DEVON have
to put the disruptions of the past few days behind them when the Minor Counties
final gets under way against Cambridgeshire at March Town tomorrow.
Western
Division winners Devon play their Eastern Division counterparts over four days
in Fen country for the outright title.
Devon’s
preparations started badly when skipper Neil Hancock was left out of the side
having found it impossible to get enough time off work to cover all four days.
The Devon
management felt they couldn’t have their skipper leave at lunch on the last day
to get to a work appointment in London, so left him out of the side altogether
and asked Chris Bradley to lead the team.
North Devon
all-rounder and Somerset Academy scholar Craig Overton was given permission by
England U19 boss John Abrahams to play as Hancock’s replacment.
A second
complication came when Devon were offered Craig’s England U19 all-rounder twin
Jamie after the 12-man squad had been picked.
“It was a
moral issue really,” said Devon’s director of cricket Roger Newman. “How do you
tell someone who has played all season to reach the final they won’t be in for
the big one?”
Devon’s
path to the final has been on the back of five straight wins –the last by 10
wickets over long-time leaders Berkshire – after the May Bank Holiday opener
against Dorset at Bournemouth was drawn.
The team
seems to have developed a winning rhythm – James Burke, Rob Holman and David
Lye have been stacking up the runs, Bradley and Trevor Anning have been
knocking over the wickets – and Newman doesn’t see any reason to change the
orchestration now.
“Winning is
a habit and we seem to have found a way of doing it,” said Newman.
“We have
shown in games that we are well on top in that we won’t ease up, and in games
like Wiltshire we have fought back after bad sessions to win the match.
“One of our
strengths is we have bowlers who build scoreboard pressure, which forces
batsmen into mistakes which get them out.
“If we keep
doing what we have been doing, we can win the game.”
Devon last
won the title in 2006 when they defeated Buckinghamshire at Exmouth in the
final and are bidding for an eighth title since 1978,
One of
those wins was in 2004 at Worcestershire over Cambridgeshire in a rain-ruined
two-day game.
Cambridgeshire’s
only win was way back in 1963 when they topped what was then a one-division
competition.
Players to
watch out for in the Cambridgeshire side are opening bat Peter Richer,
all-rounder Lewis Bruce and off-spinner and captain Paul McMahon.
Richer is a
steady pair of hands at the top of the order with 365 runs on the way to the
final at an average of 30.41.
Bruce (374
runs) is top of the batting averages on 53 and has 30 wickets at around 17 runs
each.
McMahon,
who had four seasons with Nottinghamshire, made is the leading bowler in the team
with 38 scalps at 14.71 runs each.
Cambridgeshire:A
G Burton, P G Richer, J H Jatkinson, N J Ferraby, G C Goosen, M J Pateman, L R
Bruce, P Sumerkill, J McMahon, J M E Barrs. T Mees
Devon: J E
Burke (Budleigh), R J Holman (Exeter), R J Woodman (Taunton), R I Dawson
(Budleigh), J J Bess (Sidmouth), C Overton (North Devon), M W Thompson
(Torquay), T S Anning, D F Lye (both Exmouth), S Barlow (Budleigh), C Bradley
(Bovey). 12th C A J Morris (Budleigh).