- f 62 Clitheroe Advertiser &Times, Thursday, June 12th,2008
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CLITHEROE V
: EARBY Earb}' -
■ H r a t not o u t CLITHROE Cobras Under 13s (left, s)
celebrate their county cup success while the Under 11s (right, s) prepare for their : cricket four to Yorkshire
: ; ilK., W j -’W
w l 'Wf
Cobras celebrate county cup success
Whalley end Read’s good run of form
READ’S recent good run of form came to a crushing end at the hands of local rivals Whalley on
■ Saturday. And with Great Harwood and
Edenfield both experiencing defeat, it represented a lost oppor tunity to make ground on the leaders.. A refined 90 from Whalley pro
fessional Rajopal Sathish, and a vintage spell of spin bowling from wily veteran Mark Fallon com bined to cause of Read’s down turn in fortunes. Fallon ripped apart the middle
and lower order with figures of 6- 24, after the home side had been desperate to ignite a faltering sea son. However, Read were handed a number of lifelines as they looked
to chase down Whalley’s fine total of 208. That total came about despite
Whalley having amassed just 56 from the first 23 overs. . . ' However, following the drinks
break, Sathish (90) and Lee Kearsley (61 not out) added 108 for the fourth wicket; v A steady start by Martin
Davies and Richard Palmer saw the skipper cleaned up by Harvey for nine with the score on 26. A patient Davies fell for 22 on
a wicket that was definitely aid ing the bowlers early on when 56 was the total.
> Sathish played a composed
knock but lost Neil Cordingly at 63, for just four, but this allowed the professional and'Kearsley to coax the runs from the bad ball
NICK James set his second suc cessive high mark as Clitheroe blitzed bottom side Earby. After cracking a high score of
Nick in the groove And Turner
70 the previous weekend, he bet tered that by five at Chatburn Road on Saturday. And his knock of 75, coupled
with professional Paul Turner’s resurgent form of later, propelled the hosts to a seven-wicket suc cess. However, they had to contend
with an unbeaten century from Earby paid man Ali Azmat, who has seen a return to form of late. Batting first, and opening with
Stephen Pickles, Azmat carried his bat with a lusty display of hit ting. . Hiss latest knock could easily
have been enough to give Earby their second successive victory. ■, However, Clitheroe’s bowlers
kept the rest of the Clitheroe bat ting order quiet, with only three others managing to hit double fig ures. Mark Hargreaves removed
Pickles for 12 and soon added Sam Munns for six, before Farouk
: Hussain and Jack Dewhurst ripped through the middle order.. Matthew Haines did offer his
professional some respite with a spirited 21 near the close, with
passes 600-run barrier
Adil Khan (10 not out) also chip ping in at the death.
. Chasing 198 to win, Clitheroe needed a solid start, and thanks to James and professional Turner, they achieved just that. -
' The latter smashed 87 before
he was castled by Nigel Hodge, taking his tally for the season over
/ the 600-run mark in the league. James also chipped in with his
healthy 75, as they virtually put the game out of sight. / ■ • • . • Both did fall before the close,
- however, and with Dewhurst (1) falling cheaply, the margin of vic tory was less convincing.
, ; However, Daniel Turner (13,
not out) joined Peter Dibb (7 not; out) in the middle to guide the home side to victory with over 15 overs in hand. And Clitheroe will hope for
more of the same on Saturday when they travel to Cherry Tree (wickets pitched 1-30 p.m.).
and step up the pace. Sathish was controlled to 50,
playing some lovely strokes, before deftly nurturing three con secutive boundaries past third man off Harvey. His knock lasted 74 balls, as he
found the fence 13 times with four maximums. Kearsley carried on when the
pro departed, and duly passed his 50 to the delight of a good crowd. Read didn't get off to the best
of starts when Nick Marsh was bowled by Cordingly tor two, fol lowed soon after by the dismissal of Michael Whalley, caught behind off Cordingly for 10. • Harvey was joined by Elliot
Artingstoll as they looked to move things along, but Harvey did have two lives.
= With the score on 96, he lost his partner after Fallon had been brought into the attack, and shortly after, Fallon had Harvey Ibw for a fine 63 including seven boundaries. Palmer flung himself to take a
catch Sathish would have been proud of to dismiss Sam Mar shall, before Fallon mopped up the remainder. Andrew Turner made 26 before
being smartly caught and bowled, before youngsters Andrew Lay- cock and Elliot Lowes were both bowled. The last four wickets went
down for just 10 runs, and Read will hope for better on Saturday when they host Baxenden, while Whalley travel to Oswaldtwistle Immanuel (1-30 p.m.).
