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Tag: Kent
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Week 64 – May 31st – Week 3 of lockdown easing phase 3
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Week 60 – May 3rd – Week 4 of lockdown easing phase 2
Today I did my first part of the face to face training at Kent’s Beckenham crickt ground. Overall I think it went well. Just need to realise that you will be dealing with children of all standards.
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Week 57 – April 5th – Week 2 of lockdown easing phase 1 part 2
Today I started my ECB cricket coaching course (ECB Foundation I Coach), first 4 modules are online.
I chose to do the face to face at Kent Beckenham cricket ground.
Wish me good luck ?
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Week 45 – January 4th – Week 1 of lockdown 3 restrictions
Not surprised, Boris announced we are going into lockdown 3. Partly down to the new variant from Kent and to the idiots not following the simple rule. See my front page about that!!.
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Week 36 – November 2nd 2020 – Week 1 of lockdown 2
After chatting with some people, I decided to put myself forward to do a cricket coaching course. Finally got some feedback from Kent cricket.
“The first course on the coaching pathway is the new Foundation 1 (this is replacing the previous qualification called Level 2, which you may know some people who have this). This course lasts 2 weeks and is completely primarily through online modules with 2 face-to-face assessment days to be completed. There are also some pre-requisites which need to be completed:
ECB DBS – this is essential for all coaches and also must be an ECB one, not from another organisation
Completed Safeguarding Young Cricketers module – this is an online ECB course on how to coach safely with children. You are automatically signed up to this once you have registered for a coaching course
Minimum age of candidates is 17 years old.”
So watch this space. ?
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Week 26 – August 24th 2020 – Week 23 of lockdown
Always good to beat Surrey!!
Darren Stevens took 4 for 41 to spearhead a thrilling 17-run victory against Surrey at the Kia Oval and keep his county’s Bob Willis Trophy South Group qualification hopes alive.
Surrey, needing 192 to win from 62 overs after bowling Kent out for a second innings 127, were themselves bowled out for 174 deep into the final session of a memorable contest.
Matt Milnes was Kent’s other bowling hero, taking 4 for 57 – including the dramatic final wicket – and also producing superb deliveries to bowl both Sam Curran and Rikki Clarke either side of tea.
Stevens had taken three wickets in nine balls in his opening spell to leave Surrey reeling at 20 for 4 but Ben Foakes’ excellent 57 had left Kent wondering if they could close out the victory despite taking regular wickets at the other end.
Indeed, the last hour had just started, with 15 more overs remaining, when Milnes clipped the top of Matt Dunn’s off stump to bowl him for a brave 12 and give himself final figures of 4 for 57.
Dunn had been left to make 28 runs for victory with only No 11 Amar Virdi for company after Harry Podmore had rather fortuitously ended the second superb innings in the match by Foakes, having him well held by diving keeper Ollie Robinson from a legside ball after he had added another composed and high-class effort to his first innings 118.
Milnes’ other scalp had been that of Adam Finch, leg-before for 6 with 56 still required. There may not have been any spectators watching, but there was no shortage of tension, particularly when Foakes and Dunn were adding a calm 28 in 10 overs for the ninth wicket, as Kent fretted.
Kent’s 22 points, and second win in four matches, puts them just six points behind south group leaders Essex with just the September 6-9 round games to go.
Podmore picked up Mark Stoneman’s wicket in his own new ball burst during Surrey’s calamitous start to their chase, but Foakes and Laurie Evans then boosted Surrey’s hopes with a fifth wicket stand of 57, until the irrepressible Stevens returned to the attack to take a smart catch off his own bowling with his third ball back to send Evans packing for a fine 53-ball 42.
And Milnes made Kent heavy favourites, going into the last session, by nipping one back between left-hander Curran’s bat and front pad to bowl the England all-rounder for 14 and, in the second over after the interval, also defeating Clarke’s attempted drive.
The evergreen Stevens has now bagged 20 wickets at 19 runs apiece in Kent’s first four Willis Trophy fixtures. But it is his record in the past decade that is most remarkable, especially when remembering that the veteran all-rounder has also hit more than 7,500 first-class runs since 2010, including 16 centuries and 39 other scores above 50.
Since turning 40 in April 2016, Stevens has now picked up an astonishing 213 wickets in county red-ball competition at 20.39 with his wily medium pace. Since the age of 35, moreover, that wicket tally is 438 at 22.50. Before moving to Kent in 2005, at the age of 28, he had hardly bowled in eight previous seasons with Leicestershire; in his first six seasons for Kent, he only took 87 championship wickets as he slowly developed his bowling until becoming a recognised frontline operator.
Here, he began by removing Scott Borthwick and Jamie Smith with his fifth and sixth deliveries to leave Surrey 6 for 2 at the end of the second over. Borthwick chipped to short mid-wicket off a leading edge, where Daniel Bell-Drummond took a fine diving catch, and Smith edged a forward push to Jack Leaning at second slip.
There was no hat-trick but, with the first ball of his third over, Stevens won a leg-before decision to send back Will Jacks for 6 and – by then – Podmore had also had Surrey’s acting captain Mark Stoneman caught at first slip for 10.
Jordan Cox, the catcher, threw the ball high into the air and let out a roar of celebration because, from the fourth ball of Surrey’s second innings, Cox had dropped Stoneman on 2 off a similar ball from Podmore that lifted and left the former England opener.
No play had been possible before lunch, due to heavy overnight and morning rain, but hard work by the Oval ground staff meant that a start could be made at 1.10pm with Kent resuming on 118 for 9 in their second innings.
Last pair Nathan Gilchrist and Hamidullah Qadri added a further nine runs in four overs before Curran had Gilchrist caught at first slip by Clarke for 13 to finish with 4 for 39. Clarke, whose brilliant five-wicket spell had sliced through Kent’s second innings on day three, finished with 5 for 20.