WALSDEN CC C.L.L. LEAGUE CHAMPIONS 2012
Expectations
for 2012 at the club were relatively high.
Mid table finishes in the previous 2 seasons showed that the club had
the basis of a strong side. However with
the return of James Rawlinson after a one season stint as professional at
Settle CC and the Barker brothers from Todmorden it meant that the amateur
strength was good. Coupled with this was
the first time visit of young Kiwi quickie Hamish Kyne from Wellington as
overseas amateur, and most important of all the recruitment of professional
Ranil Dhammika, a left arm spinner who could also bat from Sri Lanka.
The
season began at
Walsden’s
next game was at Ashton who have propped up the league in recent seasons. Walsden again started well with Rawlinson
scoring a superb 76, Hooson 27 and Dhammika 28 all contributing well. Unfortunately the tail didn’t wag and a total
of 165 was challenging but certainly not unattainable. As it happens the total was far too big with
Shackleton 5 - 19 and Dhammika 4 - 41 blowing Ashton away for 91.
When
the rain relented, early May saw Littleborough visit Walsden. All Walsden’s top order contributed but a
rapid partnership of 107 between Dhammika 85 not out and Nick Barker 39 not out
took Walsden to a very good score of 255 for 3.
Walsden made early in roads into the Littleborough innings when overseas
amateur Williams was brilliantly run out by keeper Dawson and then possibly the
catch of the season saw Shackleton catch Australian professional Clinton Perren
off his own bowling for 20.
Littleborough never recovered from these early setbacks and were
eventually 129 all out. Shackleton
taking 3 - 19 and Dhammika 4 - 12 off ten overs.
Walsden
then visited the unpredictable Unsworth.
Walsden won the toss and elected to bat on a damp wicket and were
quickly in big trouble at 14 for 4. For
the first time of many during the season Walsden’s strength in depth showed
with a match winning partnership between Kristian Halstead 54 and Nick Barker
49 taking the score to 136 before some late hitting advanced the score to 150 –
8. Unsworth were quite simply blitzed by
Dhammika 5 – 18 and Stevie Barker 4 – 29 and were bowled out for 48 off 24
overs.
Royton
who had started well were the next visitors to
The
first round of the Wood Cup at Walsden saw Walsden demolish a poor Ashton
side. Walsden scored a mammoth 268 with
17 year old Jake Hooson scoring a chanceless superb 110 not out. Kyne was the leading Walsden bowler with 4 –
19 and Ashton were 100 all out.
Another
tricky league fixture followed with
Unpredictable
The
loss of both Walsden openers put a bit of early pressure on, but
Another
Wood cup interlude saw reigning champions Norden visit
Stevie Barker 22 not out led Walsden to a reasonable 202. Unfortunately Walsden could not remove
Nordens South African pro Mark Price until very late in the game and his 109
was the main reason that Norden won in the last over of the game.
With
only the league now left Walsden’s next game was on the low slow track of
Monton. Walsden’s very slow innings was
dominated by a very patient 47 from
The
last match in June saw Crompton visit
Walsden
now topped the league but with no overseas amateur going on to win the league
would be a real challenge. The loss of
Kyne meant a change in tactics with Dhammika opening the bowling in most games
and being supported principally by Shackleton and Stevie Barker.
The
first game in July saw Unsworth visit Walsden.
Another superb spell from Dhammika, 20 overs 6 – 36 well supported by S
Barker 17 overs 3 – 50 saw Unsworth bowled out for only 104. Walsden were cruising at 78 – 2 but the loss
of Dawson and Nick Barker brought about a collapse of mega proportions and saw
Walden reduced to 86 – 9. Cue the Gale
brothers, Joe batting at No. 11 scored a magnificent 17 not out, whilst brother
Josh played patiently for a crucial 4 not out.
This win again proved the value of strength in depth.
Mid
July on another cloudy day (when weren’t they) at Walsden saw the second half
of the season start with the return fixture against
The
return fixture at Littleborough’s Hare Hill ground was a painstaking batting
effort by Littleborough. Stevie Barker
removed the dangerous Perren for only 1 and Littleborough then batted 50 overs
to reach 99 – 9. The only highlight was
Dhammika’s first hat trick in senior cricket.
