Stevens KOs leaders
CRICKET JOSH Stevens ensured London Maccabi Vale were victorious in a final over thriller as they defeated Brondesbury to secure their second league win of the season.
In a feisty encounter that had twists and turns throughout, Vale scampered two runs in the fading light to clinch victory by two wickets, with just four balls of the match remaining.
It was a magnificent triumph against a Brondesbury side who were top of the table coming into the fixture and had recorded three successive resounding victories in the league but Vale were wonderful in the field and resilient with the bat to scramble across the finish line.
The match had been reduced to 30 overs a-side due to overnight rain, and Vale were at their spirited best with the ball from the outset. Stevens, on debut for the senior side, grabbed the first wicket as he produced a hostile and controlled opening spell. He was backed up by flawless ground fielding as Vale did not allow Brondesbury to stamp their authority on proceedings.
Steven Allweis helped maintain the pressure and he picked up two wickets in two balls to establish Vale’s dominance. Spin twins Ben Lederman and Toby Michaels stifled Brondesbury in the middle overs, before Lederman opened his account thanks to a smart stumping from Alex Haffner.
Allweis returned at the death to claim his third victim of the innings, and Vale went in at the halfway stage content with their efforts as they restricted Brondesbury to 129-5 off their allotted 30 overs.
On a tough pitch, the chase was never likely to be simple, and Vale found themselves two wickets down within five overs and the target appeared a long way off. Adam Brand and Ben Lederman helped Vale turn the tide on Brondesbury, putting the opposition under pressure with a series of well-struck boundaries.
Brand was controversially given out caught-and-bowled, despite strong suggestions the ball had not carried, but Lederman was unfazed - smashing a quartet of fours and a monstrous six to push Vale closer.
His dismissal shortly afterwards, and that of Ben Kohler, who was adjudged run out despite appearing to be safely home, sparked a middleorder collapse as Vale slumped from 81-3 to 87-7.
With hopes fading and Brondesbury increasingly optimistic, Vale required a substantial partnership and that arrived just in the nick of time from Neil Lederman and Stevens. The pair played sensibly to guide Vale to within ten runs of victory, but Lederman was caught and the match twisted once more.
Stevens and Allweis survived a couple of run-out opportunities to eke out valuable runs, and it was left to captain Allweis to strike the winning runs in the final over to push Vale over the line and spark jubilant scenes.