1
Sussex County Cricket Club
HOrSHAM Festival 2011 Presented by
Official Festival Brochure ÂŁ3
MAJOR SPONSOR
Wed Aug 10 - Sat 13: LV=CC Division One Sussex CCC v Worcestershire CCC Sun Aug 14: CB40 league DIvision 1 Sussex Sharks v Worcestershire Royals
GROUND SPONSOR
HorSHAM Festival 2011
3
WELCOME TO HORSHAM We are very pleased to welcome Sussex and Worcestershire to our lovely ground. Sussex first played at Horsham on 15th June 1908, against Essex, and in that time every First Class county except Yorkshire has played here. In my schooldays at Collyers, Cricket Week began on Founder’s Day, the first Saturday in June, when we marched through the town. Two three-day matches were played with no play on Sunday, of course. We had the whole week off as half term so it was a very popular event. In the 1930s Horsham made a big feature of the Festival with many other activities taking place: dances, plays, films, promotions in the shops and flags and bunting all over the town. During our long relationship with Sussex, many Horsham cricketers have represented the county. Tim Killick, George Pearce, George Cox (senior and junior), Jack and Charlie Oakes, Paul Parker, Robin MartinJenkins, Michael Thornely and, currently, Chris Nash and William Beer are some of the men who began their cricketing lives with us. Our late president, the legendary Dr. John Dew, was a brilliant wicket-keeper and the most charming ambassador any club could have. He was justly rewarded with a posthumous OSCA in recognition of his services to cricket. John created our colts’ section, which now numbers over 200 including about 60 girls and which has produced many players for Sussex representative teams from the 1st XI to the Under-9s. We are, of course, very happy that Sussex play many of their second-team fixtures at Horsham. The Horsham Cricket Festival would not be possible without our many volunteers, so ably led by Barry Peay. We provide extra ground staff, stewards, gatemen and women, car parkers, bar staff, catering, office administration and all the infrastructure required to stage such an important public event. A special treat for Sunday spectators is our wonderful Ladies Tea Tent. County Cricket is the only First Class sport that takes place in Horsham; long may it continue. We hope you all enjoy this year’s Festival. By David Horsman, Chairman Horsham CC. www.pinnacle.uk.com 08707 707 765 info@pinnacle.uk.com Sussex County Cricket Club & Pinnacle wish to thank the advertisers who appear in this publication for their support and wish them every business success. The contents of this brochure are believed to be correct at the time of printing, nevertheless, we cannot endorse and readers should not rely solely upon the accuracy of any statements or claims contained herein without prior consultation with the service provider.
Design: Print:
Wall&Pleece WSL
Editorial: Kent and Sussex Sport
Contents
5 6-7 9 10-11 13 14-15 17 19-21 25 26-27 29 31-33 35-37 39-41 43-45 49 50-51 54-57 56 58 59
Chris Nash CMJ: Profile Future of the Festivals Six Great Games Wayne Parnell Festival Time Horsham records Visiting Horsham Sussex’s treasures Robin Martin-Jenkins Worcestershire Squad Alan Richardson profile Fore! It’s Frankie Horsham Memories The Horsham Story Chris Nash Q & A Jonathan Agnew Geoff Greenidge Scorecard Vouchers Fixtures and Results Sussex Averages
DON’T BE STUMPED FOR CHOICE Considering plastic surgery?
The new Polo from Motorline Volkswagen in Horsham
one year
Who should you see?
Free
Low assistance raTe finance one year
It is easy to be knocked for six by the variety of surgeons on offer. Your choice should be guided by experience and track record. Roger Smith offers a local option and he has 20 years consultant experience with full recognition as a Certified Plastic Surgeon.
Free
insurance 3 years
3-year warranty
Free servicing
Mr Roger Smith Consultant Plastic & Reconstructive Surgeon
MA MB BChir FRCS MChir (Plast)
He offers consultations in breast and facial cosmetic surgery, as well as body contouring techniques including abdominoplasty (tummy tuck).
Call to arrange an appointment East Grinstead: 01342 330304 01342 330367
www.rogersmithcosmeticsurgeon.co.uk
(Subject to terms and conditions)
Motorline Volkswagen Horsham Redkiln Way, Horsham RH13 5QH. Telephone: 0844 822 7195. www.motorline.co.uk/volkswagen
HORSHAM Festival 2011
5
Dream come true
Chris Nash’s ambition was to play for Sussex on his home ground. As he approaches his fifth Horsham festival he reveals that the surroundings still inspire him Playing in the Horsham festival was always a dream of mine as a youngster. I spent many years skiving off school to come and watch the cricket. My mum used to give me the week off which unfortunately led to a visit from social services one year when I was seen at the game by the music teacher who was leading the school band who were playing during the interval! My mum replied that it was better education for my future than school and, as it turned out, she was proven correct! This year would have been my fifth Horsham festival as a player but England Lions commitment means I will be absent. Last year
“To score a century last year and be able to dedicate it to Dr John Dew was very special for me and I know he was watching from up above.” was very special as I scored my first Sussex hundred at my home ground when I got 156 against Derbyshire and was privileged to be part of history as the top four batsman in our first innings scored hundreds for the first time in the county’s history and only the second time since 1920 in the history of first-class cricket in England. It was a very special achievement by all of us and I am very proud to have been part of it. I have many special memories of playing at Horsham. I grew up at the club with summers playing cricket and winters playing squash so it very much became a second home. I always receive a warm welcome from the people behind the scenes at Horsham and I regard everyone at the club as a good friend who have helped me achieve my dreams of playing professional cricket. Unfortunately my biggest influence in cricket is no longer with us. Dr John Dew was a special man, as everyone associated with Horsham will acknowledge, and he was instrumental in making it such a special place. I always miss him when I go back. To score a
century last year and be able to dedicate it to him was very special for me and I know he was watching from up above. This year’s Festival will see a reunion of many of the players and officials from the Horsham side which won the Cockspur Cup at Lord’s back in 2005. It would have given me another incentive to score a hundred and as a side I hope we can continue our good form at this wonderful festival ground.
6
HorSHAM Festival 2011
CM-J will be listened to with respect as well as seen on the great ground at Lord’s, for he is an accomplished after-dinner speaker, wit and mimicry to the fore.
HorSHAM Festival 2011
7
Distinguished service As a Horsham player, Christopher Martin-Jenkins has played as well as reported at Cricketfield Road. His distinguished service to the game has led to him taking on the role of MCC President this year. Ivo Tennant, of The Times, meets him Broadcaster, writer, after dinner speaker and father of a Sussex cricketer, Christopher Martin-Jenkins has taken on one of the honorific roles in the game this year. He will be making speech after speech, entertaining dignitary after dignitary, influencing leading administrators - and taking tea with the Queen. Like Arthur Gilligan, Hubert Doggart, Ted Dexter, Robin Marlar and John Barclay before him, he has been chosen to be president of MCC. In one sense, CM-J, as he is universally known, is the odd man out. He did not play first-class cricket, for Sussex or any other team. The closest he came to doing so was to be 12th man for Cambridge University in the Varsity match. But then neither did the 16th Duke of Norfolk and countless others going back to when such appointments were first recorded in 1821. The real difference is that CM-J has been a journalist all his career, unlike Marlar, who took up writing after his days as Sussex captain were over. Hence the honour is accentuated, for it is in effect for his contribution to cricket through the media and in particular Test Match Special. He has been a part of their commentary team since 1973, although looking after the Queen came first at Lord’s this summer. The role of president is unpaid and
essentially he (there has yet to be a female, although doubtless Rachel Heyhoe-Flint would not turn it down if asked) is a figurehead. Occasionally, it encompasses contending with controversy. Sir William Legge had the misfortune to be in office when MCC’s tour party indulged in ‘Bodyline’ tactics in Australia in 1932-3 and Colin Cowdrey’s health was affected in the bicentenary year of 1987 when the secretary, Jack Bailey, abruptly left office. CM-J, who says he has never asked his wife, Judy, whether she wanted to become a member, is having to preside over differences of opinion among the committee over whether to pursue the £400m redevelopment of Lord’s – but at least he is not having to cope with a neardiplomatic crisis, as occurred in 1932-3. He will be listened to with respect as well as seen on the great ground, for he is an accomplished after-dinner speaker, wit and mimicry to the fore. He also wishes to exert some influence over the direction of the game. Hitherto he has been restricted to balanced opinion in his columns for The Times. Any strong views have been restrained by one of his characteristics: a belief in weighing up both sides of a story. “I have to be fairly tactful, but I would like to see a cutting down of excess in the fixture list, particularly the number of
one day internationals. It’s a mess and disobeys the maxim of ‘leaving them wanting more.’ “There was a possibility of the Open clashing with the Lord’s Test against India this year, which would have been foolish, and I made my feelings clear on that to MCC and ECB. And I certainly wouldn’t oppose more occasions when spectators are allowed onto the outfield, or children playing on it during intervals with soft balls. It is very counter-productive not to let them on,” he said. “If there are two touring teams coming to England each year, then there should be two Tests at Lord’s for them. The Rose Bowl at Hampshire and the Swalec Stadium in Cardiff will have to wait longer to host more matches. Even Rod Bransgrove (the Hampshire chairman) would admit every country would want to play at Lord’s. The whole bidding system has been under review and there has to be a better way than a Dutch auction. “Can we afford ground redevelopment? There has to be a feeling of space and greenery and we have to have faith in the architects, but I find it difficult to see how natural light can come into a development below the Nursery End. If that is not feasible, the whole thing isn’t. And I would hate Lord’s to become a concrete stadium.”
We are extremely pleased to be supporting Sussex County Cricket Club in the Horsham Cricket Festival To celebrate this event we are offering 25% off our standard terms to all new Landlords.*
With ever evolving regulations and demands you need specialist engineers with the experience and project management to deal with your enquiry efficiently on time and on budget.
Please produce this advert from the souvenir programme to benefit from this offer. We look forward to welcoming all new Landlords to King & Chasemore Lettings Best of Luck to Sussex County Cricket Club For further information please call Peter or Gemma on 01403 271630 or email peter.clark@countrywide.co.uk
Planning
Wiring
Testing
CBS Electrical provide both domestic and commercial services including: emergency lighting, fire alarm installations and general electrical installations throughout Sussex, Surrey and London.
As part of the UK’s largest property services group we
have won over 80 awards for our service in the past 3 Thank Thank you you years. for forvoting voting us… us… To find As outpart more visit: www.propertywide.co.uk/awards As part of the of the UK’s UK’s largest largest ESTA 2011 Gold property property services services group group we Awards, we have have won overover 80 awards 80 Based awards foron for ourawards our Bestwon Estate Agent won by the service service in the in the pastpast 3 years. 3 years. Countrywide Group 2008 –11 & Best Letting Agent
To find To find out more out more visit:visit: www.propertywide.co.uk/awards www.propertywide.co.uk/awards Based on Based awards on won awards by the wonCountrywide by the Countrywide Group 2008 Group –11 2008 –11
ESTA 2011 ESTA Gold2011 Awards, Gold Awards, Best Estate Best Agent Estate Agent & Best Letting & Best Agent Letting Agent
* This offer cannot be used in conjunction with any other promotion and where King & Chasemore Horsham Lettings is appointed on a sole agency basis. Offer not available to employees, employees of our promotional partners or anyone else professionally connected with this promotion. No cash alternatives offered. No correspondence will be entered into. Offer must be redeemed within 30 days of receipt. The promoter reserves the right to amend or withdraw any part of this offer due to circumstances beyond its reasonable control. Further terms and conditions apply.
