The following article is courtesy of Fergus McInnes from the SCA web-site :
Scottish CA v CA of Ireland
Six Irish players came to Edinburgh at a cold
showery May weekend to defend the Appleton Trophy, which they had retained last
year with a home win at Carrickmines. The Scottish team was weaker on paper,
with higher handicaps at the middle four places in the order, and an analysis
based on handicaps would have predicted a 20-10 win for the visiting side, but
upsets in such circumstances are not unknown...
The match began with a round of doubles, in
which the home side established a 2-1 lead. Their no.1 pairing of Bruce Rannie
and Fergus McInnes defeated the Irish no.2 pair of Jane Shorten and Ben
Reeves-Smyth in accordance with relative handicaps - though the Scots' progress
appeared in doubt at one point when Fergus underapproached 4-back and had to run
it with a jump shot from an angle of about 50 degrees. The Scottish third pair
of Campbell Morrison and Martin Stephenson also had a win, this time contrary to
handicap, against their counterparts Robert Barklie and Trevor Byne, in the only
first-round game that reached the 2.5-hour time limit. Fighting back for the
Irish side were Evan Newell and Nathaniel Healy, who achieved what turned out to
be the only +26 score of the weekend against David Appleton and Alan Wilson.
The first round of singles followed. Upsets
here were Jane's +10 win over Bruce and a narrow victory for Ben over Fergus (+2
in a three-ball ending, where Fergus had pegged out one of Ben's balls but then
got hampered after rover and failed to play safe, letting Ben in to finish from
2-back), and on the other side Martin's +14 result against Evan. With two more
Irish wins in the other three games, this round shifted the cumulative score to
5-4 for the Irish side.
Another round of singles completed the day, and
in this the honours were evenly split, leaving the visitors with a one-game lead
overnight. The players dispersed to their various houses to change out of their
wet clothing, but reconvened about 8pm for dinner at La Bagatelle (a few
minutes' walk from the lawns). That took till nearly 11pm ... and so, after the
day's fourth walk in the rain for those without cars, to bed.
Sunday was forecast to be drier and brighter,
and so it was - but not much! After a little early sunshine, the rain came on
again before the start of play, but we did get another dry spell with glimpses
of sunshine in the middle of the day before the rain set in yet again. Again
the format was one round of doubles and two rounds of singles, with the
"head-to-head" round between opposite numbers occurring at the end of the match.
In the doubles the results redressed the
balance from the first day, with two Irish wins and one for the Scots. A 3-3
split in the next round left both sides still in contention - the Scots with 11
games and the Irish with 13, chasing 15 for a draw or 16 for a win. So there
was plenty of interest in the final round. Here Evan's +25 against Fergus and
Jane's +15 against David ensured that the CA of Ireland would retain the trophy,
and Ben's +25 against Martin meant that they would do so by winning rather than
just by forcing a draw. The most exciting ending in the remaining three games
came in the game between Bruce and Robert, where Robert pegged out one ball from
each side leaving Bruce's remaining ball for hoop 2 and his own for 4-back;
Bruce did well to get to penult before Robert finished. The other two games
went to the Scots (one of them very narrowly, Campbell pegging his forward ball
out to go one point up against Nathaniel after time was called), and so the
final score was 17 games to the CAI and 13 to the SCA.
The croquet was not the only sporting event
this weekend involving a successful Irish team: the Munster rugby team also
triumphed by four points, playing Biarritz in the Heineken Cup final in
Cardiff. For some reason it was the rugby that got all the press coverage, but
Evan adapted two paragraphs from the report in Sunday's paper for his closing
remarks at the Appleton Trophy presentation ceremony - honouring the Irish
players' achievement but giving credit to their opponents for putting up a good
fight. The Scots look forward to doing so again in Ireland in 2007, and hope to
get a different result.
The weather wasn't ideal for photography, but a few pictures can be found
here (link
to SCA site)
Fergus McInnes
Teams
SCA: Bruce Rannie (0), Fergus McInnes (2.5), David Appleton (3.5), Campbell
Morrison (6 in Scotland, 4 in Ireland), Martin Stephenson (6 on Saturday, 5 on
Sunday), Alan Wilson (6).
CAI: Robert Barklie (0), Evan Newell (0), Jane Shorten (2.5), Nathaniel Healy
(2.5), Ben Reeves-Smyth (3), Trevor Byne (8).
Results
(Scottish names first)
Day 1, Saturday 20 May 2006:
Rannie & McInnes bt Shorten & Reeves-Smyth +11
Appleton & Wilson lost to Newell & Healy -26
Morrison & Stephenson bt Barklie & Byne +3T (18-15)
Rannie lost to Shorten -10
McInnes lost to Reeves-Smyth -2
Appleton lost to Barklie -17
Morrison bt Byne +3T (22-19)
Stephenson bt Newell +14
Wilson lost to Healy -23
Rannie bt Newell +4
McInnes lost to Barklie -23
Appleton bt Byne +6
Morrison lost to Reeves-Smyth -3
Stephenson bt Healy +8
Wilson lost to Shorten -25
Day 2, Sunday 21 May 2006:
Rannie & McInnes lost to Newell & Healy -19
Appleton & Wilson lost to Barklie & Byne -7T (18-25)
Morrison & Stephenson bt Shorten & Reeves-Smyth +3T (22-19)
Rannie bt Healy +23
McInnes lost to Shorten -8
Appleton lost to Newell -20
Morrison lost to Barklie -10
Stephenson bt Byne +18
Wilson bt Reeves-Smyth +12
Rannie lost to Barklie -3
McInnes lost to Newell -25
Appleton lost to Shorten -15
Morrison bt Healy +1T (22-21)
Stephenson lost to Reeves-Smyth -25
Wilson bt Byne +13
Match result: SCA 13, CAI 17