Western Morning News

Privett guides Devon to a big win

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OPENER Ben Privett top scored with 69 to put Devon on course for a thumping 160-run win over Oxfordshir­e in the NCA Trophy.

Devon went into the Sidmouth showdown in desperate need of a group game win to make-up ground lost by a two-wicket defeat at the hands of trophy holders Berkshire in round one.

This win propelled Devon up to second in the Group Three table with Buckingham­shire to play at High Wycombe this Sunday. Berkshire remain top after they got home by 28 runs against Cornwall at St Austell.

Devon team manager Dave Tall was looking for an improvemen­t on the showing against Berkshire – and, by and large, he got it.

A 92-run opening stand between Privett and Elliot Hamilton (25), was topped-up by Charlie Sharland and Ben Beaumont, who hoisteds 55 for the third wicket.

Sharland, a student at the University of Exeter, made 63 and was still going strong into the two hundreds long after Beaumont departed caught behind for 24.

Some lusty blows from Calum Haggett (27) and Lawrence Walker, whose cheeky six over mid-wicket off Tom Davis was the shot of the day, got Devon to 277 for nine at the end of their 50 overs.

Oxfordshir­e were three-wicket winners on the chase against Buckingham­shire first time out, but with a side substantia­lly different to the one that faced Devon. Seven changes are a lot to cope with!

Gaps in the Oxfordshir­e batting order became apparent as the response wandered from 47 for one to 53 for five. Take out Luke Maslen’s 34 of those runs and there was not a lot from the rest.

The turning ball proved Oxfordshir­e’s undoing as captain Jamie Stephens (1-3), Max Shepherd (4-42) and Will Christophe­rs (3-44) worked their way down the batting list.

Prav Charhal entertaine­d briefly with a bright-and-breezy 24 that included an improvised reverse cross-bat slog of Shepherd that sailed over cover-point!

Oxfordshir­e were long out of contention by then and they were all out a few slogs later for 117.

Tall agreed he got an improved performanc­e out of his team, but said there remain areas to work on when batting in 50-over cricket.

“We batted brilliantl­y at first and I was hoping we would go on to make 300-320, but we did not,” said Tall.

“Our game awareness still isn’t great: for example Sam Read gets caught on the boundary and two balls later Matt Thompson does virtually the same thing. Not what you need from two recognised batters with wickets in hand in the last five overs. Even so it was pleasing to get to 277; the caveat is we made it much harder than it needed to be.

“I could not fault us in the field – one dropped catch perhaps – and a result like this is a great confidence booster.”

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