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Club - milestones

The 2002 Benson & Hedges Final

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Competition: Benson & Hedges Final - Essex v Warwickshire
Location/Date: Lord's, 22nd June 2002
Umpires: B Dudleston and JH Hampshire
Toss: Warwickshire won the toss and decided to field
Result: Warwickshire won by 5 wickets
Scorecard
SUSSEX   WARWICKSHIRE
Hussain c Piper b Pollock 0 Powell* c Flower b Cowan 11
Robinson c Brown b Carter 18 Knight c Flower b Irani 9
Napier run out   17 Bell not out   65
Stephenson   b Carter 0 Troughton c Flower b Napier 37
Flower+ c Piper b Smith 30 Pollock c Dakin b Irani 34
Irani* c Smith b Brown 8 Penney lbw b Stephenson 0
Habib c Knight b Giles 19 Brown not out   12
Grayson not out   38 Smith      
Dakin c Powell b Brown 12 Piper+      
Cowan not out   27 Giles      
Clarke       Carter      
Extras lb4, nb4, w4 12 Extras lb6, w8 14
Total for 8 wickets 181 Total for 5 wickets 182
Wickets 0, 33, 33, 40, 61, 86, 109, 134   Wickets 19, 21, 105, 158, 159  
Bowling
WARWICKSHIRE   ESSEX
  O M R W   O M R W
Pollock 10 1 32 1 Irani 10 2 40 2
Carter 10 1 45 2 Cowan 8 0 37 1
Brown 10 0 32 2 Clarke 2 0 20 0
Giles 10 1 28 1 Dakin 2 0 22 0
Smith 10 0 40 1 Grayson 4 0 11 0
          Napier 5.2 0 31 1
          Stephenson 5 0 15 1

The morning of the final was warm but slightly overcast and we were soon greeted with the news that Michael Powell had won the toss and had asked Essex to bat. What followed was a superbly controlled display of bowling by the Bears as we slowly stifled the opposing batsmen after having dismissed Nasser Hussain and the other danger man Ronnie Irani with only a handful of runs on the board. A total of 181 seemed eminently achievable, but the early dismissal of Nick Knight and Michael Powell saw us floundering at 21 for 2. At this point in the match there may have been some flickering hoe of an Essex recovery, but this did not account for Warwickshire's two rising young stars. Firstly, Ian Bell demonstrated his escalating class while Jim Troughton displayed a precocious talent as the pair launched into a third wicket partnership that made the game safe for the Bears. The pair added 84 in 12 overs with 14 fours. There had been but nine in the entire Essex innings. A consummate display of all round cricket by Warwickshire had seen us home with almost 14 overs to spare, and the impromptu lap of honour around the hallowed turf of Lord's was thoroughly deserved, as was the Gold Award to Ian Bell for his 65 not out.

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