Wanderers lose out
A DEVASTATING display of b.owling from Alamgir Anwar consigned Ribblesdale Wanderers to another Veka Ribblesdale League defeat. The Church Meadow side have
slipped into the lower reaches of the table, after a string of disap pointing results. And it was Anwar’s six-wicket
haul that accounted for this latest reversal. He ripped through Wanderers’
top and middle order, ending wth 6-34 off 16 overs as the visitors failed to nail him down. Only four batsmen made it into double figures, with Mr Extras
■ top-scoring with 23, followed by professional Joe Scuderi (20) and
.James Bunyan (14). , ■ . . , :: Wickets fell at regular intervals..
to make the task of setting a : decent target even harder, with the sixth, wicket stand of 25 . between Bunyan and Stephen Kerr, (12) the highest of the ■, innings. 'However, despite defending a
relatively small total of , just 122, ■ Wanderers made- a decent a attempt of doing so. - '
;,; ■ . After removing Anwar for just
four, with his only scoring shot coming via a boundary, fellow opener Matthew Nutt’er followed
suit for nine with just 18 on the board. And five runs later, it was 23-3,
as Luke Hodgson edged a Scuderi delivery through to Russell Bradley to depart for seven. Paul Beech (2) didn’t hang
around long either, as he was trapped leg before by Richard Meade, but home professional Clinton Peake made a decent fist of the chase. He eventually departed for 35,.
by far the highest score of the day, and an unbeaten 15 from David Scothern eventually squeezed Barnoldswick over the line. Howard rattled through the
majority of the tail end, ending with figures of 3-44, as he removed John Pickup (5), Daniel Oldfield (19) and Michael Scoth ern (18). However, the runs of the latter
pair proved vital in guiding the Victory Park side home to victo ry, and top spot in the table thanks to Great Harwood’s defeat. : As for Wanderers, they will
hope better on Saturday when they host reigning champions Blackburn Northern, another side in a poor run of form (wick ets pitched 1-30 p.m.).
LOUIS Cross smashed the winning runs as Clilhcroc Cobras Under 13s lifted the LOB Ribblesdale Cup. He hit an unbeaten 23 as hosts Edcnficld’s total of 79
was overhauled \vith two overs to spare. Earlier, Hugh Graham picked up three wickets and
Henry Kay two, as the trophy came Clitheroe’s way. After receiving a bye in the first round, the locals began their quest with a 100-run success over Whallcy.
. Graham (31) and Zulfi (32) were the chief scorers in a total of 175-5, before skittling their opponents for just 75. And Sam Bristol was the hero in their semi-final clash
with Blackburn Norlhern, taking figures of 5-8 in three overs to restrict Northern to 68-9 in 20 overs. In reply. Cobras knocked the runs off easily as Kay
made an unbeaten 26, bettered only by George Drake who hit an unbeaten 30. Meanwhile, Cobras’ inaugural cricket tour proved a
huge success both on and off the field. : , , / Twenty-four boys and 11 adults made the visit to Har rogate and York.
■
Harrogate, Goldshorough and Dunninglon with the only loss suffered against a strong York side.
The Under 11s squad had great success, winning at . ;
; But the Under 13s were not as successful, only manag
ing victory at Harrogate out of their four fixtures. • Chairman Farouk Hussain was delighted Mth the out
come of the three days: “It has been a great learning expe rience for all the boys. Rooming together as team-mates, travelling together and playing three days of non-stop cricket has certainly been'tiring for the lads but extreme ly worthwhile “We’re very grateful to Castle Cement, Accelero and
Sainsburys for assisting us greatly ivith this tour - with out the help of such local businesses we could not have made this happen.”
. Back home, the Under 15s produced a superb away at
Blackburn Norlhern. ' Batting first, Clitheroe struggled with difficult batting
conditions, finishing wth 78-9. Neville (14) played the anchor role, but wickets fell reg
ularly as some quality bowling from their opponents kept the Cobras under pressure. Good contributions by Ahmed (13), Bowness (10) and
Scott (10) were the only other double figure scores, as Clitheroe looked to have fallen well short of a competitive total. However, with Shakoor and Kennerley opening the
bowling, supported by excellent fielding, Clitheroe made runs difficult to come by in the early exchanges. The introduction of the pace of &ott quickly changed
the game as he claimed 2-8 in fours. Bowness (1-16) claimed the wicket of the big hitting
Taylor, before Banks ripped the heart out of the lower order wth figures of 3-6. And a nail-biting final over was bowled superbly by
Shakoor, leaving Clitheroe wnners by five runs. Over at Chatbum Road, the Under 15s A produced a
71-run win thanks to three wickets in four balls from Walsh.
