Far From The MCC
~ Est. in 1998 ~
Against Stogumber”
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Monday 1st
August 2005 |
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Result: Won by 38 Runs |
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Venue: Stogumber, |
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25 overs |
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FFTMCC |
178 - 7 |
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M. Westmoreland 54,
D. Edwards 42 |
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Stogumber |
140 ao |
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A. Mann 4 - 10,
D. Edwards 2 - 25 |
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I had
known some time in advance that I would be Far From The MCC captain for the Stogumber game, and so had ample opportunity to come up
with appropriate strategies for the fixture. Naturally my first task was to
take into account the terrain, prevailing weather conditions for that time of
year in the Minehead region including average
rainfall, and the social and physical characteristics of the inhabitants of
the village and surrounds, with particular attention to age, gender, head
shape, blood type and shoe size.
J. Hotson celebrates victory with his 28th
pint. After
this preliminary work was completed and I had evaluated our opponents and
their ecosystem, I was able to turn my attention to the players who would be
at my disposal. To begin with, I divided the batting line up into six pools
(Pool A – Pool F) and then allocated potential positions in the batting order
according to personal traits. For instance, opening the batting, Player 1
Pool A (quick-scoring, fiery, not too bright) might be paired with Player 3
Pool C (dependable, vegetarian, poor taste in music) or Player 2 Pool E
(average scoring rate, fast between the wickets, amusing anecdotes and
one-liners) unless Player 6 Pool B (tall, skinny, no chin) and Player 4 Pool
D (credit card fraud, rides a bike, needs a haircut) had the potential to be
matched to either Player 1 Pool C (owns pet elephant, lives in a shack,
speaks eight languages) or the quicker scoring of Player 2 Pool F
(professional astronaut, hates courgettes, makes obscene phone calls to his
grandmother) and Player 3 Pool D (card-carrying Nazi, thick moustache,
amateur boxer). Using this simple method, I could now be assured that the
varying abilities and the natural inclinations of the team were utilised in a
system affording both flexibility and maximisation of potential.
Skipper A and Skipper B walk out for the coin
toss on Pitch C. Next, after
finalising the batting order, I turned to fielding positions. Taking a relief
map of As for bowling, I
made a list of those who could
bowl, and those who would like to, and seeing that the lists were of
different lengths, I subtracted the total of the shorter from that of the
longer, squared the answer and divided by six, and decided I would have that
many pints of cider for breakfast that morning. With some Guinness. With these
preparations now complete, I took all my copious notes and threw them out the
window, drank a bottle of mentholated spirit and went to bed safe in the
knowledge that a victory in the Stogumber game was
now a formality. ‘Hotson-Pike’ |