During the 2003 Twenty20 cup he earned a Man of the Match award for a bowling spell of 4/28.
Playing in the lower-order, Wood took five wickets in his first bowling spell.
Following a couple of expensive bowling spells, he found himself out of the first-class team.
He also took 3 for 37 against Gloucestershire, in his only first-class bowling spell.
He also took his first wicket on in a rare bowling spell.
Against Gloucestershire in 1921 he took a rare bowling spell and achieved 3 for 40.
He also bowled two overs without reward: his only bowling spell in first-class cricket.
At the start of a new bowling spell, he would tell the umpire: "Left arm without pace".
Watt was therefore used primarily to take the shine off the ball in preparation for Freeman's imminent bowling spell.
English bowlers were frequently substituted at the end of bowling spells and replaced with fresh fielders.