2017/18 Preseason Information

2017/18 Preseason Information

With the Premier Cricket season just around the corner it is Preseason time again.  While a large number of our players have already been hitting balls for months, it is time to get everyone together and start building towards another successful year. 

New Players

All new players are welcomed to attend our 'New Player Induction Sessions' ran every Tuesday and Thursday at 7:30 from the 8th of August at the Martin Lambert Indoor Nets in the TAG Family Grandstand.  For all new players click here for more information.

Existing Players 

For all existing players, club sessions start on Tuesday the 1st of August at 7:30pm in the Lambert indoor nets.  These sessions will run every Tuesday and Thursday until Tuesday the 29th of August when we move outdoors (weather permitting).  Similarly Sunday morning sessions start at 9:00am on the 6th of August, these sessions will be a mix of nets, fielding and conditioning. 

Preseason Tours

On the 25th of August for the 3rd year in a row we will be sending a first grade squad to Brisbane to compete in the annual 50 over Challenge against University of Queensland, Melbourne University and Adelaide University.  

This year, our World Finals T20 Squad will join our First Grade squad in Brisbane for a training camp before they depart for Sri Lanka on September 7th to compete at the Red Bull Campus Cricket Finals for the second year in a row. 

Full Calendar

The full preseason training program can be seen here

Any questions regarding preseason schedule do not hesitant to contact us

 

 

 Our newest Life Members; A story by James Rodgers

Our newest Life Members; A story by James Rodgers

At the Annual General Meeting last week, Greg Mail and Mark Faraday became Life Members of Sydney University Cricket Club. It goes without saying that the contribution of these two men to our club can not be summed up in a few words.

It is only fitting that a fellow Life Member pens a farewell piece to these two men who have given more to our club than any, James Rodgers penned a fitting tribute to the Greg and Mark published in the 2016/17 Annual Report.  

FAREWELL FROM SUCC TO GREG MAIL AND MARK FARADAY

When Don Bradman died, John Williamson sang a tribute where he pleaded with the Don to give us one more parade.

There’s no point pleading with Maily and Faras to give us one more game. Like all cricketers, eventually they’re finished. In Maily’s laconic words, ‘I’m not playing cricket anymore.’

Just reverting to Bradman for a moment, Bradman scored 3221 runs in 1st Grade in Sydney with 14 centuries.

Maily scored 15,242 runs including 44 centuries.

Even Faras outscored the Don with 4050 runs in 1st Grade with SUCC alone together with his 1000 for Manly.

But I suppose we’d better put these figures into context. Bradman played only 36 innings in 1st Grade.

More context:

I went to see an elderly Dr HO Rock about 35 years ago. He’d played for SUCC just after World War I and he’d also played for NSW. He has a higher Shield average than Bradman. He scored over 700 runs and averaged 112 in Sheffield Shield cricket. Bradman averaged only 110. Now Dr Rock and Maily would have got on well together. When I asked the doctor about his record, he drew thoughtfully on the twentieth cigarette that he’d had that afternoon and, out of the corner of his mouth, (Yes. The corner of his mouth), he said disarmingly:

  ‘Well you know Bradman played a lot more games than I did. He had more chances to fail.’

I’m not sure how Faras and Dr Rock would have got along. Faras most likely would have advised him to give up smoking and then sent him his legal bill for his time. Now don’t think for a moment that I’m fixated on how much Faras earns as a high flying lawyer or the fact that he can regularly order the $40 ribeye steak at The Nags, washed down by the $75 Coonawarra Cab Sav, which retails at about $3.50 as I’m reliably informed by Liam Robertson and he’s always got an eye out for a bargain.

While we respect and admire our teammates, we often make sure that their heads are out of the clouds. So when I asked our guests’ teammates  about their favourite moments, they avoided all talk of Mail’s 22 years in 1st Grade. His record 44 centuries and 72 fifties in 1st Grade, his nine 1st class hundreds, his record 15,242 runs, his 4085 1st class runs, his five 1st Grade premierships, his two Sheffield Shields. The stats are overwhelming. It was a little easier to forget Faras’ 6000 runs in Grade cricket, his three 1st Grade premierships. Now I’ve got to be careful with Maily’s figures. He tends to correct. A well-meaning spectator once called out to him after he’d run 41 kms of a marathon, ‘Only one km to go.’ Maily’s reply, out of the corner of his mouth, ‘I think you’ll find it’s 1.2 kms, sport.’

