Howzat! Came the cry.
Another wicket in this twice yearly match;
Sixth man out.
Now it’s my turn, and we need quite a few runs
To win this battle, against this well known foe.
I walk confidently, purposefully, onto the field
Pull on my gloves, adjust my cap.
I reach the crease.
“Middle and leg, please Mr Umpire”
Stand up and look around the field
To see where the fielders are hidden.
The bowler approaches,
Mike, the younger of the Southwell brothers
He bowls outside my off stump,
Let it go, don’t go reaching
And get an edge to the waiting slips.
Accumulate some runs,
Nothing flashy, just play safe.
Howzat! Another wicket,
Seven down, but I am still there,
Playing safe, experienced.
More runs are added until yet again,
The crash of ball into stumps is heard,
And our eighth wicket, falls,
And our ninth, the next ball.
But I am still here
Here he comes, our finest bowler!
Taken so many wickets with
His phenomenal speed.
Batsman – huh!
Barely knows which way to hold the bat.
Still he has two balls to face,
Hope the cricket God is smiling on us.
The first ball, he plays an elegant
Forward defensive, to the bouncer
That went over his head!
The next ball he leaves alone,
Not realising that it came back
And barely missed his wicket.
Still he survived.
Now it’s my turn; the final over.
Eight runs to get against Alan,
The other Southwell, their best bowler.
Only six balls from this excellent man
For me to face, can I get the runs.
The first ball straight but a half volley
I stroke it past Alan for four glorious runs.
Now only four to get,
Five balls to come.
The next ball on my off stump
But it cuts away
From both bat and stumps
Excellent delivery, I am lucky
Not to have touched it.
The third delivery bowled short;
I sway back as I avoid the ball
As it passes my chest;
Alan smiles, I smile back,
And full of bravado,
Nod my acknowledgement,
To a ball well bowled.
The fourth ball, a half volley
On the leg stump.
I hit this ball as hard as I can
Up, up it goes flying like a bullet
Over the boundary,
Over the pavilion.
We have won the match!
MY six, won the match!
The finest shot I have ever played!
My team cheer, cheer me!
Thirty seven not out.
We all meet at the pub
Both teams.
As I walk in Alan stands up and comes at me,
With a snarl on his face!
The snarl changes to a grin,
“Can I buy you a pint Andy? Well played”
-
Author:
Goldfinch60 (Pseudonym) (
Offline)
- Published: March 5th, 2025 02:19
- Comment from author about the poem: As a follow up from my cricket poem yesterday I have dragged this one out of the archives, it is a true story about the time many, many years ago that I played cricket for a local club. This memory has stayed with me since the early nineteen eighties when I was playing cricket for Viking CC back in Kent.
- Category: Special occasion
- Views: 12
Comments7
Good write Gold. Heard of the Bedser twins? - cricketers.
Yep saw Alec Bedser play.
Andy
What a beautiful memory Andy and well put to words. I understand little about cricket but enough to understand both these fine poems
Thank you soren, yes it is a very good memory.
Andy
Sounds like an amazing game of Cricket. Great poem.Certainly captures the excitement of the game.
So kind David, thank youi.
Andy
lol are you sure it wasn't rugby? π€£
Wrong time of the year Teddy. LOL
Andy
Wow. That is so engaging. I would play it safe as well, not really having a mind for sports strategy. ππ»π
Thank you arqios. I was a great time when I was playing.
Andy
Youβre most welcome Andy ππ»π
How the magic memories never go away, sounds like it was quite a game, enjoyed the read
So true Tobani, thank you.
Andy
You are very welcome
Now this is the kind of cricket match which has you sitting on the edge of your seat. One with a thrilling ending Andy. Man of the match, you saved the day. A super account of a special day. Much enjoyed.
So very kind Cassie, yes it was a magic day which we all thoroughly enjoyed.
Andy
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