Saturday, 7 September 2019

Gloucestershire v Derbyshire T20 - FINALS DAY!!

Gloucestershire 135-7 (Cockbain 45* Critchley 2-21, Hudson-Prentice 2-26, Hughes 1-19, Rampaul 1-23)

Derbyshire 137-3 (Madsen 47, du Plooy 29*, Godleman 25)

Derbyshire won by seven wickets with 17 balls to spare


Dominic Cork came to Derbyshire as Vitality Blast coach with a view to taking them to finals day.

Tonight, he and his magnificent side did just that, took the monkey from the club's back and made it an unbelievably special night for everyone with interest in Derbyshire cricket.

It was a superb team performance, with the bowlers showing great discipline. There were only two wides and three leg byes in the innings, whereas the home side conceded sixteen extras. On a difficult pitch, such things make a difference and, apart from one over where van Beek was top edged for two sixes, boundaries dried up for Gloucestershire after a bright start.

A tumbling catch by Hughes removed the dangerous Hammond, Hudson-Prentice again making the key breakthrough, then Critchley pouched an injudicious reverse sweep by Bracey, from the bowling of Hughes. Alex was terrific, mixing up his length and pace to great effect and conceding only nineteen in his four overs. Yet so well did we bowl as a unit that no boundary was scored between the end of the powerplay and the fifteenth over.

A key moment came when home skipper Michael Klinger assayed a risky single to Rampaul, was sent back and run out by some margin by the man with the golden arm. Smit, who again kept beautifully, had the bails off in a trice and the home side were in trouble.

Higgins has been a regular thorn in our side of late, but a regulation caught and bowled to Critchley saw him off, before the bowler held a more remarkable one, running twenty yards towards mid on and diving full length to hold the big-hitting Taylor. Van Buuren and the excellent Cockbain battled hard, but apart from a couple of lusty blows that cleared the boundary, the bowling was relentless.

The blue-haired Reece, raising more money for good causes, bowled the other half of van Beek's spell, before Hudson-Prentice and Rampaul admirably closed out the innings. Ravi's command of line and length was again outstanding, conceding only eight runs from his last eleven deliveries, as the target was crucially kept under seven an over.

It could have been tricky, yet despite the constant comments from the commentary box that pressure would be building, we handled it with consummate professionalism. Reece and Godleman came out like Western gunslingers, blasting the ball to all parts and giving us around a third of the target in the first four overs, while the ball was hard. Although Luis was bowled by Tye, Wayne Madsen came in and looked immediately at home.

Godleman's bucolic knock ended with a steepler to third man, living and perishing by the sword, but he had done a job, and our two South Africans came together to nudge, nurdle and caress the score closer to the target. There were a couple of close shaves with tight runs, but it was canny stuff - take a two or four at the start of the over, then knock it around thereafter. It was reminiscent of Wright and Kirsten in their heyday, with confidence building as their stand passed fifty and the total got ever closer.

du Plooy's exquisite timing was again evident, just as was Madsen's class. The wristiness of his strokes was a joy, the ramp over the keeper, eyes on the ball to the last, the mark of a class act. He was out just before the end, lifting a flick off his legs to be caught at square leg, but it was job done at that point.

The winning hit, perhaps fittingly, was made by Alex Hughes. He has given a lot to Derbyshire, has endured his good times and bad, but is a key member of this side. He bowled well, fielded tigerishly and is one of a raft of all rounders whose presence has made this a very good team.

His four through the covers saw wild scenes on the boundary. The visiting fans were magnificent, in fine voice throughout, and it was touching to see the excitement among the players. New arrivals like du Plooy and Hudson-Prentice have a golden end to their first summers on the staff, while older hands, like Godleman, Madsen and Hughes (in experience at least) will be pretty emotional tonight. Dominic Cork appeared to be in his post-match interview, for sure.

Little Derbyshire aren't supposed to be at finals day, but they are there on merit. They recovered from an abject effort against Leicestershire to turn into a T20 juggernaut. The fielding was extraordinary tonight, Madsen's first over stop setting it off, while Dal, van Beek and du Plooy swept the boundaries brilliantly. Dal's speed over the ground was again impressive, fully justifying his selection.

Earlier today, Essex fans voted in large numbers, hoping to get Derbyshire in their semi-final and tonight they got their wish. After that display, they must surely realise that it will be no formality. Whether we win or lose, we have stunned the cricket world this summer, with great credit due to the team, the coaching staff and the supporters for a memorable few months.

Let that juggernaut keep rolling, all the way to Edgbaston. I can't get the smile off my face tonight and even our dog, Wallace, looks proud...

Well done lads. That was simply amazing.

Altogether now...Derbyshire, la-la-la....

11 comments:

  1. A wholly professional performance against a decent side. The key was the bowling and I imagine Gloucs will have thought themselves at least 30 short. Impressive how the fielders attacked and a terrific pick up and throw from Ravi to get Klinger out. As you say PF the powerplay won it and regardless of what the pundits might say a side chasing less than a run a ball and with wickets in hand must always be favourites. That said, the Madsen/Du Plooy partnership was a great example in working down a target and switching the strike.
    Terrific stuff - and well done to the coaching team for bringing them back from the brink after the Leics defeat.