Certification
Distribution
E: info@cbselectrical.co.uk www.@cbselectrical.co.uk 01403 261602 or 07818 815291 41a Brighton Road, Horsham, RH13 5BU
HorSHAM Festival 2011
9
Why sussex are committed to festival cricket For many of our supporters, particularly those in West Sussex, Horsham week is their highlight of the summer And as someone who has been coming here for many years myself, it is easy to understand its attraction. On a warm, sunny day there is nothing better than cricket in this delightful setting. It is a tradition of our calendar that we as a club want to maintain and uphold. As Christopher Martin-Jenkins, who knows Horsham better than most, mentions elsewhere in this brochure, 20 years ago some counties thought nothing about taking the game to five or six out-grounds a year. It is not so long ago that Eastbourne and Hastings were on our own fixture list and I would love to return to either venue in the future, because cricket in the east of the county has always been well supported. If the venue, wicket and facilities meet the standards we require I sincerely hope it will happen. We are committed to festival cricket as long as it is supported by spectators and the corporate sector. It works financially as long as the grounds can be allocated a one-day match, whether it is Twenty20, as was the case at Arundel this year, or a longer version of the limited overs game which we have at Horsham this week in the CB40. It is one of the reasons why Sussex strongly opposed the reduction in home Twenty20 and 40 overs games that will
happen in 2012. As a non-Test match ground why wouldn’t we want to open our gates for those matches that make money, whether it’s Hove, Horsham, Arundel or elsewhere, as often as possible? My rather poor analogy is that it is like a High Street retailer closing on Saturdays or not opening for the weeks running up to Christmas. Test match grounds have the opportunity to make a huge amount of revenue from staging international cricket so staging Twenty20 helps balance that disparity of income for other clubs like Sussex who wish to remain competitive. You only had to be here last year to gauge the Twenty20 popularity. It was probably the first time in the competition’s history that the start had to be delayed to allow everyone to get in. Let’s hope for a repeat this week. For many people here this week the attraction is the more gentle rhythms of the County Championship and the visit of Worcestershire. I hope our visitors will enjoy the facilities and the town of Horsham itself and all it has to offer. For the festival to be a continued success we are very appreciative of the work put in by the team here at Cricketfield Road. They do a great job and fortunately it has become a venue where the team has done well in the last few years.
Mushtaq Ahmed always bowled well here but it is such a fast-scoring ground which gives batsmen full value for their shots. Who can forget a year ago when our top four batsmen all made hundreds including two Horsham players, Chris Nash and Ben Brown. I am planning to experience the Scarborough Festival for the first time when we head to Yorkshire later this month. I love visiting out-ground cricket and Scarborough, of course, has a wonderful reputation. Mind you, it will have to be something special to beat what we have here in Sussex. Enjoy the week and I hope to bump into as many of you as possible during the next few days. Jim May, Chairman
10
Horsham Festival 2011
SIX Great Games At Horsham
Bruce Talbot remembers six of the best games in the long history of first-class cricket at Horsham
1908 June 15, 1908 and Sussex play their first county match at
Cricketfield Road. For many years June, or even late May, was the traditional time for the county’s first out-ground cricket of the summer and that inevitably meant rain interruptions. There was no play in this game on the last day after Sussex had batted first and made 298. Three of the top four – Joe Vine, who passed 12,000 first-class runs in this match, and the Relf brothers Robert and Albert – made fifties while Charles Benham took 7 for 60 for Essex, the best figures of his career. Essex could only manage two overs of their reply before the rain intervened.
1934 Jack Hobbs, acknowledged by many as the finest batsmen in the history of the game, was in search of his 200th first-class hundred when he arrived at Cricketfield Road but at 51 age had finally caught up with The Master. Sussex beat Hobbs’s Surrey by nine wickets and Hobbs made 34 and 79 in the second innings before he was run out. The Times’ journalist Dudley Carew noted: “Where before everything had been free and masterful, there was now an intolerable sense of strain and frustration. For the man that was made for greatness, greatness that day was not in him.” Two centuries were scored, though, by Sussex openers John Langridge and Jim Parks senior.
1983 After a gap of 27 years Championship cricket returned to Horsham with a bang as Lancashire won a thrilling three-day tussle by 54 runs. Frank Hayes made 149 as Lancashire scored 312 for 6 and then Mike Watkinson took six wickets as Sussex plunged to 38 for 5 before recovering to make 230. Lancashire built on their lead of 82 by making 172 despite five wickets for Tony Pigott, leaving Sussex to chase 255 to win. They came up well short despite 75 from Paul Parker and were dismissed for 200 in 48.2 overs. Sussex captain John Barclay took his 250th first-class wicket in this game. Top left: Milestone, Joe Vine Bottom left: The Master, Jack Hobbs Top right: Spin wizard, Eddie Hemmings Bottom right: History maker, Kevin Innes
Horsham Festival 2011
11
1992 A game that began a day late because of rain was over by 3.25pm on the third after after Sussex’s veteran off-spinner Eddie Hemmings produced a master class to take match figures of 12 for 58, skillfully exploiting the rough outside the off stump to bemuse a succession of batsmen. Sussex’s 271 looked only par but Franklyn Stephenson removed both openers before stumps on the second day and on the Saturday morning Leicestershire lost seven wickets for 40 runs, five of them to Hemmings. Following on, they were in danger of making their lowest ever score against Sussex when they slumped to 40 for 9 before late resistance from Paul Nixon and Alan Mullally took them to 72 all out. Wisden sadly noted: “Disappointing crowds and poor commercial support increased fears that Sussex might soon scrap their annual visit to the north of the county.”
2004 History was made when Sussex all-rounder Kevin Innes (a coach in Northamptonshire’s academy these days) became the first 12th man in first-class cricket to score a century. Under new ECB regulations, counties were allowed to nominate a replacement for England players and before James Kirtley, who had been released from the Test squad, could return to play Innes had become one of three batsmen alongside Richard Montgomerie and Matt Prior to score centuries as Sussex made 619, a new ground record. Prior went from 98 to 133 in ten balls while for opener Monty it was his third successive ton at Horsham. Mushtaq Ahmed then took centre stage, although Kevin Pietersen briefly threatened to upstage him with a 75-ball hundred. Mushy finished with match figures of 12 for 244, the best return by a Sussex spinner since Hemmings wrought havoc on the same ground a decade earlier.
2010 One of Sussex’s easiest win in recent years came here a year ago as dispirited Derbyshire was despatched inside three days. And again Cricketfield Road was the scene of a record as Chris Nash, Ed Joyce, Ben Brown and Murray Goodwin all scored centuries, the first instance that had happened to Sussex’s top four batsmen and only the fourth occasion in first-class history and just the second since 1920. Derbyshire were rudderless without ill skipper Chris Rogers whose replacement Andrew Borrington made just two after he had flown down from a second-team game in Manchester to replace him. Derbyshire failed to take a bowling bonus point as Sussex established a lead of 334 before dismissing their visitors for 225 between the showers on the third day, Corey Collymore taking four wickets. “Men against boys” was the assessment of Derbyshire skipper Chris Rogers. He wasn’t wrong.
G . J Mitchell Plastering & decorating
• screeding • Plastering • drY lining
Plastering and decorating service for your home or office
GERRY WEBER SPECIAL S PECIAL V VIP IP O OFFER FFER
15% OFF A SINGLE SALE OF FULL PRICED ITEMS
local, reliable tradesman with competitive prices
Growth through referrals
VALID UNTIL 31ST AUGUST
Fully Insured For a free no obligation quote call and quote ‘susssex ccc’ Please call Gareth Mitchell Horsham - 0797 955754 email - plastered88@live.co.uk
Gerry Weber Horsham 17–18 Swan Walk, 01403 246920
HORSHAM Festival 2011
Wayne’s world
Q What’s the best thing about playing for Sussex?
Q Who is the biggest joker in the squad?
A I think firstly the professionalism and that competitive edge. Obviously all teams have it but since I’ve been here I’ve seen real professionalism and that’s been the biggest aspect for me.
A Andrew Hodd. No doubt about that one! Q Who is the best trainer?
Q Which cricketer do you play like the most? A I like to think that I’m different, but if I wanted to be someone I think I’d probably want to be skilful like Zaheer Khan. I don’t like to base myself on other people, I want to be the first Wayne Parnell rather than anyone else!
Q Who was your cricketing hero as a youngster? A When I was growing up it was actually Gary Kirsten and Matthew Hayden. I think those two guys would be the ones as when I was younger, I was actually more of a batter. When I got into my teen years it was more left-armers like Zaheer Khan and Ashish Nehra. Q Apart from The PROBIZ County Ground, Hove, which is your favourite ground to play at and why?
Sussex’s new overseas player Wayne Parnell gives us his answers. Adam Matthews asks the questions.
13
A I think Newlands in Cape Town, that would definitely be right up there. It’s one of the most beautiful grounds in the world. Personally I also like Pretoria, I’ve done really well there internationally and hopefully when I go back there I can continue that. Q Who has the worst dress sense? A Definitely Chris Liddle, with all the cardigans that he wears! I think maybe sometimes he thinks he’s on the golf course rather than at a cricket ground!
Q Who has the worst taste in music? A Amjad Khan tries to rival me to try and be a DJ so he’d have to be up there, he’s not as good as me though!
A Probably Amjad, he’s done well as he’s now got a six pack and he didn’t have one before he came here!
Q What are your other interests outside cricket?
A I like DJ’ing and listening to music. I have an application on my iPad so when I’m chilling at home I like doing a bit of mixing. Q What’s the best advice you could give to an aspiring cricketer? A I think obviously hard work takes you places but also not trying too hard. I think what happens often is because young people are so eager to do well they actually try too hard and the screws come loose. The main thing is to know what you’re about and stay within those boundaries. Q What’s the biggest lesson you’ve learned so far in your career? A Obviously when I first started I did really well but then I got injured and coming back from my injury I wanted to prove to everyone that I was back to where I was but by doing that I tried harder than I actually should have! I didn’t perform that well when I was coming back but now I’ve learned to tone it down, go back to basics and not think too hard. Q Who has been the biggest influence on your career?
A Back home growing up it was Christo Esau, who was my junior coach up until under-19 level, then coming into the national team it was Vincent Barnes, the South African bowling coach who helped me a lot, not just on the field but also off the field, being both a friend and a coach. So those two would be the two people who have influenced my career the most.
