I am currently waking each day up to blue skies and a maximum daily temperature of at least 20-22 degrees. It all seems very wrong at the start of a new year.
I seemed to miss being home at Christmas more this time round, after previously spending two Christmases in the southern hemisphere in 2001 and 2006. This one was made worse by the UK seeing it’s first proper white Christmas in my lifetime. Having said that I have not missed the apparent chaos that has followed: Grit rations, school closures, tail-backs, and most alarmingly, temperatures around -10 degrees!
Anyway, back in the land of sheep, (of which I have seen very few I might add – and strangely, the largest flock I have witnessed was in actual fact pink!), volcanic rock, Sunday afternoons on the beach, and an accent which I still struggle to distinguish from Australian; the holiday season has been mostly relaxing. The lead up to the summer break involved some up and down cricket from East Coast Bays whilst my form remained good amongst it.
We qualified for the one-day competition quarter-final which is this upcoming Sunday against arch rivals Takapuna. Adjacent to the one-day games we were narrowly beaten by Parnell when we came out the wrong side of a very important toss and we also dropped points after a week of torrential rain and the abandonment of the completion of our other match. In the same week, other teams managed to play and claim a crucial advantage.
My contributions have been pleasing. I have been consistent with the bat and ball. 44 not out, in a losing cause and three wickets in the final match before the Christmas meant I passed 500 Auckland Cricket Ass. points and earned my East Coast Bays very own ‘Baggy Green’ with the number three embroidered. (two team members beat me to it – I like to think that this was due to me missing the first two games of the season!)
My three week break over Christmas involved some travel and some cricket with the Auckland Aces. I was invited to Twenty20 practices and to play in their Twenty20 inter-squad selection match. I was never in contention due to Ravi Bopara taking the overseas spot for them. If you ignore my second ball duck in the final over (if contact was made, the ball would still be traveling over the Auckland harbour bridge as you read this), I bowled nicely and clean bowled Lou Vincent in a tidy four overs.
Related categories: Cricket, David Wigley, Steelbacks

















