Gregor McKenzie unleashed a brutal boundary strewn century as St Cross Symondians inflicted one of Bath's heaviest ever defeats - an eight-wicket thrashing in the ECB national club championship second round.

McKenzie hit three sixes and 14 fours in a 74-ball hundred as St Cross chased down Bath's 140 all out to win with 15 overs to spare, writes Mike Vimpany.
To compound the visitors' agony, one of his sixes smashed the front windscreen of one of the Bath cricketers' cars parked on the Green Jackets ground boundary edge.
Defending champions and current unbeaten leaders of the powerful ECB West of England Premier League, Bath were in trouble from the start, with South African Kyle Pluke (3-29) and Matt Howarth (3-22) reducing them to 67-6.
Dorset's Sam Young (29) rallied alongside James and Will Arney before two wickets each by Charlie Gwynn (2-29) and Jack Bransgrove (2-19) closed the innings.
Bath hit back immediately, trapping Bransgrove leg before, but by then McKenzie had announced his intentions by hitting South Australia all-rounder Aidan Cahill for six !
McKenzie totally dominated from there on in, smashing the Bath bowlers to all parts of the ground on his way to a massively impressive 100.
Wilf La Fontaine Jackson (24) was little more than a spectator in a century second wicket stand, only interrupted by a rain stoppage early in the 20th over when St Cross were within touching distance of victory.  
Ironically, McKenzie - coming in at seven - was run out without facing when St Cross plunged to a six-wicket defeat at Lymington, their second consecutive Premier Division loss.
Beaten by South Wilts a week earlier, St Cross needed Charlie Gwynn's unbeaten 75 - scored in a lively late stand with Ed Ellis (41) - to lift them from 119-4 to 213-6 (Jack Bransgrove 41).
Lymington are often indifferent at the crease and at 75-3 the outcome was in the balance - until Fair Oak raised Mo Abbas turned the tide.
He made a timely 71 (ten fours and one six) and thrived during a 109-run partnership with Gareth Berg, which pointed St Cross towards their goal. He departed at 174, but by then the damage was done.
Berg, the retired former Hampshire & Northants bowling all-rounder, took charge and with  a Lymington best 83 not out (13 fours and one six) eased his side home with 12 overs to spare