Team Announcements: Round 10

Team Announcements: Round 10

Round 10.jpg

SECOND GRADE
Syd Uni vs Mosman
Uni No.1 - 10:00am

Jack Holloway
Ryan McElduff
Charles Litchfield
James Larkin (c)
Darius Visser
Alex Shaw
James Crowley +
Tom Kierath
Jono Craig-Dobson
Dugald Holloway
Lawrence Neil-Smith

THIRD GRADE
Syd Uni vs Mosman
Rawson - 10:00am

Matt Powys
Ryan Danne
Jack Hill
Lewis Bedford
Tom Galvin
Ed Arnott +
Ash Cowan (c)
Josh Toyer
Liam Whitaker
Kieran Tate
Jack Lawson

FOURTH GRADE
Syd Uni vs Mosman
Cahill - 10:00am

Alex Bell
Brayden Dilley
Tom Fullerton
AJ Grant (c)
Michael Robinson
Ollie Thompson
Rob Browne
Hayden Storey +
Sam Wood
Aidan Peek
Jazz Rinka


FIFTH GRADE
Syd Uni vs Mosman
Bowral - 10:00am

Liam McElduff
Kevin Jacob
Hugh Farrow
Liam Hughes
Julian Dimas
Ned Barnet
Christian Lorenzato +
Ryan Bulger
Andrew Wilkinson (c)
Shivansh Pathak
Murray Miles

METRO CUO
Syd Uni vs UNSW Black
St Paul's - 10:00am

Brodie Frost
Muhammad Ghumman
Zohirul Islam
Nick Mortimer
Max Veltro
Harry Gibson
Greg Cade (c) +
Jono Phoebus
Ashwin Kirubanandan
Jon Aylward
Max Shanahan

LIONS
Syd Uni vs Reg Bartley
Reg Bartley - 1:30pm

Pieter Mees
Angus Stevens
Mohammed Ghumman
Ryan Blayney
Ross Anderson
Matt Freeman
Al Yap
Ajeet Kumar
Prasan Adikarige
Rakin Rahman
Ollie Ottosson

Five Things We Learned from Round 9

Five Things We Learned from Round 9

The finalists have been decided!

That's right, all eight of them.

You could be forgiven for having missed the fact that Round 9 of the First Grade competition was also Round 4 of the First Grade Limited Overs Cup.  Rather like Cricket Australia, the SCA struggles to know what to do with 50-over cricket: it needs to be in the mix somewhere, but squeezing it in presents a problem.  The current solution - to designate rounds of the premier Cricket competition as dual-purpose limited-overs rounds - is as sensible as anything, since it allows each club to play as many of the others as possible without requiring First Graders to turn out on every single Sunday in summer.  But it does rather have the effect that the competition flies under the radar until January when, all of a sudden, it's quarter-finals time.

The nature of the competition being what it is, it's no surprise that the top eight on the Limited Overs table bears a striking resemblance to the top eight on the First Grade table, the only difference being that Manly sneaked past Randwick-Petersham (and a bunch of other sides with two wins) by virtue of a bonus point.  Anyhow, on 28 January, table-topping Campbelltown plays Easts at Raby, while Parramatta plays Manly, Bankstown takes on Sutherland and Sydney and Sydney University meet at Drummoyne Oval.  

Ed Cowan is misunderstood

There are probably still a few misguided players out there who buy the line that Ed Cowan is a dogged, grafting strokeless opening batsman - a caricature of his game that grew out of a period when he was playing under instructions at the highest level of the game.  This always amuses those of us who recall that when Cowan played together with Kevin Pietersen in Sydney University's 2002-03 premiership side, they both hit the same number of sixes (19, since you ask).  Cowan always had, and still has, the ability to demolish any bowling short of the highest class, which he showed in his blistering 71-ball century against St George on Saturday.  Although he showed due respect to a probing opening spell from his Blues team-mate Trent Copeland,  Cowan still reached fifty from only 52 balls, with his square-driving of the quicker bowlers a feature of his innings.  But he raced to his century from the next 19 balls, shredding St George's young spinner Chris MacDougal, whose four overs cost 48, repeatedly lofting drives down the ground.  When he eventually miscued an attempted ramp, Cowan had hit 13 fours and five sixes, racing to 120 from 88 balls.  Nick Larkin played well for 54, Liam Robertson finished the innings in spectacular style with 65 not out from 41 balls, and University's 5 for 324 always looked too much for the Saints, although a furious 83 not out from Jonathan Rose (from only 49 balls) threatened an upset before Robertson effectively settled the issue by grabbing three wickets in his first over.