Walsden’s reply was relatively straight forward with
Another
interesting fixture towards the end of July saw Walsden travel to
Third
placed Milnrow visited
29
July 2012 was arguably the first time when the championship became a real
possibility. Both Heywood and Norden
were well within reach of Walsden’s points total at this stage and so the game
at Norden was of critical importance.
Another rain affected start meant a 22 over per side game. Norden won the toss and professional Price
and ex Lancs player Fitton smashed the Walsden attack to all parts of the
ground. It was only when Price was
brilliantly caught by Dan Howley off Nick Barker that Walsden exerted some control. Norden however still scored 179 off their 22
overs with Nick Barker and Dhammika both claiming 3 expensive wickets apiece.
Walsden’s
reply started disastrously when Dhammika who was promoted to open was bowled
off the first ball he received.
Rawlinson played a very useful innings for 29 which brought together
Dawson and Nick Barker. A circumspect
start looked as though Walsden would be hoping to achieve 1 point by scoring
134 or 75% of Norden’s score. After 15
overs Walsden were 101 for 2 and after 18 were 126 for 2. The explosion then began with Barker hitting
4 sixes and 5 fours and
Middleton
who had started the season well were the first visitors in August on another
cloudy day at
Walsden’s
next visited lowly Werneth at the Coppice.
After a sound but slow start by Rawlinson 50 and Hooson 25, the
acceleration came initially – from Dawson 21 and then Dhammika 60 not out off
58 balls and Nick Barker 43 not out off 34 balls to set a challenging 225 –
3. Werneth had no answer to Dhammika who
bowled 21 overs 6 – 44 and were eventually dismissed for 123.
Walsden
then entertained Monton and Weaste in Mid-August who won the toss and decided
to bat. Dhammika bowled well with 4 – 44
off 20 overs and Jake Hooson made his first real contribution with the ball
taking an excellent 4 – 15 off 6 overs.
Monton batted 40 overs and were eventually bowled out for 137. After both Walsden openers were dismissed
early
After
the top of the table clash at Heywood had been rained off another crucial game
saw Walsden entertain Norden who were seeking to obtain revenge for the recent
defeat. Norden batted first and when
Dhammika dismissed Price for 27 Norden’s hopes of a really big score evaporated
and they managed to score 165 all out off 49 overs. Dhammika taking 7 – 63 off 25 overs and
Stevie Barker 3 – 75 off 17.5 overs.
Rain early in Walsden’s reply meant that Walsden needed to score 118 off
23 overs. Both openers went relatively
cheaply but a superb 53 not out by
Due
to the poor weather two of the first games of the season had been rained off and
rearranged for the last 2 weekends of the season meaning that going into
September Walsden still unusually had 5 games to negotiate, the last one being
Heywood who at this stage were only 8 points behind Walsden. The title for them was still very much a
reality.
The
first game in September saw a revamped Ashton visit Walsden. Ashton managed 113 all out off 38 overs with
Dhammika taking his mandatory 5 wickets, well supported by Shackleton and
Hooson with 2 wickets apiece. Ashton
bowled well and after Rawlinson and Dawson had scored good 20s the team had a
bit of a wobble losing 4 cheap wickets.
Fortunately Nick Barker hung around for a resolute 22 not out to see
Walsden home for the loss of 7 wickets.
Walsden
then visited
With
three games to play and Heywood still only 8 points behind, Walsden visited
Radcliffe who during the season have had a very good bowling attack spearheaded
by Cheetham the ex-Lancashire bowler, but also a poor batting side. Fortunately this was also the case again on a
sunny (yes sunny) day at Radcliffe on 9 September 2012. Dewhirst won the toss again and batted. Unfortunately at 28 – 4 and 41 – 5 this
looked as though it might not be the right decision. However not for the first time in the season
Walsden showed themselves to be a team with real depth and fight. Halstead with 21, Josh Gale 16, Stevie Barker
13 and then a brilliant belligerent 44 not out off 44 balls by Joe Gale well
supported by skipper Dewhirst saw Walsden to a decent total of 144. Two early wickets from Shackleton and then 5
– 32 by Dhammika and a miserly 3 – 9 off 8 overs by Stevie Barker saw Radcliffe
dismissed for 73.