But you’ve got to go behind the stats to find the personalities. So, I went to Will Hay whose answer was incomprehensible: ‘Can GM story be one of GM stories that he told umpteen times although in fact doesn’t always relate to GM?’ The question mark at the end of that said it all. But that wasn’t all. It was followed by the message,’ I will be out of the office until Monday 22 May on work related travel…’ (a euphemism if I ever heard one), followed by the ever-helpful, ‘For immediate assistance, contact the Morgan Stanley Trading Team.’ So I rang the MSTT but quite amazingly, no one had ever heard of Greg Mail or Mark Faraday. What sort of lives do they lead at MSTT?

Danny Ward’s similarly incomprehensible story (which he spelled STOREY) drew a response from Smash: ‘You can take the architect out of Lebanon but…’

Then Eddie’s reply was equally cryptic: ‘I don’t use this email address any more.’ Well, if you don’t use it, how did you know that I was trying to contact you on it?

But I shouldn’t sledge my cricketing superiors too harshly, especially, to my mind, Eddie should still be playing for Australia. Incidentally, some Parramatta troll was pestering Eddie on social media (he must have got the right twitter address?) after 1st Grade beat Parra in this year’s semi-final. Eddie replied ‘How’s your Mad Monday going champ?’ Maily got in on the chat: ‘The correct response to this by anyone from Parramatta is ‘two weeks later than usual.’

To be fair, Eddie did come good…when he recalled Maily’s response to a journalist unwise enough to ask him if he’d scored a slower hundred than the one he’d just scored in eight hours against Victoria. Maily’s reply: ‘You don’t watch much cricket do you, mate?’

So the stories flew around.

Faras’ highest score for the Club, 186 at Waitara on an afternoon when 2nds piled up 520 was cast into the shadows by what happened the following week. Faras’ suggestion of a quick Friday night net was followed by a few beers, then a BBQ, then a few more beers, then a visit to Kings Cross with Rig! 5am bed, woken by 35 degree heat, a comatose Rig, a seedy Faras, a long trip to Waitara, having to be driven by Sarah due to the legal inability of the two senior players to do so , a wilting afternoon in the field, 520 not enough, 2nds soundly beaten.

On the other hand, when SCG MacGill failed to show for the start of a Sunday game at Village Green, Tim Laing offered Maily a sub fielder.

‘Nah. No thanks. We’ll beat you with 10.’

Maily never did rate slow bowlers: ‘they’re only there to see me comfortably from 40 to 80.’ And when a 1st Grade spinner suddenly changed from right arm off spin to left arm orthodox, Maily informed the umpire that it didn’t really matter because he was rubbish at both.’

Maily was rarely out of his comfort zone, piling up runs at the crease, catching them easily at slip, bowling his medium pacers, beer in hand in the dressing room commenting wryly on the day’s play. But at the 2016 Club presentation night at Darling Harbour, about midnight, after scrapping Will Hay off the floor, Mel insisted that Greg step onto the dance floor and shimmy along to Justin Beiber. For the first time, Maily was wrong-footed.

Dressing rooms tend to see cricketers at our most uninhibited. Consider this conversation:

Faras to Ward: Does Smash have a sister?

Ward to Faras: Yeah. Why?

Faras to Ward: Smash has such beautiful curves that I’m thinking of making a play for his sister.

We know how that ended.

One of the great things about University cricket is that the onfield banter tends to be far more cerebral and often causes confused rage in opponents. A Sutherland batsman’s appearance at the crease this season was greeted by Maily’s, ‘don’t worry. He’s batting 15 spots too high in the order.’

Faras was less succinct but just as effective.

When Danny McLauchlan threatened all sorts of violence against our batsmen in a semi-final against Bankstown, Faras stopped the game, reported the threat to Umpire Goodger, told Danny that he’d sue him, turned to Goodge and told him he’d sue him also for failing to fulfil his duty of care as an umpire. Was this the same Darren Goodger who was allowed into Cargo Bar one Saturday night with Laurie Borg while Faras was left outside, shamefaced, refused admittance?

Of course, prolific batsmen like these two tend to talk more about their bowling. Bradman was proud of his two Test wickets, Wally Hammond and Ivan Barrow. Maily has good reason to remember his first 1st class wicket, the great VVS Laxman caught in the gully by Gavin Robertson or the four Test players in his 4 for 18 against WA: North, Nicholson, Casson and Angel.