Batting first, Clitheroe made 126-7 in 18 overs, thanks
to supreme knocks from Walsh (28), Dent (26) and Dewhurst (21). And in the reply, tight bowling by Holdsworth and
Hutchins restricted their progress, with Alex Kilkenny finishing with figures of 3-10. White made a promising debut, picking up two wickets, before Walsh took centre stage to secure the \vin. The Under 9s reversed their early season form to secure
a convincing 60-run victory away at Baxenden. 4 Choosing to field first, the Cobras gave a magnificen"
display including run-outs by James Ballister and Joe Hardcastle. Tight bowling saw Baxenden score just 10 runs oft the bat, with only four extras conceded. And the Cobras were equally ruthless in their approach
to batting, loring only two wickets during their innings. Harry Lang and Dominic Stuart each contributed 10 runs, as the locals cruised to victory.
P3 COMPUTiRS ■ SPECIALISING IN WHITEBOARD, PROJECTOR & CABLE INSTALLATIONS © m © ..' .132: :
^TKtt lesc Dewhurst bHargrcaveslZ ’ ■ S. Muimsc Turner b Hargreaves...6. N. Hodge c Hargreaves b Hussain; .3;
, - A. Khan not out -
- J. Crazier Ibw Dewhuist. . . . . . . . ; .2 -- J. Martin b D e w h u r s t .6 ‘ M. Hanes c Hargreaves b Hussain 21 ; ....... • • • .10 A
■ Extras..'.. . . . . . . . . . .■...;....5' > ThtallforO)'.:....'.'...:....197’; Bowling: M. Hargreaves 13-2-67-2;
A Pearce 7-1-27-0; F. Hussain 15-W7- . , 2; J. Dewhurst 5-0-18-2; N. Bolton 5- J 0-25-0.' ' • ’ Clilhcroc;, ' '- A;'A;
Tumerb H o d g e .87'
. N.JaniescHainesbPickles ......75 - P. Dibb notout .7 ................ .'.7 . ■ .
J.DewhurstcandbHodge
.1 '
D.Tumernotout...................'.13 Extras..............I . ..18 ,
■ 'Ibtal(tor3).................... ;.i201; . Bowling: S. Hipgrave 3-0-23-0; Azinat 9-1-29-0; A. Yates 4-0-25-0; J.' Martin 4-0112-0; M. Haines 5-0-390; N. Hodge 2.20-9-2; S. Pickles 20-8-1.,
BARNOLDSWIckVi RIBBLESDALE
WANDERERS Kibblesdalc XVandcrers
A. Marsh c Pickup b Anwar. .. .. ..4 i Scuderi c Hodgson b Anwar......20
M.BriggseSherazbAnwar.......4 ■ G. Hunt c D. Scothern b Iqbal. . ; . .9 D.
J. Bunyan c Hodgson b Anwar. .. .14
S.KerrcandbAnwar R.
B. Spencer
bD.Scothcm:......... .10 - M. Pratt c M. Scothem b Peake . . .7 ■ E x tra s ........; ......... ......23 T o l a l . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . l2 2 / , Bowling; A. Anwar 16-7-34-6; Z.
Iqbal 13-2-32-1; S. Sheraz 3-0-21-0; Peake 8.4-4-18-2; D. Scothem 3-1-7-1. Barnoldswick
M. Nutter c Pratt b Meade ..........9 ■ A. Anwar c Marsh b Scuderi . . . . . . .4 L. Hodgson c Bradley b Scuderi .. .7 PeakestBradleybM. Pratt ...1.35 P. Beech Ibw Meade .................... .2
.. D. Scothem not out. . . ;__ ___'. .15 J.PickupcBunyanbHoward .....5
. D . f f l d n e I d b H o i v a n i 19 Mi Scothera Ibw Howard . . . . 7 .. .18 S.
