NUFAN won the toss and opted to bat first on an excellent batting surface.
Snow and Bedser were able to make early breakthroughs for the Andrews, dismissing NUFAN's openers in the teens, before Hazare was forced to retire hurt after refusing to wear a helmet. Chappell and Barnes responded positively, bringing up the NUFANs' hundred on the stroke of lunch. The middle session was a display of great batting from the pair, Sid Barnes leading the way with some dazzling strokeplay as the partnership grew.
After tea Besder got the breakthrough, dismissing Barnes for 94, but Chappell carried on just as he had be going, completing a fine hundred. He was out to Pollock, but the Andrews failed to make the new ball count, Walters and Lindsey striking cleanly in the final hour to take NUFAN to 366/4 at the close.
In the morning John Snow struck to claim the wicket of Walters, and while Denis Lindsey attempted to guide the tail, Snow ran through the NUFANs' lower order to complete a five-wicket haul. Lindsey was the last man out as NUFAN posted 425 all out.
The Andrews got off to a steady start, negotiating the new ball to reach 34/0 at lunch. But midway through the first session 'deadly' Derek Underwood struck twice in two overs, with the economical Toshack removing Boycott at the other end. Pollock and Donnelly steadied things with a strong partnership taking the Andrew's total past 200, but Donnelly fell late in the day as the previously expensive Chandrasehkar picked up his first wicket.
By the third day Clive Lloyd's fifty had brought the Andrews back towards parity, but they still started day three 175 runs adrift. Walters and Underwood combined to make great use of the old ball, with Tallon and Pollock falling in successive balls. Toshack finished things with the wicket of Snow, earning NUFAN a lead of 148.
The second innings began in shambolic fashion. Len Hutton was run out in the second over. Bedser and Snow picked up a new ball wicket each, and with Hazare still unable to bat, the NUFANs went to lunch on day three effectively 35/4 in their second innings.
Barnes and Walters began to pull away, but the NUFANs were reduced to 69/5 as Andrew's new ball pair came back on. Some stability returned with Walters and the unfancied McKenzie able to put on enough of a partnership to boost the lead into safer waters. Their stand got NUFAN to 119/6, a lead of 267, at tea.
When John Snow struck again to remove Underwood and Toshack, the target still seemed chasable. But the last wicket pair of McKenzie and Chandrasehkar defied all odds, and Andrew's bowling attack, to put the lead beyond reach. Snow was made to wait for a deserved five wicket haul as the pair upped the ante to a round 200 before the last wicket fell, McKenzie notching a valuable half century, and Chadrasehkar just missing out. The target was 349.
Faced with a huge target and two remaining days, the Andrews were not going down without a fight. While Boycott accumulated, Barlow was a man on a mission, raising his half century from 60 balls as NUFAN's attack wilted. At lunch the chasing side were 112 without loss.
Underwood would be the man to get the breakthrough, removing Barlow for an enterprising 67. But despite Compton being removed for 22, the day belonged to Andrew. Geoff Boycott rolled back the years with a typically unyeilding hundred, and Pollock joined in to put on a stand of 93. At 270/2, the hard work had been done and Boycott's dismissal by Underwood hardly seemed to matter. Pollock made a half ton and Donelly and Lloyd both contributed.
On the last day NUFAN needed a miracle with the score at 320/4. And they very nearly got it. Donnelly and Mankad fell in quick succession to the fast bowlers, before Lloyd and Pollock - the latter notching a king pair - departed in successive balls. With barely a few runs needed, the Andrews got home with only two wickets to spare.