14
HorSHAM Festival 2011
Festival time again
Christopher Martin-Jenkins, the Test Match Special commentator and former cricket correspondent of The Times and the Daily Telegraph, outlines why he is passionate in his support of the county cricket festival week All the talk in official cricket circles recently was cutting down the amount of County Championship cricket. To my mind it is foolish talk, for a number of reasons that include the uncertainty of the weather and the danger that festival cricket, the very essence of the county game, will become even rarer than it already is. Oh my Harrogate and my Buxton long ago. There was a time, and still is in the more enlightened counties, when the county coming to town was a big event, anticipated long in advance, relished while the cricket was in progress and reviewed with pleasure months later. Sometimes games are never forgotten, such as the one started and finished after a thunderstorm on the extraordinary opening day of the Tunbridge Wells week in 1960. Kent and Worcester began battle at11.30 am, Kent reaching 80 for four by lunch before being bowled out for 187 at 3.40pm. The left-handed Peter Jones made 73, very nearly as many as Worcestershire managed in their two innings of 25 and 61. Witnesses reported small craters appearing when the ball pitched, much to the liking of Dave Halfyard and Alan Brown, who took nine cheap wickets each. By 7.15 it was all over. Every now and then freak events occur and pitches are not what they should be for top-class cricketers. They are the exceptions to the general rule that county cricket is better tuned to small, intimate grounds than it is to echoing caverns like The Oval or Edgbaston, places that come alive on the big international occasion but that too often seem glum and empty when they play host to the homespun atmosphere of the County Championship game. County cricket flourishes, absorbs and excites in places such as here at Arundel and Abergavenny, Bath and Burton-on-Trent, Colchester and Colwyn Bay, Dover and Dudley, Eastbourne and Ebbw Vale. I shall not try to get to the end of the alphabet but there would not be many letters missing if I did. Many of the places that no longer get the chance to stage county cricket have quite beautiful grounds, and those that remain generally do so still. The cricket is characterised by a strong local spirit, while players and spectators are brought close together to the benefit of both. The surroundings, seldom far from a church or pub or both, are invariably adorned by old and beautiful trees that help the ball to
swing, not to mention shortish boundaries that encourage bats to do the same. Good weather usually guarantees good-sized crowds and a precious amalgam of tension and relaxation. We all know the reasons for the decrease in the number of festival games. All counties have more or less developed their main grounds, at an accelerated rate in recent years. Some of them have got into serious financial difficulties as a result. Once there has been investment at a county’s headquarters it makes sense to use that ground as often as the number of pitches will sensibly allow. Overheads are less expensive that way. The strong counter-arguments are that festival matches spread the gospel around the county, encourage local cricketers and cricketwatchers, make everyone feel part of the family of the game and give a focal point to the season for those clubs on whose grounds the county team comes to play. I know from the experience of my own local club, Horsham, how much that means to the members, many of whom get involved year after year in the nitty-gritty of preparing the pitches, making the teas, watering the flower-baskets, erecting the tents that go up round the ground and organising the arrangements for dealing with an invasion of cars and spectators. More than this, matches on out-grounds can still be great events for the town in question. I suppose I have been to one of these games without seeing the local Mayor in attendance on one or other of the days but if so I cannot remember it. There always seems to be a large black car with a pennant billowing out from the bonnet parked in a position of prominence with a driver at the ready (albeit with an eye and a half on the cricket) to whisk the VIP back to the town hall after a good lunch. At one match in Wales, in the glorious parkland setting of Pontypridd one wet day after play had been called off for the day and everyone had gone home, I promise you that the Mayor went ahead with his prepared lunchtime speech from the balcony, like Hitler at the Nuremberg rally, even though the field in front of him was empty and the handful of people who could actually hear him were all standing behind him, most of them invited journalists anxious not to waste the chance of a drink and some
HorSHAM Festival 2011
15
Main Image: Horsham Left: Cheltenham Right: Tunbridge Wells
free sandwiches. By the same token the Mayor was not going to miss the opportunity to make a speech. “I’ve prepared it, boy, so I’m damned well going to give it.” It was, of course, at another mining town, Ebbw Vale, that Emrys Davies called his partner Gilbert Parkhouse across at the end of the over to tell him that he had just tapped down the pitch with his bat on a length and had a nasty surprise. “I could have sworn I heard someone answering back from below,” he said. The fact is that if towns, cricket clubs and county executives all co-operate and appreciate the possibilities of festival games, they
will benefit everyone concerned. The local economy gets a boost from an influx of visitors, helping shops, pubs, hotels and garages amongst others; the county gets a guaranteed profit if its officials have negotiated sensibly; and the home club itself gets plenty back in bar takings and prestige. For me the likes of Aigburth and Basingstoke, not to mention more established favourites such as Cheltenham and Scarborough , are quintessential settings for the county game. Like the Championship itself the county festival weeks are a small but precious part of the English way of life.
HorSHAM Festival 2011
17
RECORDS AT HORSHAM County Championship matches Highest totals 619-7 dec: Sussex v Nottinghamshire 2003 600-6 dec: Warwickshire v Sussex 2004 593: Derbyshire v Sussex 1998 Lowest totals 35: Sussex v Glamorgan 1946 51: Leicestershire v Sussex 1924 57: Worcestershire v Sussex 1924 Highest individual scores 262* Ian Bell, Warwickshire v Sussex 2004 224 Phil Mead, Hampshire v Sussex 1921 193 Chris Adams, Sussex v Durham 2007 183 Ed Joyce, Sussex v Nottinghamshire 2009 179 Dennis Brookes, Northamptonshire v Sussex 1948 176 Ted Bowley, Sussex v Warwickshire 1925 175* Jim Parks, Sussex v Cambridge University 1955 174* David Sheppard, Sussex v Glamorgan 1953 There have been a total of 99 first-class hundreds scored at Horsham
Highest partnership for each wicket 294 (1st): Ed Joyce and Chris Nash, Sussex v Derbyshire, 2010 289 (7th): Ian Bell and Tony Frost, Warwickshire v Sussex 2004 254 (4th): Kim Barnett and Matt Cassar, Derbyshire v Sussex 1998 243 (3rd): Alec Stewart and Graham Thorpe, Surrey v Sussex 1995 187 (2nd): Alan Green and Paul Parker, Sussex v Surrey 1985 Most wickets in a match 17-106: George Cox, Sussex v Warwickshire 1926 13-68: Maurice Tate, Sussex v Nottinghamshire 1923 12-58: Eddie Hemmings, Sussex v Leicestershire, 1993 12-114: Maurice Tate, Sussex v Worcestershire, 1924 12-133: George Tribe, Northamptonshire v Sussex, 1952 Best bowling in an innings 9-35: Vince Broderick, Northamptonshire v Sussex, 1948 9-50: George Cox, Sussex v Warwickshire 1926 8-18: Maurice Tate, Sussex v Worcestershire, 1924 8-30: Maurice Tate, Sussex v Glamorgan 1923 8-56: George Cox, Sussex v Warwickshire, 1926 8-68: Maurice Tate, Sussex v Kent 1927
RescueYourData.co.uk Sussex-based Data Recovery Specialists
Specialising in recovering data from electronic devices such as PC’s, Laptops, Apple Macs, MP3 Players, Mobile Phones, Memory Cards, eBook Readers & RAID Storage devices such as NAS boxes
Catholic Benedictine 11-18 co-educational boarding & day school
Our pupils are our best advert; come and see for yourself • Distinctive all-round education, high academic standards and strong community • International Baccalaureate and A Levels in the Sixth Form • Transport routes include Tunbridge Wells, Haywards Heath, Oxted, Redhill and Horsham
Other than a small evaluation fee there is a ‘no data no fee’ policy on most recovery jobs. Data can be recovered when it’s been deleted/ formatted, or when a hard drive sounds like it is broken. Over 15 years experience in the IT Industry
OPEN DAYS 2011 24 September (girls only), 8 October, 12 November
Please book your place in advance. All Open Days are 9.45 am – 12.30 pm. For further details, please contact the Registrar, Miss Yvonne Lorraine t: 01342 710200 admissions@worth.org.uk
Forensic casework can be undertaken. Please email for details.
Paddockhurst Road, Turners Hill, West Sussex RH10 4SD
enquiries@rescueyourdata.co.uk
www.worthschool.co.uk
Charity No. 1093914 Company Reg. No. 4476558
B1189_WS_200x95P 2.indd 1
11/07/2011 11:51
HorSHAM Festival 2011
19
HORSHAM – Time Well Spent
Horsham is a gem in the very heart of West Sussex. This historic market town offers the best of both worlds with a rich history, architectural heritage, outstanding parkland and beautiful countryside. The other side of Horsham’s coin is its stunning town centre with pavement cafés, award winning floral displays, markets and a superb blend of specialist shops and famous names. produced by Forest, Denne and Trafalgar Neighbourhood Councils in partnership with Horsham District Council
Places to Stay
There is a superb range of visitor accommodation in and around Horsham from 5* country house hotels to excellent local bed and breakfasts, campsites to self- catering cottages. For further information contact Horsham Visitor Information Centre. Tel: 01403 21166 Email: visitor.information@horsham.gov.uk
Local Attractions
Country Houses & Gardens Parham House and Gardens (near Pulborough) www.parhaminsussex.co.uk St Mary’s House and Gardens (near Bramber) www. stmarysbramber.co.uk Petworth House (Petworth) www.nationaltrust.org.uk Nyman’s Gardens (Handcross) www.nationaltrust.org.uk
Family Attractions
Holmbush Farm World, near Horsham. www.holmbushfarm.co.uk Huxley’s Birds of Prey Centre, near Horsham. www.flyingfalcons. co.uk Southwater Country Park: www.horsham.gov.uk/leisure/1103.aspx Fishers Farm Park, near Billingshurst. www.fishersfarmpark.co.uk Horsham’s Visitor Information Centre provides all you need to find your way around the town centre and beyond. Others services include accommodation bookings and information on local events and attractions, a holiday information service, maps and guides, travel information and souvenirs. You can also check the website on www.horshamvisitor.co.uk Official Horsham District Guide www.burrows.co.uk/horshamguide Horsham Town and Shoppers Guide www.visithorsham.co.uk Horsham Festivals and Outdoor Events www.horshamentertains.co.uk Horsham’s Hidden Treasures www.hiddenhorsham.co.uk Horsham Interactive Mapping www.virtualhorsham.co.uk Horsham District Visitor Information www.horshamvisitor.co.uk
For Golfers
Rookwood, near Horsham. www.rookwoodgolfcourse.co.uk Mannings Heath Golf Club. www.manningsheath.com
Leaving the competition stumped. Stunning good looks with a performance to match. The Mercedes-Benz Sport model range. At Mercedes-Benz of Gatwick we pride ourselves on providing our customers with the highest level of service. So you will enjoy the experience of purchasing a new Mercedes-Benz from us as much as you will enjoy driving it away.
Call us today on 0844 539 2373 to discuss your individual requirements Lookers plc Mercedes-Benz of Gatwick County Oak Way, Crawley, West Sussex RH11 7ST 0844 539 2373 www.mercedes-benzofgatwick.co.uk
HorSHAM Festival 2011
21
The Horsham Experience In Horsham’s historic town centre, Medieaval architecture and Sussex heritage combine effortlessly with the distinctly cosmopolitan air created by the many independent and national shops and outdoor cafés and restaurants that thrive in this awardwinning town centre. Whether the main purpose of your visit is for shopping, leisure or business, do take a little time to explore and seek out just a few of the gems that await you in and around the town. There is no doubt that you will discover the truth behind our slogan; that Horsham is indeed Time Well Spent.