Sheiaznotout....,. , , . . .2
E x t ra s ; . .. .. .: . .: . ........ .....7 Total(for8) ..'. .. .. .. .. .. ..1 2 3 /Bowling; R. Meade 11-3-17-2;
Scuderi 11-1-39-2; D. Howard 16-244- 3;
M.Pratt6-0-19-l. ' : ; ■
WHALLEY
VREAD ■ iWhulIcy : ■ ’ ,
M. Davies c Harvey b Smithson .'.22,/ E. Palmer b Harvey . . . . . . . . . . .9 . Sathish c Jones b Lowes . . . . . . . . .90 N. Cordingly c Lowes b Harvey i .. .4 L. Kearsley not o u t D.
.61 /
M. Fallon c Marsh b Harvey. . : . . .2 J. Ram not out....................... .2 E x t ra s . .. .. .. .; . .. ; .. .. ./ . ; . .9 :
■.Total(for6) ....:.;'..;..;.'.208 z Bowling; Harvey 20-2-74-3; E. ’
Lowes 10-250-1; K. Smithson 122-64-. 1;E. Artingstoll2-0-11-0. 7; : V' Read V" ;■ ;
N. Marsh b Cordingley. . . . . . ; . .■. .2 ; M. IVhalley c Ram b Coidingley. .10 . Han-ey Ibw Fallon E.
.; .63 7 ArtingstollcandbFallon .,.,;.24,; J. Marshall c Palmer b Sathish... .20
. A.TurnercandbFallon/ . .. .. ..2 6 , J. Jones St Ram b Fallon... ;.'.;...l;:
A.LaycockbFallon ....•...■.i.:..8'. E.LowesbFallon .•....■;.....'.‘...0 K. Smithson runout. . . . . . . '. . ; . . .7
A.Baronnotout .;.'.;‘t . . . . . '. . . . .0 , ' E x t r a s ....... ... .; . .6 Total............................. ;..167
/ ^^^Bowling: N. Cordingly 7-1-222; D. ^PN e ill 12-2320; Sathish 7-0421; D. >’ ' Fitzhenry 7-0-320; M. Fallon 8.4-0-' 24-6.
' _ -
■ resultsandtablescanbefoundohpage’i 61-
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• Selected teams, latest fixtures,' ,
'
r side score victory STATION; Road■
'. League’s .victory.^over. the Saddleworth League OU' Sunday.*/.^ /
^ ' ’ ' < ,
played;host to the Ribblesdale ‘ ' - •
JijtMt'er the visitors elected to bat, the home pair of; . David O'Neil and Neil Cordingly bowled their allot- ; ted stint well and rffitricM the score to 40-2 off the; first 18 overs. T
■:j But the Saddleworth League dug in and rallied;
: pushing along well vvith some useful contributions
from.the middle order enabling them to muster,a positive total of 220.
^ iSSfln the reply, Clitheroe’s Nick James playing a
.text bqqk inningSLwith some sweet shots in a' sparkling 74 that set the game up nicely for the Rib-;’ blKdale League!" '
, • , . >
;sAThis laid the foundations, andlhe score ticked along nicely despite the loss of a couple of wickets.: ;
wsi However, .Cordingly steadied the ship and closed: unbeaten on 48 as they got home with a'couple of . overe to spare. ^
Disappointing day for Chatburn
A DISAPPOINTING batting performance saw Chatburn crash to a seven-wicket defeat to Ingrow ; St John’s.'
‘ . s Batting first, after being inserted by the visitors;;
HowardcandbAnwar . .. .. .. .4 ........12 .
BradleycHodgsonbPeake ....9
the locals lost wickets at regular intervals, with openers Henry Kay (11) and John Reynolds , (14) falling cheaply. Steve Bowker (4) and Richard Shovelton (4) did
n’t last long either, before a middle-order fightback threatened to salvage matters. / Paul Graig top-scored with 26 before he was
bowled by/Raza, as the innings crumbled to 104 all out._ ■ And Ingrow made light work of the reply, losing
just three wickets on their way, to victory, in just, over 30 overs. ; Aiidrew Booth grabbed two of the three, with the ■
other a run out; as Chatburn’s title hopes suffered a setback. ; Meanwhile, the second string also slumped to a
heavy reverse against Eldwick and Gilstead.. -7^ I ,The locals were skittled for just 58, their lowest
score in recent years, after the hosts made 185t7 K Chris Mulheam (4-28) and John Lockley (2-57) were the chief wicket takers. > - . ‘ ’
Low Moor extend perfect start
LOW Moor continued their unbeaten start to the
' Clitheroe and District Midweek Cricket League.- Turner, hit 30 as they produced a seven-wicket;
win over: Calderstones, chasing a victory, target,of; just 76. ■ ,
‘ Fitzhenryranout.......................9 .
