in one shot... Daisy Field, Dockers field and St Chads 

https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/archive/collections/aerial-photos/record/raf_58_1779_f21_0347



Bibliography 

Details about a greyhound track (Area pre go-cart track)? https://worldgroundhop.blogspot.com/2020/05/tilbury.html

Fondu Cricket club https://www.thurrock-history.org.uk/fondu2.htm

Ariel shot RAF 1955 - Dockers field, St Chads and Daisy field wickets.

https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/archive/collections/aerial-photos/record/raf_58_1779_f21_0347

Link to Storymaps version https://storymaps.com/stories/a09fdde5b6d6411796c49a15a4545f4d/edit





Saturday, 30 September 2023

Best season ever?

 At the age of 63, 2023 looks to have been my best season ever. I've never played so much cricket and as a result got my first ever five-fer and came in as the 4th highest wicket-taker at the club!

I've played in two teams, primarily the 5th XI made up of younger kids and old blokes and the 3rd XI made up of the better kids, usually who've got Dads that are cricket players that are generally looking to push on and become 1st XI players when they're 18 years old and blokes in their 30's and 40's. The other teams I play in are friendlies which are a broader mix and often include first XI players down to the 5th X and I'm usually the 5th XI player down to my bowling. These teams I love because the 1st, 2nd and 3rd XI players are often fit, agile and fully committed and therefore take catches off my bowling and prevent boundaries - very different to the 5th XI where the kids are still a bit wary of the ball and still haven't reached that point where they're willing to put their bodies on the line to stop a ball. The rest of the team are usually less than agile older who don't put in the time and effort to stay fit and agile and take their strength and agility far less seriously than I do. 

As a result...


Of the top five here Kirby Jennings is the only other 5th XI player and up till last week she'd been in front of me as she is such a good bowler. As you can see her Strike rate is better than mine which is the figure I always feel is the one to pursue and get as low as possible. She bowls completely differently to me - tossing the ball up really high above the eye-line on a good length. She's often brought on when there's a batter that is destroying us and as you can see from her strike rate she gets the wicket that we need in a matter of overs and seems non-plussed when she's hit for 4's and 6's, she just seems to be un-phased and she bowls the same ball again and takes the wicket - often making the batters look foolish, I love playing in the same matches as her watching her do her work. She bowls SLA and says she doesn't get the ball to turn much and says it's the flight, line and length accuracy that works for her. 

Again as with last season, I've bowled Flippers. Primarily cross or mixed seam back-spinners, I rarely bowl with the seam up. I have a back-spinning off-break variation which I bowl rarely, this season I've taken at least a couple with it. But for me one of the good things about the season having played in the mixed level games is that I've been encouraged to bowl Leg-Breaks by the better players and they've worked with a few wickets which has been nice. The season came to a close with some experimentation with bowling classic Top-Spinners (See previous post) and all through Sept (last night being the most recent) and these are coming out pretty well and look very promising. It looks like I might go in to the 2024 season with a range of Flipper variations and a Top-Spinner, with some Leg-Breaks on the rare occasion, but I'm still wary about bowling my Leggies in 5th XI games. 

Friendly team captain? 

We've had a pretty amazing Sept, today (30th) the weather is sunny and around 22-24 degrees in the South East of the country where I am and every Saturday through Sept we've had very similar weather and very little rain, so we could have easily played right through every weekend. The last league game was back in August and so many people were gutted that the season had finished and were all saying that they'd play through Sept into Oct as the pro's do. This is mainly the Indian lads at the club. We've been netting all the way through Sept - last night included and there may be more to come before the nets are removed on the 7th of Oct. Talking about it there seemed to be a consensus that we should look to somehow continue playing, so I enquired about this with some senior members of the club and got some vague answers; It seems that because our ground is council maintained, the wickets are only prepped during the league season - but there may be some scope to extend that further, but there was a general reluctance to do so as there was a belief that it would be nigh on impossible to get teams out beyond the end of the league season based on previous experience. It was emphasised, that if there was some interest in playing through Sept it would probably be better to make all the fixtures 'Away' games as clubs that owned and maintained their own wickets would have more say with regards the availability of their wickets and not be restricted by Council schedules. 

The conversation then moved on to whether there was enough interest in playing through September and how viable the idea was. Then the key issue was brought up "The club is always looking for people to take the lead on these things and if you would be the skipper and arrange the fixtures, there's no reason this can't happen if you feel there's the interest in it... You could be the Friendly team skipper and sort out Sunday games as well through the season and we'd get more cricket being played"?