The Best of Horsham’s Public Art 1 The Rising Universe (the Shelley Fountain) 2 The Horsham Heritage Sundial and bronze plinth 3 Sungod (Sundial) 4 St. Leonard’s Forest Dragon 5 William Pirie (the donkey and cart) 6 War Memorial Roundels 7 Three Swans Sculpture and Mosaic 8 Museum Gardens (the Millais Bronze) 9 West Sussex County Times Anniversary Sculpture 10 Human Nature Garden
Bishopric The Forum Park House Garden Horsham Park, Children’s maze Piries Place Carfax Swan Walk Horsham Museum Carfax, near bus stop Horsham Park
Welcome to the World of Exclusive Finishes Artnavix is an independent and creative studio of unique decorative finishes, we design and install a wide range of surface treatments for both private and commercial clients, finishes that will enhance and reflect their individuality and lifestyles. Spray painting Decorative covings Unique wall finishes Unique paints Stretching ceilings Bespoke ornament floors Specialist flooring Artificial stones
As with all our work, we will create for our clients decorative and totally unique wall finishes in specialist applications, using all our professional skills to create their vision for the building.
Sussex CCC Movie and PARTY NIGHT
FRIDAY 19TH AUGUST 2011 • Bring a picnic & blanket AT THE PROBIZ COUNTY GROUND GROUND OPENS AT 7PM FILM STARTS AT 8:30PM BAR OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT (Times are approximate)
• Food & drink available • Licensed bars • Fancy dress welcome & encouraged • Prizes for the ‘Best Dressed’ • Fun & activities around the Ground
FOR TICKETS CALL: CALL 0844 264 0206
Hospitality options available, please contact the club for more information.
Subject to licence
VISIT W W W. S U S S E X C R I CKET.CO.UK FOR MORE INFORMATI ON
COPTHORNE PREPARATORY SCHOOL
Copthorne Prep “recognises the uniqueness of individuals and supports every child so that each makes good progress”.
ISI Inspection Nov 2009
AAA 2 B Taxi Private Hire 24 Hour Service For All ocASSionS Drivers requireD Discounted Airport rates 4,6, & 8 Seaters
01403 242424 01403 254321
Registered Charity Number 270757
n Outstanding academic results n Co-educational 2½ - 13 years n Flexi and Weekly Boarding n Extended Pre-Prep Department n Minibuses servicing the local area including Horsham and Crawley n Early drop off and after school clubs n Parent & Toddler Group (Friday morning) n Nursery Education Grant available
bookings@horshamtaxis.com www.aaa-cars.co.uk 5 star graded company
To enquire or visit our school, please phone 01342 712311 Effingham Lane, Copthorne, West Sussex RH10 3HR
www.copthorneprep.co.uk
credit cArd BookingS Accepted
HorSHAM Festival 2011
25
New home for Sussex treasures
The county has the most extensive collection of memorabilia and cricketing artefacts outside Lord’s and now they have a home to match as Richard Barrow explains The new Sussex Cricket Museum will open at 10.30 on 12th July during the LV Championship match with Hampshire. Rob Boddie, our archivist is planning an Indian theme to coincide with the Indian tourists’ visit to Hove in August, whilst a more formal opening will take place next year when we will be opening all of our new exhibits, the highlights of which will include an area dedicated to Matt Prior, our double Ashes winning wicketkeeper. The new museum is located in a wonderfully large space which used to be the groundsman’s headquarters beneath the pavilion at The PROBIZ County Ground. Our plan is to embrace a fresh-looking 21st century facility incorporating state of the
SCMET secretary Jon Filby and his team are working hard to get ready for the opening of the new museum on July 12.
art technology, coupled with the traditional displays of original material and cricket artefacts. In rough terms, the layout will consist of an office to house a selection of key reference material including Wisdens and our collection of Sussex Year Books. A secured archive area will house our more important and rare books and albums, scorecards, photographs, press cuttings, autographs and letters. The main body of the museum will consist of the exhibition of the history of Sussex cricket with a people focussed timeline theme, covering cricket played in Sussex from the 18th century to Matt’s heroics in the Ashes 2010. It will cover the evolution of country house cricket to the development of the County Club (1839) through to the modern professional era and the second ‘Golden Age’ of Sussex cricket. There will be a strong emphasis on participation. Indeed one section of the museum will be dedicated to interactive cricketrelated games and skills specifically aimed at kids. Finally, we intend to develop an online virtual tour of the museum linking into both our archive and our interactive displays. There is no question we are being very ambitious in our desire to have the best cricket museum in the country. I know, with the enthusiasm and dedication of the Trustees, secretary Jon Filby and our archivist Rob Boddie we have a team to deliver the project to fulfilment. It is critical that we develop a regular income to sustain our annual overheads and with this in mind we have launched our new ‘Friends of SCMET’ programme. All we ask is a minimum donation of £10 per year. In return, each year Friends will receive a minimum of four editions of “Of Sussex By The Sea”, two Sussex cricket related lectures in the Museum, an invitation to our annual lunch for the Friends of SCMET, priority opportunity to purchase SCMET limited edition publications and a programme of visits to historic cricket locations throughout Sussex and the South-East. If you would like to become a “Friend of SCMET” please contact our secretary, Jon Filby at jonfilby@blueyonder.co.uk.
26
horsham Festival 2011
No Regrets
Robin Martin-Jenkins made his Sussex debut on his home ground at Horsham. A year after retiring, he tells Paul Weaver, of The Guardian, that he is enjoying his new career in teaching. Robin Martin-Jenkins is unlikely to forget his final match for Sussex at Hove in July last year. Supporters sang “RMJ My Lord” to the tune of Kumbaya. “He’s old, he’s posh, he’s got a lot of dosh,” they chanted. After 16 summers in the county colours he deserved a bit of a fuss. The match was on TV too. “I know what it feels like to be Luke Wright for a day,” he grinned afterwards. Martin-Jenkins, 35 , who is now teaching geography and religious studies at Hurstpierpoint College, says he doesn’t miss playing cricket that much. But Horsham week always brings a wave of nostalgia for the beanpole all-rounder. “I used to go up to Cricketfield Road every Wednesday evening from the age of nine,” he says. “They had a junior cricket evening run by the famous Dr John Dew. “I remember the excitement of playing there for Horsham for the first time, as a teenager, and in some of the Sussex junior matches. “And then I made my Sussex debut there in a Sunday League match, in 1995. It felt wonderful to make my debut in surroundings that I was so familiar with, going out to bat or field and being cheered on by family and friends. “It was on Sky TV as well, which was quite exciting in those days. And I remember getting Alec Stewart out, my first wicket for the club. That’s a really good memory. It was a filthy, leg-stump halfvolley, from what I can remember, and he played a pretty average shot, straight to Keith Greenfield at midwicket, which was very nice of him.
horsham Festival 2011
“My real playing highlight was getting a 7 for 51 against Leicestershire, in 2002. But I never scored a hundred there, which was a disappointment.” Robin and his wife, Flora, now live in Hove. But Horsham was the family home – his father, Christopher, now president of the MCC, still lives there with his wife, Judy.
at other out grounds, like Scarborough. Everyone seems to be in a holiday mood. “The smaller crowds often look bigger than they are and there is a special buzz. At Horsham it often felt like a big crowd because the ground is so compact.” It helped, of course, that Sussex have enjoyed regular success at the Horsham
27
“right” way round for an all-rounder. “I had the great fortune to land at the right time. By that, I mean I played for Sussex when they had the best time in their history. “From the history point of view that first championship in 2003 beat everything else. But the most exciting day was winning in 2007, when we had to hang around all
“I’ve been back to watch a few times but I haven’t had the pangs to be out there again. So I think I made the right decision to stop when I did.” “It’s such a lovely, sleepy, peaceful town. It was voted one of the best places to live in the UK some time ago,” said Robin. “And the club has been so well run over the years, largely because of the legendary Dr Dew. Hopefully his legacy will run for a good long time.” What Robin most likes about Cricketfield Road is the festival atmosphere. “When you play in these out grounds everyone seems in a better mood, for some reason. Not just the players but the umpires and the coaches. “Everyone seems to cheer up because there is a lighter atmosphere about the place. The same applies when we play
ground. “I always enjoyed playing there and Sussex always seemed to do well. I can’t remember losing there - I know we lost against Derbyshire one year, but I didn’t play in that game. “I quite enjoyed bowling there. It bounced, a tennis ball bounce, and carried more than it did at Hove. And it often turned on the third and fourth days, which was fun when we had Mushy around.” Robin played for Sussex between 1995 and 2010. He averaged 31.69 with the bat and 31.90 with the ball and the way he was playing at the end he needed only a few more matches to turn those figures the
day waiting for the Surrey game to finish at The Oval before we knew we had won the Championship for the third time. “I haven’t missed playing that much. I miss the dressing room side of things, to a certain extent. But I haven’t actually missed the playing. “I’ve been back to watch a few times but I haven’t had the pangs to be out there again. So I think I made the right decision to stop when I did. “I’m loving my second career, teaching. I come home every evening exhausted, but very happy. I haven’t had to use my brain in an intellectual capacity before.”
A life-changing educational opportunity... for over 450 years Do you need an expert team to install fitted kitchens in Redhill? Are you considering new bathrooms in Haywards Heath, and would like a dedicated team of professionals to handle the design? For all these services and much more, make the friendly team at David Myers your first call.
Christ’s Hospital provides an outstanding education with excellent facilities for sport.
OPEN DAY Saturday 1st October for entry into Years 7, 9 and Sixth Form
An 11-18 Independent Boarding & Day School for children from all backgrounds
Please contact Admissions on Founded by King Edward VI in 1552 Registered Charity No. 1120090
01403 211293
for more information www.christs-hospital.org.uk
FEATURED SERVICES . . . • • • • •
Kitchen Design Kitchen Installation Bathroom Design Bathroom Installation & More
If you would like to find out more about any of the services we offer, or if you have any questions to put to our team, contact us today! Tel: 01403 240851 www.kitchensredhill.com Mobile: 07774 842347
horsham Festival 2011
29
Meet the Pears Bruce Talbot with the low-down on the Worcestershire squad BEN SCOTT
L: Andrew M: Solanki R: Mitchel
DARYL MITCHELL Worcesterhsire-born opening batsman who established himself in the side when the Pears won promotion to Division One in 2008, three years after his debut. Aged 27, he has scored nine first-class hundreds and averages just under 40. Appointed captain this season. MATT PARDOE 20-year-old left-hander establishing himself at New Road this season. Has only played in nine first-class games but is already gaining a reputation as a hard-working batsman difficult to get out. VIKRAM SOLANKI Still a class act at 35, the former county captain has been one of the mainstays of Worcestershire’s batting for the last 15 years. Has scored more than 15,000 first-class runs and played 54 times for England: 51 ODIs and three T20 internationals. The prized scalp in the Worcestershire line-up. MOEEN ALI The 158 he made at New Road against Somerset a fortnight ago was his first for ten months, a surprising statistic given his
undoubted talent. Stylish left-hander who has been a thorn in Sussex’s side in the past. ALEX KERVEZEE One of only four players to have featured in a World Cup aged 17. Now 21, Dutchman Kervezee is establishing a reputation across all three formats as a hard-hitting middle order batsman. Has represented The Netherlands 41 times and domestically has scored four Championship hundreds. JACK MANUEL Birmingham-born left-hander who was offered a professional contract last year after impressing in Worcestershire’s Academy. Aged 20, he represented England under-19s against New Zealand in 2010. GARETH ANDREW Former Somerset all-rounder who has played some consistently good cricket since switching to New Road in 2007. Bowls seam at a decent pace and is developing into a more than capable lower-order batsman, although a maiden first-class century eludes him. Recently ended speculation about his future by signing a new two-year contract.
