The All Too Vincibles

This afternoon saw the match between Oval Invincibles and London Spirit women’s teams. Invincibles were already eliminated, while Spirit needed a win to apply pressure to Manchester Originals for the third qualifying spot (Southern Brave are already in the final, and Northern Superchargers have already booked their slot in the eliminator on Finals Day). This post looks back at the match.

London Spirit won the toss and put Oval Invincibles in to bat. Of note for them was the presence of Kate Coppack, a pace bowler who was making her Hundred debut. The Invincibles simply never got going, though Coppack’s only visit to the bowling crease yielded eight runs from five balls. Medium pacer Eva Gray and off spinner (and Spirit skipper, and possible successor to Natalie Sciver-Brunt as England skipper) Charlie Dean each recorded 2-12 from their full allocations of 20 balls. Six of the runs Dean conceded came from the 18th and 19th balls she bowled, which were also the 98th and 99th of the innings as a whole. In addition to her bowling and captaincy Dean held two catches, one of them an absolute worldie, leaping into the air and grabbing the ball with an outstretched hand and then keeping control of it as she fell to the ground. Invincibles finished their 100 balls with 108-8 (and it was almost nine down – the last ball was an LBW given on the field, sent upstairs and only confirmed as not in fact out after all the players had left the field). Only Marizanne Kapp with 32 from 25 balls and Paige Scholfield with 22 from 21 balls had made significant contributions with the bat.

When you have a small total to defend pretty much everything has to go right if you are going to do so. Thus it was a particularly dire warning sign for Invincibles when Kira Chathli (born in Southwark and based at The Oval for all domestic cricket other than The Hundred) was gifted a fast start by Joanne Gardner who let through a four when the ball barely had enough on it to cross the rope, and it should have been an utterly basic matter to limit the damage to a single. Chathli took control of proceedings from that point on, and though the other opener, Georgia Redmayne, took a little longer to find her stride she too played impressively. By the end of the Power Play Spirit were 47-0 and the writing on the wall could have been no clearer had it been in Arial Black 500 Point, bold faced letters. The pace hardly slowed with the field going back. By the time 50 balls, the official half way stage of the chase, arrived Spirit were 93-0. Chathli completed a magnificent 50 with the second six of her innings, having also hit seven fours along the way, and got there in a mere 26 balls. That six also took Spirit past the 100 mark on the 53rd ball of their innings. Redmayne and Chathli both got out with victory a shot away, but Charli Knott put the 62nd ball of the innings away for four to give Spirit an eight wicket win with a barely credible 38 balls to spare. Originals will need to hand Superchargers an even bigger thumping tomorrow to displace Spirit, and this being Spirit’s fifth win of the tournament it officially eliminates Trent Rockets and maintains a proud record in this tournament of no team with a mere even record of four wins and four losses ever qualifying for Finals Day. Charlie Dean was named Player of the Match for her bowling, fielding and captaincy. Full scorecard here.

My usual sign off…

The London Cup and England’s 3rd Test Squad

The London Cup, England’s 3rd test squad, links, a teaser and some photographs.

INTRODUCTION

Just before starting work on this post I spotted that the England squad for the third test match has been selected. Therefore I will start with a look at that, before moving on to main subject.

A DISAPPOINTING SELECTION

The squad for tomorrow’s 3rd test match against the West Indies contains 14 names, as follows (see here for full details):

Joe Root (Yorkshire) Captain, James Anderson (Lancashire), Jofra Archer (Sussex), Dominic Bess (Somerset), Stuart Broad (Nottinghamshire), Rory Burns (Surrey), Jos Buttler (Lancashire), Zak Crawley (Kent), Sam Curran (Surrey), Ollie Pope (Surrey), Dom Sibley (Warwickshire), Ben Stokes (Durham), Chris Woakes (Warwickshire), Mark Wood (Durham).

Ben Foakes, James Bracey and Dan Lawrence have all been overlooked. My choice of 11 from this 14 (like the Irishman who was asked for directions ‘Oi wouldn’t start from here’) would be in batting order: Burns, Sibley, Crawley, *Root, Stokes, +Pope, Curran, Bess, Archer, Broad, Anderson. I refuse ever to name Buttler in a suggested test XI, which from this 14 means I have to give the gloves to Pope. I think England need both their veterans Broad and Anderson, and I also want the spinner, the out and out speedster and with due respect to Woakes I opt for the extra variation provided by Curran’s left arm, gambling on him at number seven. Although I would like to accommodate both speedsters, it would mean either one of the veterans missing out or Bess coming in at number seven which is a trifle too much of a gamble on the batting even for me. 

THE LONDON CUP

Surrey and Middlesex women’s sides convened at The Oval to play a T20 match for The London Cup yesterday evening, starting at 6PM. The game was available on livestream courtesy of http://www.kiaoval.com. Surrey had lost all of the previous five runnings of this event, and were without Nat Sciver, Sophia Dunkley and Bryony Smith, all up at Derby with the national squad.

Surrey bowled first, and opened with medium pace from Amy Gordon and spin purveyed by Claudie Cooper. Middlesex were saved from complete disaster by a robust innings from Cordelia Griffith who made 30, the highest individual score the game. Gayatri Gole came in at 60-5 and reached 28 not out, as Middlesex ended up recovering somewhat to 108-7 from their 20 overs.

Beth Kerins had a spell which started dreadfully – four of the six balls of her first over were rank full tosses but recovered well.

Dani Gregory, a young leg spinner with a very rapid arm action, bowled a spell in which she sent down a number of wides, but also some very good stuff, including this beauty (click link below to view), probably the best single delivery of the match.

Surrey themselves struggled with the bat, especially against Katie Wolfe, the quickest bowler on either side, and Emily Thorpe, another young spinner who looks a real prospect (she got two wickets, both clear cut LBWs, one of them Aylish Cranstone just as she was beginning to like dangerous). They too were 60-5 at low water mark, and their number 7, wicket keeper Kira Chathli, played a fine innings to rescue them. In the 18th over Chathli twice flipped deliveries over the keeper’s head for fours to get Surrey back almost up with the rate. The 19th over was bowled by Katie Wolfe, and until near the end looked like settling it for Middlesex, but then the irrepressible Chathli hit another four and six were needed off the final over. The number nine for Surrey got Chathli back on strike early in the over, and with two balls left three were required for victory. Chathli, cool as a cucumber, slotted one final boundary to take her own score to 28 not out and her side to victory with one ball remaining. Bhavika Gajipra also bowled well for Middlesex.

TEASER, LINKS AND PHOTOGRAPHS

A couple of pieces from Richard Murphy of Tax Research UK:

  1. The right response to the question ‘What taxes should be raised to pay for coronavirus?’ is ‘None’
  2. The UK government’s own accounts show that QE cancels government debt

A very easy teaser from brilliant.org:

Teaser

This was offered with multiple choice answers, but I am not going to be that generous. I will however give one hint: this is a problem about pattern recognition, not calculation.

Now it is time for my usual sign off…

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This panel is on Railway Road.

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A swan reflected in the water…

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…and reversing it, Escher style, so that the reflected swan looks like it is the original.

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