On the other hand, Faras has little to boast about. Not even one 1st Grade wicket, including Scott Henry’s deliberately dropped catch on the boundary at Village Green.

Let’s return to John Williamson’s words:

‘Sir Don, you gave us pride in ourselves.’

Similarly, Nick Larkin said this about Maily:

‘You set new benchmarks and consistently high standards for performance, behaviour, spirit of cricket. You never lowered the intensity. You had the respect of every player. You were revered by your team and this Club. You shaped the way that 1st Grade played, with belief, attacking, resolve and confidence. We scaled the heights and we are now the envy of clubs across the competition.’

On a personal note, when I was asked by Theo to take over as Chairman after Mick O’Sullivan’s death in 2013, I said I thought I could do it as long as we had Maily captaining 1st Grade and TK 2nds and Faras and Theo on the Board. Their combined wisdom, integrity, and judgement were exceptional. Both Maily and Faras played in the 1st Grade Premiership side that year, and TK and Theo in the 2nd Grade premiership,  premierships  that meant so much. Kerry O’Keeffe texted me on the night after our great victories: ‘Micko will be on the Reschs in Heaven.’

One of the more memorable innings I’ve seen in any Grade was played by Faras that afternoon. We needed 144 on a very difficult wicket. Faras came in at 3-30 which soon became 6-71. He’d played with exemplary technique and patience, sacrificing his natural instincts,  and greeted Tim Ley with, ‘Timmy, there’s more pressure in a 10 foot putt. Have a go at them and we’ll win this.’ Faras’ 36 was worth three times the runs. Tim made an inspiring 48 not out. We were home by 3 wickets after being bowled out for 37 in the 1st innings.

But where was Maily? Best man at Chris Campbell’s wedding. He’s a man of his word. He’d promised Chris months before.

So Maily and Faras won’t come out one more time as much as we’d love them to. But what they’ve left is a colossal legacy that is unsurpassed at this great Club; the greatest records, the fondest memories, battalions of friends, who’ve all been so proud to share this with you tonight.

James Rodgers

AGM Update 2017

AGM Update 2017

Our 153rd Annual General Meeting took place last Tuesday (17th July) in the TAG Family Grandstand at Sydney University Football Ground.  

Life Member inductions

The meeting was headlined by the induction of two of our finest sons as Sydney University Cricket Club Life Members.  Greg Mail and Mark Faraday become our 18th and 19th Life Members after both officially called time on their playing careers.  Keep an eye out tomorrow for more regarding the contribution these two have made to our club. 

Cricket NSW and Sydney Cricket Association presentations.

Andrew Jones, CEO of Cricket NSW presented on the continued growth of all forms of cricket in NSW.  Craig Hambleton, SCA Representative presented some of the proposed changes to the upcoming Premier Cricket season and discussed the rationale behind them.  We thank both men for taking the time to present at our AGM.

Board of Management 2017-18  

Bruce Collins QC and Alan Crompton OAM were invited to continue in their roles as President and Patron respectively.  

Adjunct Prof Max Bonnell was elected once again as Chairman of the Board, whilst Mark Faraday, Ben Joy and Adam Theobald all return in their roles as Senior Vice Presidents.  

Dale Bryant was also elected as Honorary Secretary (ex-officio) as well as the delegate to NSWCA and SCAs. Joe Kershaw will continue as Honorary Treasurer / Undergraduate Member. Henry Clark stepped down as Club Captain and has been replaced by Jack Gibson for 2017-18.  Keep an eye out in the coming weeks for an article introducing our newest Club Captain. 

Additionally, Phil Logan shall resume his role on the board as Chairman of the Foundation (ex-officio). Meanwhile it is anticipated that Hartley Anderson will continue as Vice President of Alumni Relations, to be ratified at the August meeting of the new Board.  

The only position still to be filled is that of second SCA delegate, vacated by Greg Mail, anyone interested should contact Dale Bryant. 