So, it looks like there's scope for this if I volunteer to be the Friendly captain and sort the fixtures. I've been the captain before (4th XI) years ago when they were desperate and had an awful season with really small kids in the team and a series of older blokes who were brought out of retirement to try and save the 4th XI side. It included games with only 8 players with 3 of them being only 13, it was pretty awful and I don't think we won one game, so it's not something I have a good vibe about. But since then the club has been transformed and is so much better with so many more players. Add to that I'm a better player now and have more of an idea with regards captaincy, so I may consider it. I've got till Jan to think about it and see if the interest is quantified as talking about it is so much easier than showing up for it. The idea of the mixed level Sunday team is really appealing though. 

The clubs doing really well
At the end of the season like most clubs we had an awards night. I haven't been to many of these for years - not since my own kids were in the frame for awards. I'm not a drinker, so that side of it isn't a draw for me. But having played in the 5th XI with other people's kids who'd done really well, I thought I'd show up this year and have a look and show some support. 

I was amazed! The event was well attended, but the amount of under 16 players was surprising, but even better was there was loads of girls. I new there was a girls team, but the sense I had from stuff I'd seen on social media was that there wasn't enough of them, but there were stacks of them - loads of wannabe Maddy Villiers and Charlie Deans! Girls in the 14 - 15 year old age bracket and all the way down to 8 year olds, so good to see. The club is a different place in comparison to 5 or 6 years ago. 

Highlight of the year
There were a number, but if I was to choose just one it would be the game against Hornchurch Athletic cc. Their ground is at a school and the facilities are pretty basic as the changing room and toilets are inside the school a distance from the ground, so we get changed outside. The wicket's okay though and the outfield is OK too - usually with a very short boundary on one side that is down-hill. In the past we've been absolutely hammered by them - our team being the usual old geezers and young kids finding their way. Whereas they seem to have a good core of about 3-4 decent batters in their mid 30's to mid 40's who play correctly, surrounded by younger and similar aged players of different ethnicities who play far more aggressively. Their bowling is a little erratic, but because of this, they're difficult to score runs off of mixing quite fast with spinners with unusual but affective approaches. With this mix of players all the games I've played in we've lost. Added to this, they come across as having a really aggressive win at all costs mindset and just seem to come across as being really stand-offish. 

In this game, all these aspects seem to be in place, but we had a couple of players 'Harry' an Indian bloke who was playing for the first time and claimed to be able to bat a bit and my son Joe, who hardly ever plays - twice a year, who's a decent bowler. We had a different wicket keeper Tom Tonnison who's about 15 and "Super Kirby" the destroyer of aggressive batters. 

We batted first and there were some major mishaps in the first couple of overs with their bowling - really high full tosses off pretty fast bowling and then our captain copped one on the head (no helmet) almost knocking him out and he had to retire with suspected concussion. We trundled along at a relatively slow scoring rate with Brian Waterman and Reece Eustace playing well, building a good partnership of ones and two's and the occasional boundary. Both almost reached 50 (see below) and that eventually brought Harry Suthar to the crease. The unknown Harry come in around the middle somewhere and then things picked up. It turned out he could bat. We have quite a few new blokes turn up and they're asked 'Do you bat or bowl' and they'll say 'Yeah I'm a batter' and they'll then go into full short format mode hit a few fours and get out, not playing the situation, keeping in mind the need to stay in and accrue runs at a steady rate. We're looking on thinking - damn he was looking good - should have played differently. Not Harry, he was decent and went on to score a solid 50 and then was out bowled S.Hunt the mystery spinner with a Paul Adams bowling action. We came off with a better than normal score of 193 with those three players playing crucial innings. We were buoyant, with the bowling attack we had, we were in with a shout, but we knew these blokes were good and very determined.

The usual two blokes came out and we started with Joe and Henry as I recall. Henry bowled OK, but Joe brought out his A game and bowled accurately and at a good pace. Shah took on 14 year old Henry and hit him for a few fours, but had nothing to combat Joe...





















Joe went through them with relative ease and they looked gutted.























Pmac the captain brought Harry on and he bowled well, so not only was he a decent bat, but his bowling looked handy as well. I replaced Joe with my Flippers and Leg-Breaks and took 2 wickets in my first over and another in either the 2nd or 3rd over. Looking at the scores it looks like I took 4, but one of those was a run-out off my bowling.

We went through their top order easily, some of the blokes who came out looked really determined, but between Kirby Jennings and me we pretty much finished them off. One of Kirby's was great to watch, because she bowls so loopy and slow she generally gets some tap, but she doesn't change anything - she just keeps doing what she does. K.Murford came out at number 7 and looked like a man on a mission. But had a look at Kirby, hit her for 4, but at the same time realised that she was potentially dangerous and gave her some respect, not playing expansive shots between hitting her for some 6's and 4's, but on his last big hit he holed out to deep mid-on with a great catch taken by Ted Currington as I recall running in from the boundary.