SELKIRK GIVE FIVE-STAR DISPLAY AGAINST STRONG MCC SIDE

The much-anticipated return of the MCC to Philiphaugh (6/8/23), after a gap of 119 years, lived up to all expectations.

A unique drone’s view of the club and the teams assembled to play in a special fixture
(photographer Chris Highton controls the drone from the picnic bench at the left hand of the picture)

Having dismissed the visitors for 132 in the 37th over, Selkirk’s batsmen recovered from a shaky start to take the game right down to the wire, eventually finishing on 115-9 after 40 overs, just 17 runs short of the MCC total.

Visiting MCC captain Andy Wilson said his players had not only been impressed by the warmth of welcome they had received, but by the commitment and skill of the Selkirk players.

“It’s been a great experience,” he said, “and Selkirk is obviously a club very much at the heart of its community.

“These are exactly the kind of fixtures MCC sides enjoy playing, and I’m very confident we’ll return to Philiphaugh in the not-too distant future.”

That the match was able to go ahead at all was in itself a minor miracle, given the torrential rain of the previous 24 hours. Selkirk’s ground care team – Ronnie Dumma, Stuart McCall and Allan Hogg – earned high praise from both captains.

Stuart, Ronnie and Hedgy do some reparatory work midgame

Batting first, the MCC found both the slow wicket, and the potency of opening bowlers Michael Fenton (1-25) and Daniel Heard (2-11) hard to handle, slumping to 12-2.

Michael Fenton removes Elliot Keenan (photo by Grant Kinghorn https://www.grantkinghornpics.co.uk/)

First change bowler Greg Fenton (2-20) maintained the pressure by picking up the wickets of Scotland u-19 player Patrick Ritchie (11) and current Scotland internationalist Jack Jarvis (8), leaving MCC still in trouble at 39-4 in the 16th over.

However, the visitors’ fortunes changed with the arrival at the crease of Fraser Watts, a well-known ODI specialist and a member of Scotland’s team at the 2007 Cricket World Cup in the West Indies.

In tandem with Pete Deakin (21), the pair boosted the MCC score to 105-5, with Watts eventually out LBW having scored 63 runs – an innings which deservedly won him the ‘Man of the Match’ award.

Fraser Watts on his way to a match winning 63 – photo by Grant Kinghorn https://www.grantkinghornpics.co.uk/

Watts lost his wicket to fellow Scotland internationalist John Blain (3-15), one of the home club’s four guest players on the day. The final two MCC wickets were taken by Selkirk vice-skipper Kenny Paterson (2-0), leaving the MCC on 132 all out.  

MCC players take the field after lunch

In reply, Selkirk found the MCC’s formidable bowlers a hot handful, and by the end of the 25th over were left struggling at 45-6. Jamie Glover (10), John Everitt (9) and Blaine Gillie (9) all did their best to stem the MCC tide, but the home team found themselves well behind the run rate.

A quick-fire knock of 44 by talented all-rounder John Blain gave the Souters fresh hope, but the home team eventually fell just short of the 132 target, with Paterson and Heard both still at the crease when the final ball was bowled.

MCC set a tight field for Selkirk batters

MCC’s wicket-takers were Ben Davidson (1-16), James Thompson (1-6), Marcus Sharp (1-3), Stuart Davidson (2-6), Elliot Keenan (1-14) and Pete Maksimczyk (1-27).

Post- match presentations were made to MCC batsman Fraser Watts, as well as to the visitors’ umpire and scorer – William Ferguson and Allan Baxter. Marcus Sharp (MCC) and Daniel Heard (Selkirk) received ‘top performance’ awards after being nominated by the opposite team’s captain.

Many thanks to our loyal photographers Chris Highton and Grant Kinghorn.

One photographer photographed another photographer’s back – Chris Highton piloted drone catches Grant Kinghorn stalking the boundary.

Also thanks due to our match sponsors – Skip and Shirley Houston, joined in the photo below by both captains.

On Saturday, Selkirk returned to East League business with a crunch Division 2 match against Westquarter & Redding CC at Bailliefields, Falkirk. Read the report here.