Sydney University Cricket Club Board of Management for 2017-18

Patron - Alan Crompton OAM

President - Bruce Collins QC 

Chairman - Adjunct Prof Max Bonnell 

Senior Vice Presidents 

Operations - Mark Faraday 

Finance and Administration - Ben Joy

Marketing and Membership - Adam Theobald

Honorary Secretary - Dale Bryant 

NSWCA Delegate - Dale Bryant 

SCA Delegate 1 - Dale Bryant
SCA Delegate 2 - unfilled

Honorary Treasurer (Undergraduate Member) - Joe Kershaw

Club Captain - Jack Gibson

Annual Report

The 2016/17 Annual Report was released on the night and can be accessed below. Anyone wishing to obtain a printed copy, please contact Dale Bryant.

View Annual Report Online Here

99 years ago: JSD Walker

CAPTAIN JOHN STUART DIGHT WALKER, MC

 Killed 21 July 1918 at Merris Nord, France.                                    Buried at Borre Cemetery.

Major Leonard May writes about Captain Walker’s death at Merris Nord, France, on 21 July 1918:             ‘…he went out to reconnoitre and was coming back when a machine gun opened fire…as he turned, he was hit in the head and killed immediately.’

Two weeks later, among the sporting results and news of sportsmen’s activities at the Front, the Sydney paper ‘The Referee’ carries an account of Walker’s death. He was a sportsman, ‘who had plenty of ability, abundant enthusiasm and an ample reserve of pluck.’

Two years earlier, Walker wrote to one of his aunts, Mrs Robertson:

 ‘I have got a crack at last and a rather nasty one but one is lucky to come out alive…’

He writes with prosaic understatement about his Military Cross, his promotion to Captain, the compound fracture of his femur. And concludes with a heartfelt,

 ‘…hope they got compulsion (conscription) in Australia…it would do them good.’

John Stuart Dight Walker carried the Dight name, a surname that resonates through the ages with the Sydney University Cricket Club. Five of his relations have played for SUCC. His cousins, between 1893 and 1902, FJR (Frank) Dight, WB (William) Dight and CC (Clarence) Dight, and in more recent times, brothers Stephen and Jeffrey Dight who played during the 1970s and 1980s.

JSD Walker could claim, through his mother’s family, relationship with the renowned Australian explorer, Hamilton Hume (1797-1873) who married Elizabeth Dight, Walker’s great aunt.

The Dight and Walker families served Australia with unrivalled fidelity during The Great War.

The Reverend John Walker (1855-1941), patriarch of the Walker family, one time Moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Australia, was a chaplain who visited Australian soldiers in hospitals in France and England during 1917.

His daughter, Marjorie, served as a nurse with the Australian forces, especially at Salonica.

His wife’s brother, Lance Corporal Hilton Dight, a graduate in Engineering from the University of Sydney, was noted for his bravery under fire at Gallipoli and in France. He returned to Australia in 1917, suffering from illness, shell shock and awful hallucinations. He took his own life at Narrandera in June 1918.

Five of the sons of Reverend Walker and his wife, Jessie (nee Dight), Arthur, John, Noel, Alison and Maxwell, also served. Arthur, Noel and John were killed in France.

John and Jessie carried these crosses throughout their long lives. Jessie died at 69 in 1932 but John survived until 1941 aged 86.

John Stuart Dight Walker was born in England, at Birkenhead, in September 1885, but his family moved back to Australia as his father took up various parish postings.

At Sydney Grammar School, he was a carefree natural sportsman. In his final two seasons (1902-03 and 1903-04) in the school 1st XI, he took 203 wickets in all games with his left arm ‘swervers’  and scored over 2000 hard hitting runs. ‘He kept the good ones out and swung his extensive arms on the loose ones’ commented the 1904 ‘Sydneian’ with some insight.  He and Marcus Blaxland put on 264 in 1903 when Sydney Grammar defeated Melbourne Grammar in the annual match by an innings and 270 runs, but there was a stark contrast in styles. Blaxland’s 247 was cultured and orthodox. Walker’s 108 was belligerent and risky as he was dropped three times.

Walker’s final school game in March 1904 was an indication of his destructive talent as he left abiding memories of his prodigious ability. His 8 for 67 routed an inexperienced St Joseph’s side.

He represented the Grammar 1st XV, was appointed a  College Prefect and matriculated to the Department of Engineering at Sydney University in 1905. His career with the Cricket Club (1st Grade cap no 86), however, stuttered and faltered, in stark contrast with his glittering schoolboy feats. In three interrupted seasons in 1st Grade, he scored 63 runs at 5.7 and took 19 wickets at 29.7. He even spent more time in 2nd Grade in 1905-06 than he did in 1st Grade but he still found no form (108 runs. 5 wickets).