Ramblers with a 20-run wini-making 119-6 before,, restricting their opponents to 99-8.
','St James came out of their gamewith Chipping-; ^ ^
V’Rimington also produced a fiye-’wicketwin oi?er Sabden, 'With some tight bowling keeping the vish; tors to 96 all out. , ' ' f Bishop then retired on 35 as Rimington made 97-;' 5 in reply to stay second in the table.
Patrick steers Whalley home ;
TWO wickets for. Patrick Brown helped Whalley; Under 15s to an excellent xvin at Padiham.''"' ‘", {•} He grabbed 2-13, with Luke Tidmarsh also col
lecting 1-6 as the home side were restricted tq86 in , 20 overs. ^
, J “
fWhalley lost three quick wickets in the reply, but;; James Galling (13 not out) and Gary Barker (20 not: out) saw them home.’ .
,,1 Me'anwhile, the Under 13s scored 113 at Brin- siall, xvitK'Sam Richardson hitting 50 and^other useJ ful knocks from Robbie Read (14) Harry Lambertj (14) and Adam Robinson (11). ’ .''-J'j’’':''
r The home side then fell short at 75-i;'with' Ellie Chambers talcing the only‘wicket to fall. 4.';
PRIZEWINNERS, offi-;
- cials and guests at the Rcadstonc United presen tation evening at Padiham ' Town Hall. (T090608/2)
Readstone’s great season
READSTONE United capped off their most successful season ever at their annual presentation on Monday. Six of the eight teams picked up
league honours, including two league title successes. Teams and individuals were pre
sented with trophies by club founder member John Hill at a packed Padi ham Town Hall. Both the Under 16s and Under 15
Girls won their leagues, with the latter also reaching the cup final. . The Under 15 Boys celebrated a cup
win, while the Under 11s were beaten in the final of the Consolation Cup and the Under 8s finished runners-up in their league. And the Under 10s also picked up
silverware, as they were handed the league’s Fair Play award. On the individual front, Oliver Dug-
dale and Thomas Halliwell won the respective junior and senior male Play er of the Year awards. . Sophie Hindle was the female Player of the Year, with Lee Ashton the Club
- Person of the Year and Simon Bywa ter taking the Chairman’s Trophy. The Under 10s, Under 11s, Under
15s and Under 16s all presented a Players’ Player of the Year prize, handed to Dugdale, Denzil Yates, Tom Ives and Ben Bridson. The rest of the age groups present
ed a Most Enthusiastic Player honour, with Joanne Taylor (Under 17 Girls), Alex Czemanin (Under 15 Girls), Alex
Bell (Under 7s), Dean Moorhouse (Under 8s) and Brandon Waring (Under 9s) taking those awards. Abbey Blackett and Gabby
Preugsehat were the two female sides’ Players of the Year, with Aidan Duffy, Owen Grice, Joe Troup, Michael Greenhough, George Frielick and Bridson taking those awards in order of age. And it was Melissa McKay and
Natalie Cassidy who took the two female Sportsperson of the Year acco- ■ lades, with all seven of the male sides also presenting that award. Those went to Lee Wild, Joe Noone,
James Davies, Jamie McEvoy, Luke Wilde, Sam Schofield and Josh Corrig an respectively.