Former Middlesex wicketkeeper who had a loan spell at New Road in 2010 before returning again this season. Aged 29, he is a stylish glove-man and capable batsman who narrowly missed out on a hundred in the corresponding fixture at Hove last season. The Pears hope to make his move permanent. SAEED AJMAL Pakistan off-spinner, 33, who has played 86 times for his country including 11 Tests. Joined Worcestershire this season as overseas player although his returns in county cricket so far have been fairly modest. JACK SHANTRY Shropshire-born seamer, aged 23, whose brother Adam has played for Glamorgan and Warwickshire. Has broken into the Championship side this season as Alan Richardson’s regular new-ball partner. ALAN RICHARDSON Veteran seamer finding a new lease of life at New Road after spells with Warwickshire and Middlesex. Has taken more than 40 Championship wickets this season and in the right conditions he will be a handful with his ability to move the ball through the air and off the seam. JAMES CAMERON Zimbabwe-born left-hander who has played in eight Championship games this season but struggled for consistency and was left out of the team for Worcestershire’s last two home four-day games against Hampshire and Somerset.
horsham Festival 2011
Welcome return Alan Richardson is looking forward to his third visit to
31
hospitable Horsham, even if it means plenty of work for the Worcestershire seamer. By Paul Bolton Worcestershire seamer Alan Richardson is expecting a heavy workload over the four days of the LV County Championship match against Sussex if his previous experience of playing at Cricketfield Road is anything to go by. Richardson was part of the Warwickshire side that specialised in high-scoring draws on their way to the County Championship title in 2004 including one at Horsham that featured 1,350 of them – including a career-best 262 from Ian Bell – but only 18 wickets. “I remember the pitch being very flat and it was very hard work for the bowlers,” Richardson said. “I sat with my feet up for two days and I didn’t need to put my pads on. “But the other two days I definitely had my bowling boots on. There was nothing at all in the pitch for the bowlers although it did a bit more when I played a second team match there for Middlesex in 2006 and we got a result in a rain-affected game thanks to some tasty declarations.” Apart from the flat pitch Richardson remembers Horsham for the hospitality of the host club and the delightful setting. “On both times I have played at Horsham we have been well looked after and Horsham is one of the better outgrounds on the circuit,” he said. “During my time at Middlesex we played a lot of cricket at Uxbridge and Southgate which don’t quite evoke the same memories. “We’ve just got back from playing Yorkshire at Scarborough where we had four fantastic days with big crowds in. I’m looking forward to going back to Horsham. Hopefully there will be more in the pitch for the bowlers this time, otherwise I will be calling for the spinners from an early stage.” At 36 Richardson is in the twilight of his career but he is enjoying is cricket so much that he has just signed a new oneyear contract extension. He took 55 wickets last season to help Worcestershire secure a surprise immediate return to the top flight of the County Championship and was highly praised by director of cricket Steve Rhodes for the professionalism he brought to the dressing room.
Simon Parsons.indd 1 Simon Parsons.indd 1
12/07/2011 09:50:52 12/07/2011 09:50:52
horsham Festival 2011
“If I am seen as a senior player it’s only because of my age,” Richardson said modestly. “I don’t get much respect in the dressing room. The youngsters keep reminding me that I am the oldest player in the squad. “I think that Saeed Ajmal is going to be a key figure in the final weeks of the season if the pitches turn and he is going to be our figurehead. “Since Damien Wright returned to Australia and Matt Mason retired bowlers like Gareth Andrew and Jack Shantry have taken on more responsibility and they have responded well. “They’ve had to bowl more overs but we have worked well as a unit and if I am seen as the senior figure in the seam attack it’s just something that has happened.” Richardson began his county career with Derbyshire in 1995 but he made only one first team appearance and was released at the end of the season after he found himself behind 12 other seam bowlers. He spent the next three years working part-time as a landscape gardener while playing for Staffordshire in the Minor Counties Championship and club cricket for Little Stoke in the North Staffordshire/South Cheshire League.
33
Warwickshire spotted Richardson playing for the England Amateur XI and successful trials in 1998 led to him being offered second chance in county cricket. “I’m enjoying my cricket as much as ever,” Richardson said. “It’s more like a fourth or fifth career than a second but I’m loving it. “I’m probably going to end up finishing my career with Worcestershire but it’s a good place to be at the moment.” Richardson was interviewed for the job as cricket professional at Bromsgrove School after he left Middlesex two years ago but is pleased that he accepted Worcestershire’s offer to extend his county career. “There’s a high level of professionalism at the club at the moment and I’ve thoroughly enjoyed the time that I have spent with the club,” he said. “Before I joined Worcestershire they had been in the First Division three times and been relegated after one season each time. “When we went up last season we probably surprised a few people. We came up with the sole objective of staying up and so far we have been competitive and surprised a few people and we might have won a couple more games than we have.”
34
HorSHAM Festival 2011
Arundel Festival 2011
35
Fun time Frankie The last player to complete the domestic firstclass double of 1,000 runs and 100 wickets in a season, Franklyn Stephenson won friends the world over for playing combative cricket with a dazzling smile. After three happy years with Sussex the amiable man-mountain retired in 1997 to become a golf professional in his native Barbados and eventually fulfil the dream of building his own cricket ground and practice facility. He spoke to Mark Pennell It was Hollywood fantasy at its star spangled flag-waving best as Kevin Costner - driven by the haunted whispers of former baseball legends telling him: “If you build it, they will come” constructed a ‘diamond’ amongst the fields on his farm. On the face of it, the plotline to the 1989 movie Field of Dreams appears far fetched and a touch dewy-eyed. Yet it is the exact same dream that inspired Franklyn Stephenson, the one-time Gloucestershire, Nottinghamshire and Sussex allrounder, to build his own cricket pitch barely a six-hit from his home in Holders Hill, Barbados. It was 90 degrees in the shade when Franklyn proudly showed me his cricket ground in the making. Taking up the story that led to the fulfilment of his dream, Franklyn said: “A friend of mine, Tim, came for some golf lessons one day and said he had this little plot of overgrown land that he’d like me to look at. He wanted me to see if there was anything I might do with it because he was told that ‘I could do anything’. “When I first saw the area I was very excited because I could see immediately the potential of it. There was a big bank that needed taking out and bamboo was growing wild, but I could picture a playing field here and a pavilion over in the corner. I felt it could be nice enough to have kids playing here every night and good enough to attract some touring teams.
“I knew it needed a lot of work, but Tim graciously said he’d finance the project if I’d manage it. Our hope was to have the facilities in place for county teams to come over from England, that’s been my focus, my plan, my dream if you like. “Having spent a lot of time in England I know the guys don’t have the best weather for pre-season training and felt that Barbados could offer the ideal alternative. “I had the idea as long ago as 1995 when I spoke to Phil Neale, who was manager at Warwickshire then, who said if the facilities were good enough then counties would come. So this is a dream come true for me and yes, that Kevin Costner film has come into my mind so many times since we started building this place.” Though he could have been a star baseball player in his own right, Stephenson admits his secret love in sport rests with golf. After first picking up a club at the age of seven at home in Barbados, it needed the east coast links courses of Lancashire to finally inspire him to take up the game in earnest. He said: “I played all sorts of sports as a kid cricket, soccer, chipping around the sports field with a wedge, and I was tennis champion of my area; mainly because I had a massive serve that could pin guys onto the wire fencing at the back of the court!
The Boars
‘Traditional Pub with a modern twist’
We’ll be making Breakfast, Lunches as well as Dinner during the festival.
Head 01403 266554 Worthing Road, Horsham, West Sussex RH13 0AD
Arundel Festival 2011 “Cricket was my early passion though and I’d gone over to England for the first time in 1984 to play league cricket in Oldham and that’s when I first played golf properly. “I returned to Barbados after that summer with two sets of golf clubs, a practice net and with the intention to work had at it, but back then golf was a very expensive game here on the island, on certain courses it still is, so I decided to stick with cricket for a while and then, once cricket was done, get so good at golf that the game actually paid me. “I was already playing off scratch by then and represented Barbados at golf in 1986 and 1987 Caribbean Championships. My performances were good enough to attract a sponsor which, unbeknown to me, contravened the rules. It was an honest mistake, but they took my pro status away for six months because of it.” Riled by the decision, Stephenson contacted the European branch of the Professional Golfers Association, flew to their headquarters at the Belfry near Birmingham, formulated a
37
batting and as I ran in Willey backed away all of a sudden. The strapping had come loose and was flapping around under my shirt and jumper. I pulled it all off, gave it to the umpire, carried on bowling and took five wickets. “The game was never dead for me. There was always something to get out of a match, which was the beauty of being an all-rounder I guess.” As for his three summers in Hove, where he was twice named cricketer of the year by the Sussex branch of the Cricket Society, Stephenson added: “It was always so dry down on the south coast that it seemed like the flattest pitch in England, as a consequence, we had a problem getting positive results there. “I could never get between Norman Giffford and Alan Wells and get them to try and open up the home games. We beat Surrey at The Oval inside two days when they had seven batters in the top 20 of the averages. The pitch there had some life and a little movement.
“As a fast bowler you’re always going to be hampered by injury but thinking about it now I think I did fantastically well to stay on the park as long as I did.” constitution and returned home to found the PGA of Barbados. He added: “From 1988 I had my PGAB playing card and travelled around the world playing cricket and golf. Then, when cricket was over for me, I returned home and took up a job as resident professional at Sandy Lane. “I don’t earn a fortune, but I love my golf and it is a very relaxing way of life.” Banned from Test cricket after taking part in rebel tours to South Africa in the early 1980s, Stephenson reserved his best for the county arena and for Nottinghamshire in particular - he achieved the double for the east Midlands’ side in 1988. However, he also looks back fondly on his three seasons at Hove, and playing through the pain barrier for Sussex. “As a fast bowler you’re always going to be hampered by injury but thinking about it now I think I did fantastically well to stay on the park as long as I did,” said Stephenson, the undisputed king of the slower ball. “I think only Courtney Walsh could match me in that regard, we both found a way of bowling through it and staying out there through thick and thin. “I remember a game against Leicestershire when I had to strap up my right shoulder to bowl. David Gower and Peter Willey were
“Then we went to Northampton and beat them in two days when Allan Lamb told his team-mates that he reckoned I was trying to kill him. Later on, we beat Leicestershire in two days at Grace Road as well. “I turned to the management at Sussex and said this is what happens if we play on wickets with a bit of life and bounce, but Alan (Wells) didn’t want that. He wanted flat pitches at Hove and I felt that held us back from winning things. “The highlight was beating the West Indies inside two days and half-a-session, but we didn’t realise all that we should as a team. I still enjoyed my time there though, we bought youngsters through like James Kirtley and Danny Law and I got on really well with Peter Moores. “I can’t say I was big mates with David Smith though, there was a clash of two strong minds if ever there was one, and there were times when people had to get between us but, when I reflect on it, I played some of my best cricket there.” In this era of covered pitches, and Twenty20 overkill it seems unlikely that any cricketer will ever emulate Stephenson’s achievement of completing the first-class double. Maybe that’s why his smile remains as broad as ever.