He graduated B Eng in 1907 and then his profession took him away from Sydney for some time. He managed a gold mine near Meekatharra in the mid-west of Western Australia before enlisting at Blackboy Hill in 11 Battalion as a Private in April 1915, although he qualified for a commission, before proceeding to the Front. He stood an impressive 183 centimetres tall and weighed 84 kilos. The light brown hair that had peeked out from under his cricket caps now showed under his Lieutenant’s cap.

For bravery at Pozieres in 1916, Walker was awarded the Military Cross. ‘For conspicuous gallantry and skill during operations. He assisted wounded men and sent up ammunition and water to forward dumps under incessant shell fire…’. His care for his men came at a cost. At Mouquet Farm, he was hit in the left thigh and knee by sniper fire which fractured his femur. It was eventually decided, after hospitalisation in London,  that he should be invalided back to Australia in February 1917 to recover. But he was not to be denied. He convinced the medical authorities that he was fit for duty and returned in November 1917, rejoining 11 Battalion in  May 1918.

Captain Walker is remembered at Sydney University in the War Memorial carillon.

At St Andrew’s in Ballarat, where Reverend Walker was posted during the war years, a stained glass window was dedicated in 1942 honouring the three brothers who were killed in France. The inscription reads:

 ‘Their father conceived the idea of this tablet as an inspiration to those who follow on so that the torch of liberty, which they gave their comrades true from their falling hands, might be held high in each succeeding generation.’      

James Rodgers

 

101 years ago: Bob Holliday

At first there was nothing.

Then he emerged from the yellowing, crumbling pages of old newspapers.

Until the late 1970s, the records of SUCC which had a rich history, stretching back to 1864, were scanty and scattered. Damon Ridley and I then set about finding the old Annual Reports and putting the Club’s story  together. There were still gaps. No Annual Reports survived from the World War I seasons. Scorebooks had long gone. Anyone who played in these seasons seemed to be lost to record and memory. We did have access to newspapers and microfilm, especially the sports pages, in Fisher Library. And we gathered former players, now elderly but most with sharp, lucid memories, and we interviewed them.

In the 1914-15 Report, we found C D Holliday who played 2nd and 3rd Grades that season and who also played one game in 1st Grade, scored 19, and disappeared. But there he was again in January 1916 in the scores of the Grade games played on 10th and 17th January. C D Holliday batted at number 3 against Petersham at University Oval, scoring 6 and 20. Much of the space in those papers was taken up with news from The Front, lists of dead, wounded and missing, accounts of battles. But this Grade game at University took the eye.

Petersham rattled up 3 declared for 585 on the first day. Future Test players, Tommy Andrews (232 not out) and Johnny Taylor (174) put on an astounding 240 in two hours of clinical demolition of the weak University attack. On the second day, in reply, University was bowled out for 83 and 111 and lost by an innings and 391 runs, still the heaviest defeat in the Club’s history.

So there he was. C D Holliday. 1st Grade career: 1914-16. 2 matches, 3 innings, 45 runs.

And there he stayed for many years. When we interviewed those still alive from that time in the late 1970s, the name C D Holliday drew a blank. Sharp minds like Eric McElhone, Mick Bardsley, Dr H O Rock (“Never heard of him” was the expected gruff answer. Rock was on his way to France in early 1916), Dr Jim Garner, Sir Ronald Grieve, Jimmy Sullivan (still at school in 1916). Even Dr S G Whitfeld, grandfather of Phil Beale (who played 1st Grade for the Club in the 1970s and 80s), who actually played in that game in January 1916, opening the bowling (0-87), recalled that he had no idea where to pitch the ball during the onslaught and little idea which part of the fence the ball would be hit to. But when it came to C D Holliday…nothing.

And so Holliday remained a minor footnote to a swelling history of a Club that approached its sesqui centenary in 2014.

Then, a glimpse of him again. On a plaque as you enter the Main Quadrangle is the list of those University men who fell in the Great War. And there’s his name. C D Holliday.

A quick trip to the Australian War Memorial website now throws up so much information on those who enlisted, including their full military history.

