Kelvin Scott A Triumphant National Singles Champion
Kelvin Scott wasn’t planning to compete at the 2022
Summerset National men’s singles tournament, until a late
change of heart.
He managed to get an entry just before
the deadline, for his first appearance at the event since
2016.
It proved to be a prescient decision, as the
Cantabrian achieved a popular triumph, 24 years after his
first national singles title, way back in
1998.
“I’m normally away on holiday over the
Christmas and New Year period,” explained Scott. “I
haven’t played in the national singles or pairs for six
years. “But this year we were holidaying in the South
Island and I got a late entry into the singles, just a few
weeks before the event.”
Asked about his preparations
ahead of the tournament, Scott laughed, admitting they were
“poor”.
He played Canterbury interclub in
mid-December, then hadn’t been on the green
since.
Despite that, and the long absence from the event,
Scott backed himself to rise to the
occasion.
“The last time I played I lost to Mike
Kernaghan in the last eight, so I've normally been pretty
competitive in the singles,” said Scott. “I have usually
been in the last eight or last 16 most of the
time.”
“A lot of players have a forte and
singles is probably my forte. I knew if I got to the last
eight, I could be competitive again. I just had to play my
way into it; it’s just the mental side of it really… put
your head down and anything can happen.”
Scott beat
Elmwood Park teammate and bowls legend Gary Lawson 21-15 to
reach the last 16, then topped Scott McGavin (Bulls) 21-12
to ensure his passage to the quarter finals. He enjoyed a
straightforward victory over Eric Pattillo 21-7, setting up
a semi-final clash with defending champion Mike
Galloway.
It was the match of the tournament, as
Scott sealed an epic 21-20 victory on the last
end.
“It was a great game of bowls - one of those
games,” said Scott. “Mike did everything he could and I
did everything I could. And it was just fortunate that I got
the shot on the last end and that's pretty much
it.”
“I don’t think Mike could have walk off the
green disappointed. His last two bowls were great bowls, he
just didn’t get a result out of it…you can't do any more
than that.”
That set up a final with Tony Grantham,
with Scott admitting he had extra motivation against the Mt
Albert bowler.
“When Tony won his first singles
title [in 2007] he beat me [on the way],” said Scott. “I
was 20-14 up against him and he came
back.”
“Those games are always in your memory
bank. I had a lot more incentive than I probably normally
would have, because they are the sort of games that hurt,
especially [because] I was playing really well at that
tournament.”
“He picked his game up for sure
but I probably shouldn't have lost it…but that’s what
the sport is all about.”
Scott was in charge for most
of the final, and insists he wasn’t worried when Grantham
mounted a late fightback.
“Clearly you want to
finish the game off but games do have patches where they
swing and you’ve just got to ride it out,” says Scott.
“I wouldn't say I panicked by any means. I had a lot of
shots on the board and it's sport; people or teams come back
to you at some stage and you’ve just got to weather the
storm.”
The 21-14 victory was a special result, almost
three decades on from his first singles
triumph.
“In 1998 I had one hell of a draw and I
beat probably some of the best players to play for New
Zealand,” said Scott. “So I’ve definitely got memories
of that. But I've also got strong memories of other finals
(three fours and one pairs) that I’ve lost as well along
the way…you learn a bit from those.”
The 59-year-old
said some technical changes to his delivery at the start of
2021 – “I changed my grip a little bit and my stance a
little bit” – helped his confidence and consistency
throughout the tournament.
Scott was also highly
impressive in the national pairs alongside Barry Williams,
reaching the semi finals before being knocked out by Lawson
and Grantham.
“I'd probably run out of steam a
little bit mentally,” reflected Scott. “Barry gave me a
chance the whole tournament, he didn’t play too many bad
ends. He always had a ball in the zone, which made my job
easier.”