Walsden
now needed 1 win from the final 2 games of the season. As chance would have it Walsden again played
Radcliffe but at Walsden on another sunny day in Mid-September. Dewhirst inserted the opponents and Dhammika
demolished the early order to leave Radcliffe reeling at 20 – 5. Some lusty hitting from Ben Johnson saw a
brief recovery but after he was bowled by
Stevie Barker, Dhammika took complete control to end with the brilliant figures
of 11 overs 8 – 39 with Barker taking the other 2 wickets. Walsden needed 95 runs to win the league for
the first time since 1964.
After
an early scare when Hooson was dismissed by the pacey Cheetham for nought,
Rawlingson 29 and Dawson 22 saw the score to 63 before Dhammika 17 not out and
Nick Barker 11 not out saw Walsden to the championship off 31.4 overs. The celebrations then began.
The
final match at Walsden on 16 September 2012 against Heywood who finished
runners up was rained off when Heywood who chose to bat first were 74 – 1 off
10 overs. Nobody cared. The title and the trophy were by this time
Walsden’s and a few days of memorable celebrations followed for players,
ex-players and supporters. The title
victory was made all the more credible by the fact that all 10 players other
then the pro and Kyne who played only a third of the season were born and
brought up within sight of Walsden’s ground.
The
statistics for the season make good reading, Walsden played 23 out of the 30
scheduled league games and won 21 of them with only 2 losses through the entire
league season. Their final points total
of 118 beat runners up Heywood by 8 and third place Milnrow by 20.
On
the batting front Matt Dawson scored 812 runs at an average of 40.6 runs per
visit, Nick Barker 495 at an average of 38.1, Ranil Dhammika 589 at 34.6, James
Rawlinson 738 runs at 29.5 and Jake Hooson 537 at 24.4. All figured prominently in the league
averages with Dawson and Barker finishing 3rd and 4th
respectively in the amateur batting averages.
On
the bowling front Ranil Dhammika was easily the best bowler in the league
taking a remarkable 119 wickets at 7.91 runs per wicket. This is a Walsden club record in overs
cricket beating
Ces Wright’s 116. Stevie Barker was well
placed in the league averages with 45 wickets at 19.1 and Jamie Shackleton also
had an excellent season taking 30 wickets at 20.2.
As
impressive as these stats are it was the strength of Walsden’s entire team lead
superbly by the astute and selfless Dewhirst that brought the title to
Walsden. Walsden were staring down the
barrel on several occasions during the season but the lower order held their
nerves to hold on and win the game.
Walsden were also fortunate to have some very good second xi
players to bring in when occasionally they were needed. This was demonstrated by the fact that
Walsden also won the aggregate trophy in 2012 for the highest number of points
by the first and second xi’s combined.
Amazingly the 3rd xi also did the double. The club were also fortunate to have a hard
working ground staff who worked tirelessly throughout the year in covering
wickets and then getting the ground ready for play in often inclement
weather. More games would have been lost
to the weather without them.
Finally
special mention must be made to Walsden’s catching and fielding which was of
the highest quality throughout. Catches
win matches is an old cricketing adage and in this season Walsden fielded
brilliantly and did not drop many catches.
They deserved their title of Central Lancashire League Champions for
2012.