So, C D Holliday becomes more than just a passing shadow. He’s Clifford Dawson Holliday, known to his family as ‘Bob’. Born in Kogarah in January 1895, he lives with his parents in William St Hornsby. His father, Reverend Andrew Holliday, is Rector of the Hornsby Methodist Church. Bob is 5 feet 9 inches tall, 170 pounds in weight, blue eyes, light brown hair. He was educated at Dubbo Public school (when his father was posted to Dubbo), Hornsby Public and Newington College Stanmore.

Another detour brings him to life.

David Roberts, Newington’s Archivist, is readily helpful.

His name is preserved at Newington. He was there from Easter 1905 until Easter 1914. 1st XI batsman. 1st XV. Senior Prefect. Twice Dux of the College. President of the Christian Union. Winner of a multitude of prizes including a University Exhibition. He contemplated studies in Law but settled for Arts at Sydney University and gained a High Distinction in Maths in Arts I. A Newington classmate was Alexander ‘Roxy’ Muir who also played for SUCC, enlisted, was awarded the Military Cross, and never came home. When Bob made his 1st Grade debut in April 1915, Roxy was unavailable and Bob took his place. When Bob played his other 1st Grade game, Roxy had enlisted and, on the Thursday before the second day of that match, sailed with 1 Battalion. Both were stylish, reliable batsmen but at Newington, everyone batted in the shadow of Johnny Taylor, born in the same year as Muir and Holliday, 1895. Taylor played for NSW 2nd XI aged 16 on the strength of his form in school matches and he hit 226 against Victoria’s 2nd XI. He then made his 1st class debut while still at Newington, scoring 83 in 1913. After distinguished service in the 1st AIF, Taylor then played 20 Tests for Australia. In four seasons after the War, he averaged over 60 for SUCC. Taylor’s 174 against University in that game in January 1916 brought two Newington schoolmates together again. It was Holliday’s last game of cricket. Less than two months later, Corporal C D Holliday 4801 sailed for Egypt and was assigned to 54 Battalion. Three months after that, he embarked from Alexandria to Marseilles. This was his last time at sea.

On that dreadful night of 19-20 July 1916, Australia lost 2000 men and suffered more than 5000 casualties in the futile attack on the Germans’ position at Fromelles.

Corporal Holliday was initially recorded as “wounded 19 or 20 July. No further report”. In the confusion and tumult, such vague reports were understandable. But the military authorities were to experience the insistent pleas of Holliday’s distraught parents.

“He is our only son and only child…will easily understand our anxiety,” wrote Reverend Holliday on 14 August.

“Our anxiety is very great,”  Mrs Margaret Holliday wrote on 28 August.

In the meantime, Joseph Cook, the former prime Minister wrote, describing Bob as “one of our most brilliant University boys” and a specially coded cable was sent to London to ascertain his condition and his whereabouts.

And so the correspondence went, back and forth for over 170 pages and over the years.

“…our anxiety is daily increasing.”

“we have been kept all these awful months in such agony…the confusion and contradiction are simply astounding,” wrote Reverend Holliday.

On 7 December, Reverend Holliday received a cable.

“Regret report 4801 Holliday prev. reported wounded now killed in action 30 July.” The date was amended to 20 July by another cable the next day.

The most likely account of events was that Bob was shot in the mouth and was then carried to the entrance of the communication trench which was captured by the Germans before he died. His death was then announced by the Prussian War Office. It was not until 1923 that a letter from Base Records finally put the pieces together. It appears that he had been buried in a mass grave at Fromelles or Flerbeaux.

Reverend Holliday poured out his frustration from his broken heart:

“It almost seems to me now that no one knows and no one even cares what has become of my son.”

At Newington, there was widespread grief at the loss of one of their most brilliant.

“…we mourn not only for the loss of a fine man, but the ruin of what we hoped for him.”

The next edition of ‘The Newingtonian’ contained another obituary. Lieutenant A R Muir MC had been killed in action at Zonnebeke on 13 October 1917 aged 22.

The Holidays were sustained by the comforts of their faith and at the memorial service held at Hornsby Methodist Church on 28 January 1917, Reverend C J Prescott, Headmaster of Newington and father of Clarence Prescott who had also played for SUCC in 1914-15, preached the sermon:

“He was intended for a soldier. He looked forward to the avocations of peace, the halls and cloisters of academic calm or the courts where justice is done…’He rushed into the field/And foremost fighting fell.’…He was the pride of his school.”