The family company with values to match
Solar energy is one of the best sources of eco friendly renewable energy available and a Solar PV system installed on your property can generate you with a tax free index linked payment guaranteed for the next 25 years. A south facing 4KWP system could generate you an annual income of up to £1600. ICA Electrical Contractors are professional electrical contractors. We are a fully approved NICEIC contractor, MCS registered and a member of the Renewable Energy Assurance. Our experience, expertise and efficient approach have ensured that we have become an established and trusted name with many individual homeowners, landlords and house builders throughout the South East.
01403 242770 enquiry@icaelectrical.com ICA Electrical Contractors Unit 15 Blatchford Close Industrial Estate Horsham West Sussex RH13 5RG
Shaws has been part of the business landscape in West Sussex for over 15 years and is now firmly established as the regions independent choice for all things glass. Whilst we can guarantee that summer is just around the corner, we can’t guarantee the sun so why not consider a beautiful new conservatory giving you an “outside room” all year round - no matter what the weather is doing.
For all enquires please contact us on numbers below Showroom mail@shawsglass.co.uk Tel: 01403 211133
Factory mail@shawsglass.co.uk Tel: 01293 852310
HorSHAM Festival 2011
HORSHAM memories
By John Barnett
Now I may not be one of the more celebrated “Dew-drops”, and I never got to play on the main pitch, but passing through Horsham Cricket club’s junior section naturally gives Cricketfield Road and its annual festival a special meaning. A different type of ground from Arundel, it is one of the most picturesque on the circuit, and remains a wonderful advert for out-ground cricket. My first ever cricket match was at Horsham, in 1989 when Essex comfortably won a Refuge Assurance Sunday League match. Essex featured familiar England names in Graham Gooch, Neil Foster, John Childs, and Derek Pringle was on the card but did not play, however it was with the then-uncapped and lesser known Waugh twin Mark taking four catches that caught my eye, as I wondered if he might play for Australia one day too… A common factor in my first several years in the county championship was the opposition tail wagging; Lancashire’s Paul Allott and Graeme Fowler - batting at number eight after suffering a head injury fielding on the first morning - turned 224/8 into 320 all out before Sussex collapsed to an eventual nine-wicket defeat. A year later, Essex were back at Cricketfield Road and an excellent fielding display saw them reduced to 173/7, before another former England bowler Neil Foster notched up his maiden first-class century to earn maximum batting points, aided by Alistair Fraser‘s maiden fifty. 1994 saw Lancashire back again and just as captain Alan Wells would have been debating whether or not to enforce the followon, last wicket pair Mike Watkinson and Peter Martin’s century stand saved Wells the decision. Sussex won this one, but not before Wasim Akram’s astonishing 98 had turned an apparently tame draw into a thrilling final session, he being the last man out as the Red Rose fell 50 runs short. The following year, the home side needed some late, late resistance of their own as number 11 Jason Lewry survived 71 deliveries to save the match with Surrey. Lewry must have wondered how it had come to this after his three wickets in four balls on day one had reduced the visitors to 117/7. And most galling of all had to be 1997, when near neighbours Kent wrestled unlikely control on the third afternoon courtesy of last man Ben Phillips and Steve Marsh, to leave Sussex -
Richard Montgomerie
39
S Cottingham toner
Chartered Accountants Registered Auditors
Supporting Sussex C.C.C
HOPING TO RE JOYCE IN A WRIGHT GOOD WIN Pick up the phone and ring either David Stoner or Stephen Cottingham 01403 263904 NO ONE TAKES A MORE
Is your tax too taxing?
PERSONAL INTEREST
Have you paid the wrong amount of tax?
Call now for an initial free meeting
If so you need professional help now. No PRIOR Notice required
Over 40 years in Horsham dedicated to personal professional services for individuals & businesses.
Address: 42 London Road, Horsham, West Sussex RH12 1AY Website: www.stonercottingham.co.uk Email: admin@stonercottingham.co.uk Fax: 01403 211844
HorSHAM Festival 2011
41
Left Luke Wright Right Bill Athey
depleted following the turmoil of the winter, but unbeaten in the championship - with just the draw to play for on the final day, which to their credit, they almost managed. The championship-winning years all featured comprehensive home victories, Mushtaq Ahmed not surprisingly enjoying some very fruitful days, one of the highlights being 2003 when after a run-feast for the first three days, Sussex dismantled the Nottinghamshire batting on the final morning en route to a ten-wicket triumph. Mushy took six scalps, including a brilliant one-handed slip catch from Tony Cottey to dismiss Kevin Pietersen cheaply. Pietersen produced a typically pugnacious, century in the first innings, but that was eclipsed four years later by a master-class from Chris Adams on the Saturday. The skipper fell seven runs short of a double century as Durham were crushed by an innings. One man with happy memories of this venue is Richard Montgomerie, having reeled off three centuries and two fifties, including carrying his bat in 2002 against Leicestershire, a match also significant for a bowler from each side taking seven wickets in an innings - Robin Martin-Jenkins on his home patch, and Devon Malcolm. But they were not the first magnificent sevens in that particular fixture, as a quite phenomenal performance from Eddie Hemmings in 1993 hurried Sussex to an innings victory inside three days, despite the first being washed out. The hosts only recorded a
moderate 271, but just over 24-hours later, the 44-year-old had followed up his 5/27 with 7/31. For me though, my two most memorable days came in limited overs cricket, and in starkly contrasting weather. The postrevolution team of 1997 had not won a Sunday League game thus far, and would have been outsiders at tea after a strong Kent side had posted 220/9, but a perfectly timed chase on a sun-drenched afternoon was sealed in the final over, with an unbeaten century from “Barnacle” Bill Athey. Nine years on, and a C&G group game with Somerset was reduced to 24 overs a side and in pursuit of 159, the Sharks were in a mess at 16/4, but recovered to 66/4 when the rain returned. With Somerset well ahead on the Duckworth Lewis and any revised target likely to do Sussex no favours, it looked like the game was up, but a seriously concerted effort by ground staff and plenty of volunteers got the game back on with 122 needed off 17 overs. Matt Prior was out straightaway, but Martin-Jenkins and an emerging Luke Wright launched a thrilling assault to reach the finishing line with 10 balls to spare. They should have engraved Sussex’s name on the trophy there and then. As with all out-grounds, how much longer the festival will last is unknown, but there can be few in the country that hold that link between junior and county cricket so evidently….but then I might be a little biased. John Barnett commentates on cricket for BBC Radio Sussex
THE ALL NEW 2011
JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE
HORSHAM CAR CENTRE, ROFFEY CORNER, CRAWLEY ROAD, HORSHAM RH12 4HG. www.horshamcarcentre.co.uk
To discover more, call us on 01403 272747 FUEL CONSUMPTION FIGURES IN MPG (L/100KM) FOR THE JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE RANGE: URBAN 27.4 (10.3), EXTRA URBAN 39.2 (7.2), COMBINED 34.0 (8.3). CO 2 EMISSIONS (G/KM) 218. Vehicle shown is for illustration purposes only. Jeep is a registered trademark of Chrysler Group LLC.
HorSHAM Festival 2011
A special experience
County cricket has been played at Cricketfield Road for 103 years and some of the greats of the game have played here while the club continues to flourish, as Martin Read discovered. Horsham has hosted county matches since 1908 when Essex were the first visitors and sizeable crowds have been enthralled by famous players down the years. In 1934 51- year-old Jack Hobbs retired after being run out at Horsham. Much later Viv Richards kept wicket for Somerset in a one-day game. Numerous other international players have provided rich entertainment down the years. But it is Horsham’s own sons like the Coxes and Oakes that really won local hearts. Long serving Sussex professionals George Cox Senior and Junior between them played over one thousand matches for the county, scoring almost 38,000 runs and taking over 2,000 wickets. Stalwart Sussex all-rounders Charlie and Jack Oakes were born in the cottage on the ground, now sadly derelict. Father, Alfred, played for Horsham and was groundsman for 47 years. Charlie once hit a six into his own garden and on retirement took over his father’s duties. Horsham has contributed a steady stream of players to the county side. More recently Chris Nash, playing with his brother Mark (their father Nick is the club squash coach), and Will Beer have both captained the club. Andrew Hodd, Robin MartinJenkins, Carl Hopkinson and Michael Thornely all played for Horsham and Sussex in the last decade while Australian test cricketers Tim May and David Hussey were overseas players at the club. Horsham has now entered into a partnership with Cricket New Zealand enabling a promising Horsham cricketer to develop his game there during our winter in exchange for Horsham recruiting an emerging Kiwi player for our season. Horsham Cricket Club was founded in 1771 when George III was on the throne and America was still ours. Bats were curved and heavy, bowling was underarm and scores were notches on a stick. East Grinstead were our first opponents and 240 years later the two sides are still competing in the Sussex Premier League, which Horsham has won eight times. They have also won the cup competition on a record 11 occasions. 2005 was a particularly proud year when they carried off the Cockspur Cup at Lord’s, with all but one of Horsham’s team graduating through the coaching system. Today’s young side uphold the club’s tradition of playing challenging cricket.
43
www.AtlasMobility.co.uk
Home Care ...not Care Home Country Cousins is the nationwide specialist in the introduction of live in carers and companions to the elderly and those convalescing in their own home. We can provide a unique service to match your exact requirements.
ÂŁ200 cashback when a stairlift is ordered with us (for limited period)
We offer 10% discount on mobility scooters with this advert
Whether you simply need companionship and some assistance with daily tasks or support and help with personal care, Country Cousins can provide the solution.
T:0845 6014003 F:01403 217827
www.country-cousins.co.uk
HorSHAM Festival 2011
The present ground was established in 1851 when a Sussex team played a side from Surrey. Originally, the pavilion stood by the footbridge over the railway. The ground had previously been covered by Horsham barracks occupying around 12 acres, part of the build-up of military bases during the Napoleonic threat. The range of buildings included eight blocks housing 2,000 troops, surrounded by the parade ground, a hospital, guardhouse and stabling.
45
doctor, captained Horsham and was its visionary president for more than 40 years. Tennis, hockey and squash plus a variety of social functions are also vital elements at this family-orientated club. But it is the annual County Cricket Festival that attracts by far the biggest crowd of any event held in the town. Horsham committee man Barry Peay marshals a 60 strong army of groundsmen, stewards, office staff, caterers, bartenders and volunteers working long
“There are few more pleasant approaches to any ground from a town centre than down Horsham’s Causeway through the churchyard and across the river.” Today, four Horsham men’s sides play on Saturdays, one on Sundays and Thursdays and there is a Ladies’ team and matches for colts and girls in age groups from under 9 upwards. The extensive new practice area, opened by Christopher MartinJenkins, is very popular with over 200 boys and girls receiving coaching through the week, with mini cricket for 5–8 year olds providing a fun and informal introduction to the game. Each season Horsham hosts a number of Sussex second XI games, various schools tournaments and local knockout finals. With so much cricket a second ground was essential and in 1971 the John Dew ground was opened alongside the established playing area at Cricketfield Road. The late John Dew, a local
hours to prepare the ground, put up fencing, seating and marquees and provide electricity, water, toilets, first aid and other amenities for the comfort of up to 3,000 spectators. The aim is always to provide a special Horsham experience. TMS commentator Henry Blofeld was married in nearby St Mary’s Church and there are few more pleasant approaches to any ground from a town centre than down Horsham’s Causeway through the churchyard and across the river. Outground county cricket is an endangered species. Horsham’s festival has an enduring appeal that is well worth preserving. Long may it continue to be savoured.