The
detailed statistics as compiled by Mick Watson the Walsden scorer are as
follows:
BATTING
NAME INS NO HS
M
N Barker 21 8 71 495 38.08
R Dhammika 24 7 85 no 589 34.65
J Rawlinson 25 0 76 738 29.52
J Hooson 23 1 110 no 537 24.41
K Halstead 13 3 54 155 15.50
Josh Gale 16 6 29 no 124 12.40
S Barker 12 3 22 no 68 7.56
Also batted:
Joe Gale 7 3 44 no 98 24.50
J Shackleton 6 1 15 no 32 6.40
C Dewhirst 7 6 4 no 8 8.00
H Kyne 6 1 12 25 5.00
M
S Hanson 1 1 0 0 0.00
A Zaidi 1 0 15 15 15.00
BOWLING
NAME OVERS MAIDENS
R Dhammika 391.1 86 951 119 7.99 2.43
S Barker 236.2 29 840 45 19.12 3.55
J Shackleton 166.5 30 646 30 20.19 3.88
Also bowled:
H Kyne 56.5 8 206 12 17.17 3.65
J Hooson 35.2 3 229 7 32.71 6.51
C Dewhirst 15.0 1 76 2 38.00 5.07
N Barker 28.4 0 151 7 21.57 5.32
A Zaidi 16.5 2 75 3 25.00 4.55
Joe Gale 19.0 0 96 3 32.00 5.05
S Hanson 5.0 3 15 1 15.00 3.00
M
The highest wicket partnerships were as
follows:
WKT RUNS BATSMEN OPPONENTS
1st 95 J Hooson J Rawlinson Ashton H Cup
2nd 106 J Rawlinson M
3rd 144 M
4th 131 R Dhammika N Barker Crompton
H
5th 122 N Barker K Halstead Unsworth
A
6th 60 M
7th 18 N Barker S Barker Norden H Cup
8th 26 S Barker Joe Gale Radcliffe
A
9th 35 Joe Gale C Dewhirst Radcliffe
A
10th 22 Josh Gale Joe Gale Unsworth H
With the bat James Rawlinson, Matt Dawson and
Ranil Dhammika all scored 5 half centuries apiece, whilst Jake Hooson scored
the only century with 110 not out in the cup versus Ashton. Nick Barker and Matt Dawson hit 14 sixes
apiece whilst Ranil Dhammika hit 12.
On the bowling front the best figures of the
season were 9-69 by Dhammika versus Middleton at home and he took 5 wickets or
more in an astonishing 15 of the 25 matches (including cup) played. He
also did the hat trick versus Littleborough away.
On the catching front Ranil Dhammika caught
14 catches with Nick Barker and James Rawlinson 10 each. Matt Dawson had 26 catches and 12 stumpings
behind the wicket.
Finally the highest score of the season was
268 for 5 versus Ashton at home in the Wood Cup and 255 for 3 versus
Littleborough at home in the league.
C Barker (November 2012)
ARTICAL BY
DONALD RIGG, SEPTEMBER 2012
I would like to congratulate the players and officials
of Walsden Cricket and Bowling Club
on becoming champions of the Central Lancashire League this season by a margin
of eight points.
This is a magnificent
achievement by a village club against much larger towns, such as Rochdale,
Middleton, Ashton and Oldham.
What is even more remarkable,
and a credit to the committee and coaches at the club, is that this has been
achieved by players who, with the exception of the club professional, are all
local, who were born, or live, within one mile of the club, including three
players under the age of 18.
Unlike other clubs they have
achieved this without the benefit of an overseas amateur.
Every player on the side has
contributed to the success and has played an important role when the occasion
has demanded it.
The first six batsmen have
contributed nearly 3,000 runs and have backed up a top quality professional
bowler, who has taken 119 wickets. The coaches deserve a pat on the back for
the many successes achieved this year.
The impetus of the last
league win, in 1964, enabled the club to prosper with a new bar and changing
facilities, and it is hoped that this year’s achievement will provide a further
stimulus.
While the club has several
loyal sponsors the financial demands on the club, to enable necessary ground
improvements and practice facilities to be provided, means more financial
support is needed. If anyone wishes to help in any way please do not hesitate
to contact me or the club. The cost of running a club is not cheap and any
contribution would be welcome.
The club provides extensive
junior coaching and puts out teams at under 11, under 13, under 15 and under 18
age levels, in addition to a first, second and third eleven, and new players
are always welcome.
I feel that this is an
immense contribution to the local community.
Donald Rigg, Walsden CC
president, Blenheim Street,
Hebden Bridge.