The Hollidays wished that their son’s name be preserved at Newington. To the present day, a prize is awarded in Bob’s memory . A tablet to his memory also forms part of the Chapel Walkway. And, at the University where he prospered, the ‘Clifford Dawson Holliday’ prize is awarded to the most proficient candidate in third year examinations in Agriculture and Environment. Third year…a year at University that Bob Holliday never started. Now, the splendid website ‘Beyond 1914. The University of Sydney and the Great War’ commemorates all those from the University who served in World War I. It reveals a little more about Clifford Dawson Holliday. A serious, studious, principled young man of great promise. There is also an extract from something that he wrote just before he was killed:

“I am where I think I ought to be and where I believe God means me to be, and I have no fear for the future for I am in His care.”

Finally, 92 years after Bob’s death, in 2008, the existence of unmarked mass graves at Pheasant Wood was confirmed. Gradually, the remains of 250 of the Australians buried there were identified.

One was Bob Holliday.

On 19 July 2010, he was finally buried in a separate, marked grave. A distant cousin, Katie Jones, was there at the commemoration ceremony to see Bob finally laid to rest. After all those years, one who had been lost is now found.

James Rodgers

Keith Sheffield, 1930-2017

Keith Hubert Sheffield, captain of Sydney University's First Grade semi-final team of 1956-57,  died in Brisbane on 3 June 2017, aged 87. 

Born on 13 February 1930, Keith was a popular boy at Canterbury Boys High School, with a pleasant manner and was a very keen sportsman from a young age.  At school, he played both cricket and rugby league, competing against Richie Benaud, who was at Parramatta High.

Cricket was his first love but he also excelled in football and golf. Although he never mentioned it to his children, his wife, Barbara, always said he was an excellent tennis player in his youth as well.  A prefect and vice-captain at his high school he excelled academically as well as on the sports field. He was interested in the classical languages of Greek and Latin and taught himself Greek while still at high school. After school he attended Sydney University where he met Barbara. He studied Law, Latin, French, Philosophy and History and graduated in Arts/Law in 1952. He became a solicitor working in Sydney CBD, where according to someone who knew him at the time he was popular and highly regarded for his work.

At Sydney University he began cricket in the lower grades, but was too talented not to rise to the top. He was a higher order batsman and complete all round fieldsman. He had a good knowledge of the game and of players in the various clubs. 

His cricketing strengths were in batting and fielding. He was awarded a ‘Blue’ by the University in 1951. 

Following graduation he was not eligible to continue with the University Club and during this time SUCC had disappointing results even though there was a nucleus of first graders with much potential. The feeling grew that he would be an appropriate leader to foster that potential as well as being an asset to the team as a player. As a graduate he would become eligible again if he was appointed a captain.

Under his leadership the team developed a new hopefulness and began to have success. Saxon White recalls: 'The only thing that made 56-57 different however, was that the University side grew up together over a few years.....so in that season when Keith Sheffield took the captaincy, the District Clubs were faced with a more confident and growly University.. Keith.. managed one of the best cricket years of our lives.'

An example of his initiative was his willingness to risk Donald Scott-Orr as the team's slow bowler, for lack of another. Donald was predominantly an opening batsman and had not bowled his slow stuff during earlier years with the club, except in the nets. To universal surprise this began to bear fruit, being backed by a talented fielding side. In addition he had two good really quick opening bowlers, Frank Stening and David Walker, yet he understood the wisdom of using his slow bowler unexpectedly early in the innings for reasons of surprise and because the main weapon of this bowler was what he did in the air, rather than off the pitch - this strategy worked even better when the ball was relatively new.

Such ability to engender confidence drew a response which resulted in the team engaging in the semi-finals for the first time in many years. It proved to signal a renaissance.

Keith played First Grade between 1949 and 1961, scoring 2919 runs at an average of 23.54, with a highest score of 121 not out.  That was, at the time, the fifth-highest tally of First Grade runs for Sydney University.  In all grades, he scored 3982 runs at 23.98, which was then the highest number of runs anyone had scored for the club.

He also continued playing rugby league for club teams.  With so much time devoted to sport he was not able to keep up fully with his work as a solicitor and with the financial demands of a growing family (by now four children) he eventually made the decision to leave legal practice, and Sydney, and took the family to Cooma in 1964 when he took on a job with the Snowy Mountains Authority. He wasted no time in joining Cooma Golf Club and Cooma Cricket Club

He then took a job at the University of New England in Armidale, northern NSW, where he worked under Zelman Cowen (later Sir Zelman Cowen, Governor-General of Australia) and of course joined the local golf club.

