Rickmansworth III
Chasing low scores is always unpredictable. For some reason it does strange things to the brain and for Reeds Third Eleven that rule was very much apparent when they found themselves at 61 for 7 chasing down only 104.Earlier in the day Reed had demolished Rickmansworth on their own patch, infested with mole hills. This was the first week that Maseeh Naeem had lost the toss and being asked to bowl first he instructed Tom Walsingham and Jack Caine to get loose. Walsingham (8-2-8-2) had started the damage with an accurate opening spell and claimed two wickets thanks to catches behind the bat from Baz Curtis and Rob Lankaster. Michael Robertson (6-1-16-1) replaced Caine and duly had the opposition captain caught at mid-wicket by Ray Kingshott. Robertson would then himself be replaced by Naeem who would also come away with a single wicket thanks to a catch at deep mid-on by Walsingham. Meanwhile, at the other end Richard Barlow was rolling through the hosts middle order. Reeds outstanding fielding aided the bowlers by putting pressure on the batsmen. Jack Caine (1-19) came back to finish the innings breaking the last wicket stand of 31 but it was Barlow who claimed the plaudits fin ishing with 11-2-28-5.Baz Curtis opened the Reed innings and did not seem at all uneasy in his stroke selection despite the fact the pitch had clearly not been rolled. He was the mainstay for Reed as his partners came and went. At 51 for 2 it looked like Reed were cruising to victory. However, suddenly, Reed descended into panic losing five wickets in only four overs including the valuable scalp of Curtis (36). Rickmansworth sensed an almighty upset and piled on the [...]