• • • • • • •
Boiler replacements Central heating systems MCS Accredited Installers of Solar Hot Water Unvented hot water cylinders Underfloor heating Power flushing Bathrooms and Showers
Dawson Heating Ltd has an extensive client base built on reputation and a commitment over twenty two years to provide a very high standard of workmanship and customer satisfaction. As Worcester- Bosch Accredited Installers we offer an exclusive manufacturer backed, 5 year free warranty across the market leading range of Worcester- Bosch gas boilers and solar hot water products.
Installing boilers throughout Sussex and Surrey for over 20 years 01403 257678 www.dawsonheating.co.uk
MAJOR SPONSOR
GROUND SPONSOR
FOR HOSPITALITY CALL 0844 264 0201 OR VISIT WWW.SUSSEXCRICKET.CO.UK
Johnson & Sons
Don’t Move...
We can increase the value of your home NOW!! Composite doors fully fitted from only £900 inc VAT We will price match most like for like quotes
See our full range of composite doors on our website & design it there and then! We specialise in replacing and repairing. For over 30 years experience in this family run business and for your peace of mind contact Johnson & Sons. Local authority & trading standard approved. Fensa Registered.
www.johnsonandsons.co.uk
LewIS RoweLL Chartered Accountants & Registered Auditors • Free Initial Meeting • Accounts & Audit • Partnerships • Personal/Company Tax • Bookkeeping • Business Plans & Forecasts • Payroll/VAT Service • Business Start Ups & Formations • Proactive Advice
01293 542244 Email: info@lewis-rowell.co.uk 20 Springfield Road, Crawley West Sussex RH11 8AD
www.lewis-rowell.co.uk
horsham Festival 2011
49
firing line Adam Matthews talks to Chris Nash
Q What’s the best thing about playing for Sussex?
A I live about thirty seconds from the ground, which is quite nice! It’s close to the sea, there’s a good bunch of lads and it’s a great place to play cricket. Q Which cricketer do you play like the most?
A I’d like to say Sachin Tendulkar! But probably somebody like Graeme Swann, as I like to play with a smile on my face and have a bit of a laugh. Q Who was your cricketing hero as a youngster?
A Probably Shane Warne, I used to love watching him as a youngster so he’d definitely be the one. There were a few batsmen too, I enjoyed watching Michael Slater and the way he played and scored quickly. So I used to try and copy him, and I liked his kit! Q What has been your greatest moment in a Sussex shirt?
A I’ve been lucky enough to have a few really. I’d have to say winning the Twenty20 in 2009 was a real highlight. Obviously the Championship in 2007, as well as the
Pro40 in 2009 which was a huge thing for me, as I played a key role in it and made a big contribution.
Q Who is the best trainer? A Probably Amjad, he’s done well as he’s
Q Apart from The PROBIZ County
now got a six pack and he didn’t have one before he came here!
Ground, Hove, which is your favourite ground to play at and why?
A Lord’s, even though everybody says it.
Q What are your other interests outside cricket?
Just a great place to play, always a great A I love playing golf, and I love being atmosphere even if there’s only a few in the down here and spending time by the sea. ground. And of course good food! I like playing a bit of squash from time to time too. Q Who is the worst dancer in the squad on a night out? Q What’s the best advice you could
A Chris Liddle. I don’t really need to say anymore than that. He’s Northern and terrible!
Q Who has the worst dress sense? A Ollie Rayner, he wears the worst clothes in the world. He gets everything on mail order and it never quite works out! Q Who has the worst taste in music?
A Everyone says me, but that’s rubbish! I reckon Amjad Khan tried to take me down as DJ but he was awful. It was all trancie and cool, that’s not what I’m about! Who is the biggest joker in the squad? I’d say Luke Wright, he’s always mucking about and got a smile on his face.
give to an aspiring cricketer?
A Work hard and enjoy your cricket every time you play it, as it really is a great game. Have no regrets.
Q Who has been the biggest influence on your career?
A There’s two really, a guy called John Dew who was President at Horsham. He got me into cricket to begin with. And I’d also say Les Lenham here at Sussex, who has worked with me tirelessly since the moment I first started here. Those two guys are quite old school in the way they’ve done things and they’ve given me the best basic advice to get me going.
50
HorSHAM Festival 2011
Great fun to play and great fun to watch Test Match Special’s Jonathan Agnew remembers his own experience of out-ground cricket and argues that festival cricket has to be nurtured by the counties I’m a real lover of county festival cricket, for the simple reason that it’s great fun to watch and great fun to play in. During my own playing career with Leicestershire (it’s funny - some people these days have totally forgotten that this ever happened!) I had the great fortune to try to bowl fast on a succession of slow, low club grounds at festival weeks. Only kidding. The county cricket festival is a traditional part of the English game which needs to be nurtured and supported. It brings the county side to venues at which the staging of senior cricket is important for the continued growth and health of the game. It would be no good to anyone if county teams simply played all the time at their main headquarters. The very essence of festival cricket is that the county’s best players get closer to their public. I can remember fielding on the boundary during county cricket weeks and the banter and the atmosphere is always different at the more intimate grounds where festival matches are held. Ladies Day at Canterbury Week might not be typical, as most county festivals are more prosaic than that, but tents around the boundary, jazz bands playing in the lunch interval, champagne corks popping and picnic baskets packed with goodies are all part of the fare you still mercifully see on many parts of the county circuit. I am of course too modest simply to recall here some of my own performances at cricket weeks but I do remember with affection playing at places such as Cheltenham, Scarborough and The Mote in Maidstone. At Tunbridge Wells, in 1981, a certain David Gower made a lovely hundred for Leicestershire against Kent – which I always thought was appropriate, not just because of the beautiful setting but because Gower had been born in Tunbridge Wells, which is not widely known. The fact that I was very much a bystander in that particular contest – it was rain-affected, two innings were forfeited, I bowled just two overs and was bowled for nought by Derek Underwood in Leicestershire’s only innings – does not lessen my affection at the memory of appearing at the picturesque Nevill Ground.
David Gower in action
HorSHAM Festival 2011 There are other festival grounds I recall fondly from my playing days: The Saffrons in Eastbourne, the Pen-y-pound ground at Abergavenny, Dean Park in Bournemouth, Queen’s Park in Chesterfield, and the Wagon Works Ground at Gloucester where, in 1988, Leicestershire won a fierce low-scoring game on a seaming pitch against a Gloucestershire side who were spearheaded by David ‘Syd’ Lawrence, Terry Alderman and Kevin Curran. Our first innings score of 189 remained the highest of the match, but luckily our seam attack in those days was not too bad – Phillip DeFreitas, the rapid West Indian George Ferris, Chris Lewis plus myself – and we ended up winning by 60-odd runs. North Marine Road, Scarborough, will always be a favourite ground of mine for the simple reason that I made my highest firstclass score of 90 there in 1987, against Yorkshire obviously, before being denied a maiden hundred by Paul Jarvis, who had me caught at the wicket by dear old David Bairstow.
Jonathan Agnew
51
They are great memories to have, though, and it is the spirit of festival week cricket which I think best sums up its timeless appeal. During rain interruptions on Test Match Special, the conversation often turns to incidents during games past. One of the funny stories I’ll always remember is of the time a match was held up by a mole burrowing up through the surface of the pitch. I’m sure it didn’t happen during a festival week first-class game… but perhaps it could easily have done.
Taking care of your communications The Best Phone Company is here to find the best telecoms solution for your company. We specialise in all aspects of Business Telecommunications and deliver cost-effective solutions across a wide portfolio of products. We provide bespoke systems to suit your personal needs, whether it’s a simple set up for your company and home workers or a workable easy-to-navigate phone system within a complex corporate organisation. We keep things simple by billing all your communications on one monthly bill, with one payment and one point of contact.
The Best Phone Company is proud to sponsor The Horsham Cricket Festival 2011
with guaranteed savings for your business By analysing your infrastructure and what you really need, we can help you make significant savings, make you more productive and help you to offer a high quality service. Discover how we can help your business communicate more effectively with your customers.
Our objective is to save your company money Tel: 0844 809 2565 • Mob: 07966 014004 Web: thebestphoneco.com • Email: nickp@thebestphoneco.com
54
HorSHAM Festival 2011
Made In Sussex On April 11, 1973 Sussex and Barbados opening batsman Geoff Greenidge set an unwanted record by becoming the last white, Caribbean-born player to appear for the West Indies - some 38 years on the softly-spoken Bajan is still hoping to see an end to the trend. He spoke about West Indies’ cricket and his eight seasons with The Martlets to Mark Pennell Geoff Greenidge gets to enjoy the best view in the ground whenever cricket is played at the Kensington Oval in Bridgetown. As a former Test player he merits a seat right behind the arm in the CLOBI corporate hospitality box on the top tier of the 3Ws Stand. As a Cricket Legend of Barbados inductee, the 63-year-old appears right at home sipping a rum and coke, sharing banter with former team-mates and casting an eye over proceedings. It all seems a million miles away from a blustery spring day in Hove, yet Greenidge recalls his time on the south coast fondly, and with a smile accentuated by his Barbados tan. “My move to play for Sussex all came about through Jim Parks,” he recalled. “England were over in Bridgetown in early 1968 and Jim was keeping wicket. “I opened the innings for Barbados against the MCC, as they were then, and he obviously liked what he saw. Jim and a couple of Sussex committee men later approached me and asked if I’d like to play county cricket. I decided I’d love to give it a go, it would be a new experience and, as it turned out, they were a wonderful club to play for, real friendly. “The adjustment the first week or so was incredible, it was much, much colder than I’d imagined but the ball did so much more and I struggled a bit that first season. The travelling and the sheer number of matches took me aback, it was a real learning experience, but the players made me feel really welcome. “Toward the end of that first summer I spent a lot of time in the indoor school with Les Lenham just trying to change my technique to suit the English conditions and after that, things went pretty good.
Geoff Greenidge in his heyday
HorSHAM Festival 2011
55
FREE SCORECARD
Family run company that goes back 4 generations.
G.B.PLASTERING
day one: Sussex CCC v Worcs. CCC
FREE SCORECARD
Tear out and hand this voucher in to claim your free scorecard
#
We have been in the building Industry for about 75 years +
#
Tear out and hand this voucher in to claim your free scorecard
day two: Sussex CCC v Worcs. CCC
FREE SCORECARD
• • • • • • •
PLASTERING COVING ARTEXING BUILDING (NEW OR EXTENTIONS) PLUMBING CARPENTREY ELECTRICAL (17TH & PART P)
day three: Sussex CCC v Worcs. CCC
FREE SCORECARD
Tear out and hand this voucher in to claim your free scorecard
#
A lot of the work we get is by word of mouth, which we think says a lot about us and the work we do.