In the early 1970s the family relocated to Brisbane when Zelman Cowen, who had become Vice- Chancellor at the University of Queensland, offered him a job as Assistant Registrar. He worked there until his retirement in 1990.   While there he won awards for two study tours to the United States and Europe.

He had joined the local golf club and a steady stream of club prizes came into the house as he won weekend rounds and competition.

After the loss of his wife, Barbara, his memory began to fail. However, his daughter Jan and son Bruce flew him from Brisbane to attend the dinner at the Sydney Cricket Ground to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the Sydney University Cricket Club, when he sat with his 1956-57 team.

The Club's condolences are extended to the Sheffield family.

Don Scott-Orr and James Rodgers

 

101 years ago today...

101 years ago today...

                                     MAJOR JOHN NICHOLAS FRASER ARMSTRONG (1878-1916)

 

Major Armstrong of the Royal Engineers  was supervising the draining of a trench on the morning of Wednesday  5 July 1916. The weather, which had been fine, closed in on 4 July and the trenches filled easily. Amidst the noise and chaos of battle, Armstrong  was hit by a shell. He died later that day and was buried in the Fricourt British Cemetery.

This was the fifth day of the relentless Battle of the Somme which eventually lasted for 141 days and which resulted in  over one million casualties. This joint attack by the British and French forces on German positions at Picardy, astride the Somme River, had a net gain of six miles of ground.

Armstrong was born in 1878  in England into a well-connected family. His father was a law graduate of Oriel College Oxford. His maternal great grandmother was Mary Reibey (1777-1855), transported to NSW as a convict but who became a successful business woman and property owner and whose image is now on our $20 notes.  John Armstrong was educated at Sydney Church of England Grammar School (‘Shore’) after his family returned to Australia. Incidentally, ‘Wisden Cricketers’ Almanac’ makes a rare mistake when it gives his school as ‘Sydney Grammar’. At Shore, he was a successful and talented sportsman, winning ‘Blues’ for Rowing (bow seat in the 1st crew), Rugby Football (a powerful scrummager and light-footed  lineout jumper) and Cricket (opening bowler, leading wicket taker, who also batted at number 3).

Leaving Shore in June 1897 with a swag of sporting prizes, he enrolled in Arts at Sydney University but discontinued after First Year 1898.

Returning in 1901, this time he enrolled in the Faculty of Engineering,  sitting and passing a demanding series of first year exams in Chemistry, Physics, Maths, Geometry, Geography and Design and Drawing. He seemed to have found his feet and resumed his sporting career with relish. He rowed in the Sydney University Eight which had an emphatic win over Melbourne and Adelaide on the Parramatta River in 1903 and opened the bowling for the University 1st XI when the Club was readmitted to the 1st Grade Competition in 1902, having been restricted to the 2nd Grade Competition for four seasons.

Graduating with a Bachelor of Engineering (Mining and Metallurgy)in 1904, Armstrong made his way to South Africa where he was Manager of one of the De Beer’s mines in the Kimberley.

When war was declared, Armstrong was already 36 years old but the patriotic call  was insistent and he enlisted in England and was immediately appointed to the rank of Captain on 23 October 1914. He had some military experience, having served in a volunteer force, the Irish Rifles, in Sydney while he was an undergraduate, rising to the rank of Captain. During 1915, Armstrong  raised and trained a new company, the 128th Field Company of the Royal Engineers and was sent to France where he was plunged into active service from August 1915.

Amidst the slaughter on the Somme and the thousands of deaths, there was no formal obituary for John Armstrong.

He had written a short account of his time in France which was published in Shore’s magazine, ‘The Torchbearer’ in April 1916 and his former schoolmates were advised of his death by the next edition of the magazine. His name is listed in the school’s substantial Roll of Honour and in that of the University of Sydney. He has a marked grave at Fricourt.

But, John Nicholas Fraser Armstrong has been all but forgotten by the Club which he once proudly represented.

When you next take out a $20 note from your wallet, pause for a moment on Mary Reibey’s image, and today, remember her great grandson, killed in France 101 years ago.

James Rodgers