    ReplyDelete
  2. We can't lose from here can we, what a professional performance that was and I'm starting to believe we've got a grip on this T20 lark now. I thought our fielding was outstanding very alert at all times, and excellent bowling by Flynn, Rampaul, Critchley and Hughes. Van Beek is still the weakest link and I really don't know what we do at finals day , do we replace him or gamble again?.
    I honestly thought we'd make very hard work of chasing down that total but as soon as we set off like a train there was no worries, but Billy's shot was awful for his dismissal, keep both hands on the bat mate. Disappointed that the sky commentators couldn't mention the fact that we didn't have an overseas T20 specialist in our squad, that makes reaching the final even more remarkable in my eyes. Can't wait for the 21st, and does anybody know how many tickets we get allocated?

    I'll happily join in with the Derbyshire la la la

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wallace has every reason to!!
    Brilliant performance. Now for a Derbyshire/Notts final? Whatever happens this season has brought marked progress.
    Well done, guys.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Tim, Chesterfield8 September 2019 at 09:33

    I'm hungover after celebrating last night. But I'm so happy I could cry. How embarrassing.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Wonderful Evening PF got back very late very tired but also

    Very proud and very emotional what a magnificent display and again we will be underdogs on finals day which suits is just fine

    Over the years PF we have had talented players and near misses and lost matches we should have won easily because we lacked that one vital element .. BELIEF

    Well let me tell you this 20/20 team had it in spades !! And in the heat of finals day when we need a big over or our bowlers need to check the run rate or a fielder has a half chance to take a catch then this lot will do it and that's the difference between winning and losing,those fine fine margins !!

    Little Derbyshire we may be but just you date underestimate us and se what happens

    Since that day as a 7 year old when I watched us at lords win the Natwest trophy I have longed for another chance to get to a finals day and sing loud and proud ....

    DERBYSHIRE LA LA LA (got to be one of the best cricket chants out there btw )

    Well done boys you made a grown man shed a tear of joy tonight

    John Chesterfield

    ReplyDelete
  6. Allocation of tickets will be interesting, I suspect there will be a sudden interest from members who have previously turned there back on T20 games. I hope the club can give priority to members who actually bothered to turn up and support the club during this T20 campaign!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I'm normally only a lurker here, but I just have to comment today - what a fine, controlled and professional performance that was last night. How many times did the commentators have to trot it out that Derbyshire (or as they prefer to call us, Derby) had never before qualified for finals day, and were bound to be getting nervous as the winning line was in sight? Good to see three of the less glamorous, non Test ground teams get through. No reason why we can't win it, with the level of confidence and team spirit displayed over this run of victories.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nice to have you on board, Angram.

      Please feel free to comment more. There are no right and wrong ones, merely opinions!

      Delete
  8. Got back to leicester at 3.30 am tired and ar the same time with a spirit of elation and pride. We were clinical with bat and ball. There was a carnival, joyous atmosphere before we started with a good, loud following from us. The ground was packed and a good atmosphere all through the match. The fielding was extreme and aggressive something underlined by how few 2's they managed to run. No issues with billy getting out at all. That's our way in the powerplay and he had effectively put us with one foot in finals day by the time he departed with a quick good 25.

    Will live long in the memory!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Just found this site. I live in Sweden and miss cricket something terrible, but I do follow the radio commentaries when I can, and have always hoped that Derbyshire would do something like this. It's great to get inside information from a site like this on players and performances. For example, I wondered why Dal would be chosen, and have now found out why. What happened to Watt who'd done so well earlier? Derbyshire's homepage doesn't give much information on players - ins and outs - so I'll be following your column from now on.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Wow-eee!
    That's how to win a game of cricket.
    What a great team performance.
    Sharp in the field, taking some terrific catches, capitalising on a clamber from Klinger, and terrific, savvy bowling.

    A positive start to the chase from the openers, and then a measured approach to obtaining the target.

    I was pulling faces, early on, when their top edges were flying for six but that soon changed when Klinger was short of his ground.
    That we kept taking wickets - how much more different can two caught & bowleds be!? - and that they had a drought of boundaries was beginning to offer me the belief that this would turn out fine.

    midway through our reply, once some misfielding in the deep started to cost them boundaries, only then did I totally relax, out my feet up and cultivate a wide smile.

    Bravo, lads!
    Well done!
    A great team spirit, strong work ethic and winning mentality now sees us into the inner sanctum of this previously unknown mythical world of T20 success.

    I won't be at Edgbaston but I hope some of our support is able to attend. We want to hear you lads, remember, so plenty of 'Derbyshire, la-la-laa'.
    We are outsiders, of course, but at priced at 7/2, they are having to take us seriously.
    Am pleased with the draw, too, personally.
    Come on, Derbyshire!!


    ReplyDelete

Please remember to add your name. Avoid personal comment at all times. Thanks!