#
Tear out and hand this voucher in to claim your free scorecard
day four: Sussex CCC v Worcs. CCC
FREE SCORECARD
TEL: 01293 410060 MOB: 07900583501
#
Tear out and hand this voucher in to claim your free scorecard
CB40 Sharks v Royals
56
HorSHAM Festival 2011
“The one game for Sussex that really stood out for me was our five-wicket win over the Australians at Hove in 1972. I scored 99 in the first innings but followed it up with 125 not out. It was the third time I’d been out on 99, but I made up for it by helping us to beat the tourists. It was a great day, but an even better evening. “They were good people at Sussex. The likes of Peter Graves, John Snow, Antony and Mike Buss, Roger Prideaux, Tony Greig and Mike Griffiths, they were all great to be around. Peter and I became very close friends. “We came close to winning the Gillette Cup, but it proved a big disappointment to lose to Gloucestershire at Lord’s. I scored 70-odd against Mike Procter steaming in. We had a good start but our middle-order fell away. To this day I still day dream about the what-ifs.
“The one game for Sussex that really stood out for me was our five-wicket win over the Australians at Hove in 1972. I scored 99 in the first innings but followed it up with 125 not out.” “Both my children, Steven and Amanda, were born in England and we toyed with the idea of making Sussex our home, but my dad wanted me to play a bigger role in our family business Greenidge Inc. - a wholesale plumbing and electrical distributors in Barbados – I’m still working for the firm to this day, more of a figurehead now though as my son is the No1.” During his time with Sussex Greenidge was called up by the West Indies’ selectors and was rightly proud to have played alongside some of his nation’s greats. It still irks, however, that he was cast aside after five appearances and never given an opportunity to play on their tour to England in 1973. “I’d played all three Tests of the home series against Australia in ‘72/73 and they were going to the UK next up,” added Greenidge, in his soft Bajan drawl. “I hoped I’d just done enough to get in the touring party, but went back to play for Sussex after being left out. Oddly enough, Lawrence Rowe picked up an injury and went home early, and again, I hoped I’d get the call as I was actually over in England by then.
“But they (the selectors) called up Ron Headley from Worcestershire instead. I knew then my Test days were probably over. It was very upsetting and in some ways I lost a bit of an edge from my game after Recalling happier memories of his top-flight appearances, Greenidge said: “My first Test cap was in Guyana against New Zealand. I’d made some runs in the lead up and had an inkling I might be in with a chance. That still didn’t prepare me for when I actually got the call from the selectors though, it was still a wonderful surprise and a great honour to be called up. “I went out to Guyana and felt very nervous, but Sir Garfield, he was plain old Gary then of course, put me at ease straight away. He was a great captain and has always been a good man and a friend to me. “When we arrived at Bourda for the game the ground was packed and we decided to bat first. I walked out with Roy Fredericks, he was the senior pro of course, and the ovation was remarkable. “Roy was a great batsman. He was light on his feet and played the ball very late, which made him good against the quicks. He was such a nice person and very helpful to the youngsters coming into the side like me. “Their attack was useful, but not outstanding, and it turned out to be quite a good series. In that first game I managed to get into line for my first ball, work it away and get off the mark straight away, which helped settle the nerves a great deal. “It was a good wicket and a high-scoring game. I got a half-century and 30-odd not out second time around and I remember Glenn Turner getting a very big score for them [259] as it ended up in a draw.” Greenidge posted 38 and 21 in his second Test appearance, another hard fought draw in Port-of-Spain, and felt he had done enough to win selection for the squad to take on the Australian touring team in February 1973. It was, he recalled, a very different proposition to taking on the Kiwi attack. “This was a totally different ball game altogether,” said Geoff. “We pitched up at Sabina Park and they had Max Walker and Jeff Hammond and this other wiry ‘fella’ called Dennis Lillee, who had this enormous great run-up. Some say it’s an old housewives’ tale, but he truly was pushing off from the sightscreen. It was quite a sight and an amazing experience to face up to. “They got a decent score on the board, 400-odd, then, after about three overs I got a duck in my only innings of the game. Oddly enough though, it was Walker who got me out and who gave us most trouble as a team. He was deceptively quick off a much shorter run-up than Lillee, but he also got the ball to swing.”
HorSHAM Festival 2011 Back on his home island for the second Test of that series at Bridgetown, Greenidge mustered nine and 10 not out, in another creditable draw for the West Indies against an Aussie side that boasted the Chappell brother, Keith Stackpole, Ian Redpath and Rod Marsh in their number. “They were an impressive outfit in terms of their cricket ability, but talk about sledging - they were the masters of it!” said Greenidge with a wry smile. “Most of what they hurled at you was unprintable, but that was all part and parcel of the game and I quickly had to get used to it. I soon learned it was best not to take them on at it too. But to be fair to them, we all shared a beer at the end of the day. ” Geoff and the West Indies returned to Guyana for the third and final rubber of the series, which also proved to be his final appearance for the Test side. He chalked up 22 and 24 as the hosts went down by 10 wickets to lose the series. The hurt of defeat and being cast aside by the selectors lingers to this day. And as for the record he so wants to be rid of, Geoff concludes: “The white guys over here have genuine ability, but many of them leave the Caribbean to study in the States where they take up squash, golf or soccer, they don’t seem to follow up on their cricket careers. “It’s disappointing because it’s a record I’d really like to lose. It’s not a stigma as such, but it would be a big boost for the white lads at schools all over the islands to see a white player back in the West Indies’ team. I hope it happens for them, more than for me.”
Geoff Greenidge faced a young Dennis Lillee during his brief Test career in the early 1970s Inset: Geoff pictured in Barbados earlier this year.
57
58
HorSHAM Festival 2011
SUSSEX RESULTS & FIXTURES 2011 Results
LV=CC Lancashire LV=CC Durham CB40 Lancashire CB40 Derbyshire CB40 Netherlands LV=CC Hampshire CB40 Middlesex LV=CC Nottinghamshire CB40 Derbyshire LV=CC Somerset CB40 Kent
A L Inns & 55 runs A W 2 wkts H Drawn A L 6 wkts H W 5 wkts A Drawn H W 9 wkts H W 9 wkts H W 8 wkts H W 8 wkts A W 19 runs
UNI Oxford MCCU A Drawn LV=CC Yorkshire H Drawn t20 Essex H W 32 runs t20 Gloucestershire A W 7 wkts t20 Essex A W 17 runs t20 Middlesex H L 5 wkts t20 Somerset H W 4 wkts t20 Middlesex A W 49 runs t20 Kent No result LV=CC Warwickshire h Lost by 8 wkts t 20 Gloucestershire h Won by 6 wkts
t 20 Surrey a t 20 Glamorgan h t 20 Kent a t 20 Hampshire h t 20 Surrey h LV=CC Warwickshire a CB40 Worcestershire a CB40 Yorkshire h CB40 Netherlands a
Lost by 18 runs Won by 4 wkts Won by 15 runs Lost by 112 runs Won by 11 runs Lost by an innings & 43 runs Won by 8 wkts Won by 76 runs
Fixtures Date August Tue 2nd - Fri 5th Sat 6th - Mon 8th Wed 10th - Sat 13th Sun 14th Wed 17th - Sat 20th Sun 21st Tue 23rd FL Thu 25th Sat 27th Mon 29th Wed 31st - Sat 3rd September Sun 4th Sep Wed 7th - Sat 10th Mon 12th - Thu 15th Sat 17th Sep
Type
Opponent
H/A
Venue
LV=CC t20 LV=CC CB40 LV=CC CB40 CB40 TOM1 t20 CB40 LV=CC
Somerset Away Taunton t20 Quarter-Finals Worcestershire Home Horsham Worcestershire Home Horsham Yorkshire Away Scarborough Yorkshire Away Scarborough Kent Home Hove India Home Hove t20 Finals Day Edgbaston Middlesex Away Lord’s Durham Home Hove
CB40 LV=CC LV=CC CB40
CB40 Semi-Finals Worcestershire Away Worcester Nottinghamshire Away Trent Bridge CB40 Final Lord’s
LV=CC LV= County Championship | t20 Friends Life t20 | CB40 CB40 Clydesdale Bank 40 | TOM 1 Tourist match | UNI University | FL Floodlit
HorSHAM Festival 2011
59
SUSSEX AVERAGES 2011 Sussex batting averages
Player Mat MW Goodwin 10 MJ Prior 3 EC Joyce 10 OP Rayner 3 LWP Wells 10 CD Nash 10 LJ Wright 4 Naved Arif 3 JS Gatting 3 WA Adkin 1 MH Yardy 4 AJ Hodd 8 Naved-ul-Hasan 9 BC Brown 4 JE Anyon 9 A Khan 8 MS Panesar 10 WD Parnell 1 KO Wernars 1
Inns 18 4 18 6 19 19 7 6 5 2 5 14 13 8 12 11 13 - -
NO 3 1 1 2 2 0 0 2 0 1 1 3 1 0 1 3 5 - -
Runs HS Ave 806 274* 53.73 148 97* 49.33 838 140 49.29 173 62* 43.25 730 174 42.94 799 120 42.05 237 116 33.85 135 100* 33.75 154 90 30.80 29 29* 29.00 103 62* 25.75 270 67 24.54 186 43* 15.50 92 61 11.50 104 51 9.45 74 13 9.25 66 17* 8.25 - - - - - -
BF 1588 232 1582 359 1565 1406 376 277 262 102 280 668 239 240 277 231 303 - -
SR 50.75 63.79 52.97 48.18 46.64 56.82 63.03 48.73 58.77 28.43 36.78 40.41 77.82 38.33 37.54 32.03 21.78 - -
100 2 0 2 0 3 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - -
50 2 1 5 2 0 7 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 - -
0 1 0 1 0 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 4 4 0 0 - -
4s 96 19 119 22 109 109 33 11 21 3 8 26 19 10 13 6 5 - -
6s 0 0 1 0 3 3 1 4 0 0 2 0 8 0 0 0 0 -
Overs 8.5 481.4 49.0 262.1 38.0 62.4 279.4 249.4 35.0 53.0 1.0 17.0 18.0 - - - - - -
Mdns Runs Wkts 5 13 2 145 1168 42 8 146 5 24 1034 35 6 120 4 8 261 8 58 921 27 46 842 20 5 100 2 13 168 1 0 1 0 3 63 0 2 65 0 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
BBI 2/13 5/89 3/54 5/136 3/60 4/70 5/79 3/35 1/14 1/28 - - - - - - - - -
BBM 2/13 7/134 3/54 8/156 4/120 4/70 10/161 4/61 1/14 1/89 - - - - - - - - -
Ave 6.50 27.80 29.20 29.54 30.00 32.62 34.11 42.10 50.00 168.00 - - - - - - - - -
Econ 1.47 2.42 2.97 3.94 3.15 4.16 3.29 3.37 2.85 3.16 1.00 3.70 3.61 - - - - - -
SR 26.5 68.8 58.8 44.9 57.0 47.0 62.1 74.9 105.0 318.0 - - - - - - - - -
5 0 1 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 - - - - - -
10 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 - - - - - -
Sussex bowling averages Player Mat KO Wernars 1 MS Panesar 10 LJ Wright 4 JE Anyon 9 WD Parnell 1 Naved Arif 3 Naved-ul-Hasan 9 A Khan 8 CD Nash 10 OP Rayner 3 JS Gatting 3 WA Adkin 1 LWP Wells 10 BC Brown 4 MW Goodwin 10 AJ Hodd 8 EC Joyce 10 MJ Prior 3 MH Yardy 4
Inns 1 15 3 15 2 3 13 13 6 5 1 1 4 - - - - - -
Ct 1 2 0 2 0 0 1 6 5 1 1 1 2 3 2 19 16 11 6
St 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0