I asked you that question precisely because I was afraid that - once the timings had been laid out and it was obvious Druitt would have had plenty of time - you would try to blur the issue yet again by raising these other factors.
If I said that the issue of Druitt being up all night had no relation to timing, then I'm afraid I must have misunderstood your question, since it's indisputable that timing must have played a part. This is fairly obvious; if the cricket match was several days after the murder, the issue of Druitt having been up all night is rendered immaterial. His being up all night, when taken in tandem with the proximity of the cricket match in terms of time can only be considered germane to Sudgen's belief that Druitt killing Chapman is "distinctly unlikely".
Since timing unquestionably played a part in the "distinct unlikelihood" of the "Hanbury Street to Blackheath" theory, I think I'm pretty justified in opining that the timing is too tight to consider it plausible. I say so because tiredness etc are all directly allied to the time of the match in relation to the murder.
Best regards,
Ben
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