Tom impresses with big win By Edward Lee
CLITHEROE Golf Club captain Andrew Walmsley sponsored junior captain James Kenyon’s Captains Day and presented the prizes on a lovely summer’s evening in front of the clubhouse. In spite of an eight at'
the 12th, Tom Jeffrey kept his composure and won with an impressive nett 66. This gave him a three-
shot cushion over runner- up Will Kenyon. Jacob Foley took third place xvith a nett 74 and Tom Forrest took the gross prize with 83 and a good back nine which included six pars. Nick Northrop and
Mike Tattersall combined well to win the SAAB- sponsoredfourball. . Tattersall’s birdie on the
18th proved crucial as it gave them 43 points, a one- shot advantage over sec-
; ond-placed Geoff Sutcliffe and Simon Hale. J Sutcliffe’s birdie finish pushed them into second
- place ahead of five pairs on 41 points. ' Card play-offs showed Simon Raine and Julian: Troup in third place, with the best back nine. : Steve Law and Alex
Taylor took fourth from Nigel Clowes and Andrew Fish, as father and son Ted
'and Garry Speak claimed the final spot. ,,,,,' ■ The Midweelc'Medal
and Tradesman’^Trophy qualifier was a triumph for young Jacob Foley with a
77-9-68 return. Dave Thornhill’s nett 70
for, second place was matched by plus-one handicapper Mark Ash worth who had to settle for 3rd after cards. Sunday’s stableford saw
Geoff Sutcliffe in the frame again but his cred itable 39 points left him two short of winner Tim Stanley in Division one. Malcolm Brown had an
up and down back nine xvith txvo birdies and two blobs but managed to take third with 38 points. Dave Coupe had the
best return of the day with 42 points to take Division
. 2 with a comfortable four- shot margin over the lively John Beggs who eased up on the last three holes to score 38 points. Terry Bithell (38) xvas awarded third prize. . Near perfect conditions
. at Stonyhurst Park on Sunday were balanced by tricky pin positions in the President’s Day competi tion. 'f ■ The winner was in-form Martin Drury w i th 37
: points who beat Oliver Bolton on a card play-off.
■a; Bolton, who.was dis qualified from an earlier competition, should share his prize xvith his green- keeper father Barry Bolton, who had put up a
'special sign to direct his son to the correct 18th tee! < Third place xvent to John Hodkinson xvith 35 points and Chris Ryan xvas fourth (34).
7 :;As usual the longest drive competition xvas xvon
by Neale Broxvn and chair man Alan Talbot’s shot to the fifth hole 'xvas nearest the pin. Danny Liles xvas in top
form to xvin the Millenni um Trophy at Whalley when he carded 69-3-66 to edge out Paul Wray (75-8- 67).
John Harvey (97-26-71)
xvon the Long Handicap Trophy and there xvere division prizes for Chris Davies (81-13-68), Peter Shipston (85-16-69) and Pat Craxvford 989-19-70). Rob Andrexv and Paul
Connolly (Clitheroe) xvere betterball seven-under- gross to xvin the Jubilee Open at Whalley. That gave them 46
points and a three-point xvin from visitors from Rishton xvho took second place on the card from James Andrexv and Daniel Preedy (Clitheroe). Craig Gornall and Danny Liles took the gross prize xvith a roundof70. Clive Rees xvon the mid-
er and Past Captain’s Tro phy at Clitheroe. 'That saxv her home by a
shot from Emma Clegg and Helen Maginn xvho both returned scores of 77- 5-72. Nancy Mortimer xvon
Division Txvo xvith a 103- 29-74 return. Sue Johnson xvas second ahead of Mau reen Cox after both returned 104-26-78. Elizabeth Barnes xvon
the nine-hole event xvith 16 points. She finished txvo clear of Jean Brennan xvho finished a further txvo in front of Joan Boxvker. In the Whalley ladies’
medal competition. Daphne Daxvson emerged as the xvinner xvith a round of 76-7-69. Second xvas Jane Smedley (84-12-72) and third place xvent to Gill Grimshaxv (103-31-
Y2). / . , , G. McDonnell (109-32-
77) xvon the ladies’ medal at Stonyhurst ahead of B. Herd (114-36-78) and J. Doxvdy (107-25-82).
xveek medal at Long Leese Barn xvith a round of 90- 23-67 xvith Mike Conroy - (75-6-69) second ahead of Roger Lee (88-17-71) on a ■ day xvhen 80-year-old Les Simpson scooped the jack pot xvith the only txvo. ' . And Nigel Ashxvorth.,-
(41) won the stableford ; competition by a point from Geoff Storey. Divi- : sional prizes xvent to Don Blanch (39), Pat Craxvford (38), Steve Shoreman (38) and Eric Lord (39).
' Sarah Hale shot 82-11- 71 to win Division One of ,the Frances Smith qualifi
• She then partnered S. Parman to 42 points'and victory-in the Ping Four- ball qualifier.;,' But on Lady President’s
Day she had to settle for third place xvith 38 points. M. Carrington (40) xvon
after a card play-off with A. Hudson xvith-spot prizes going to G. McDon nell and J. Porter. . WilliamLancaster won
the Whalley Junior Medal. Runner up xvas Sam Whit taker. In the 9 hole compe tition Adam Robinson xvas the xvinner and James Chambers came second. .
O0MPUT1RS - SPECIALISING IN WHITEBOARD, PROJECTOR & OABLl INSTALLATIONS
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