Manly is doing something right with its juniors

A few rounds back, we commented on the progress of Manly's Jack Edwards, who is now off on duty with the Australian Under 19 side.  His place in the Manly side is being kept warm by 17 year old Oliver Davies, a product of St Paul's Catholic College Manly and the highly effective Manly junior system.  Davies was captain of the NSW Metro Under-17s this year, and has been finding his way in Seconds (where he hammered 167 against Gordon in Round 5).  He earned a First Grade call-up with a furious Poidevin-Gray innings against Randwick-Petersham in which he smashed ten sixes on the way to 163 from 124 balls.  Technically, the match against Wests wasn't his First Grade debut, as he'd played a T20 match in November, but the newcomer played with unbelievable confidence and assurance, stroking 44 from 37 balls with two sixes.  His innings gave Manly the acceleration it needed to reach a total that was just beyond the grasp of Wests' batsmen - although they chased hard until Joe Graham's hat-trick derailed the lower order.

Jarrad Burke probably wishes he had an English grandfather

Another round, another Campbelltown win, another record for Jarrad Burke, along with a few more O'Reilly Medal points.  Burke's 3-16 (and 13 not out from 11) set up Campbelltown's clinically efficient win over Penrith, and in the process he became the 31st bowler to take 600 Sydney First Grade wickets.  Only four of those bowlers - Test captain MA Noble, Blues all-rounder Grant Lambert, Anthony Clark and now Burke - have also scored 10,000 First Grade runs.  The last time a spinner did so well in the Sydney Premier cricket competition, he was hoisted into the Sheffield Shield side and within a year was playing for England.  Burke's representative career never got past three T20 games for NSW back in 2005-06.  How different it might have been if he'd only had an English grandfather.

Experience seems to count for something

University of NSW's Second Grade opener, Danny Bhandari, is old.   Don't believe us?  Well, he's a member of the Board of Cricket NSW, which makes you old by definition.  He's also old enough to have played against Five Things, which means he just about belongs in a nursing home.  And yet, taking on the new ball and a truckload of aggressive, sappy young quicks in Seconds, he has already scored 426 runs this season, at the very healthy average of 47, which puts him on track to match last season's 654 runs.  On Saturday, his dogged 78 almost helped the Bees to upset competition leaders, Northern District.  In the process, he passed 5500 runs in Seconds (no-one has made more for UNSW) and became the Bees sixth-highest run-scorer in Premier Cricket.  We are yet to confirm the rumour that he has launched a Board inquiry into the problem of why young Grade fast bowlers aren't sharp enough to unsettle elderly batsmen.

 

Round 9 Match Reports

Round 9 Match Reports

1ST GRADE

Sydney Uni 5-324: E Cowan 120, L Robertson 65*, N Larkin 54
St George 305: T Ley 3-33, L Robertson 3-43

The students were back at home to start the new year in an important round for not only the one day competition, needing a victory to qualify for finals, but the overall ladder. St George had struggled thus far in 2017/18, but the season has taught us not to take any side lightly in the first grade competition.

With the coin falling in favour of the Saints, the students were asked to bat on a grassy surface that lacked the hardness we have become accustomed to. Copeland broke through early, finding the edge of the dangerous Kerr. The good news ended there though, as a fit and fresh Ed Cowan strolled to the middle. Cowan looked scratchy early on, symptomatic of three weeks away from playing, but was then quickly into his work. Larkin went about setting a platform at the other end before falling for 54. Cowan surged onwards, racing from 50 off 52 balls to his century off only 71 deliveries. His dominant display came to an end on 120, leaving the team in a strong position going into the final 10 overs.

The middle order did what they have all season, icing the cake, to end the overs 5/324. Cummins 24 (23), Trevor-Jones 22* (27) and Robertson an incredible 65* (41) which included three maximums. Anything in excess of 300 is historically a safe total at Sydney Uni, but the nature of the wicket this season has meant big chases are increasingly possible.

The elder statesman, Tim Ley, bowled beautifully with the new ball, grabbing a double break through to reduce Saints to 2/51. Aggressive batting from Saints kept the scoreboard ticking along, with Malone and Cowan bowling nicely in tandem. Malone took 1/52 from his ten overs, leaving St George needing 200 with 20 overs to go. Wickets continued to fall steadily but the rate never got too far out of hand for the visiting side.

Jono Rose seemed to find the boundary whenever they needed it most. Lawrence Neil-Smith returned to pick up a wicket on debut, bowling Copeland who had made a swift half century. Rose then took a liking to the lanky quick, clearing the ropes on a number of occasions.

The captain turned to experience with the game on the line, with the pairing of Robertson and Ley to round out the final 9 overs. Robertson had immediate impact, taking three wickets in his opening over to complete a great all round display. From there, the Student’s held their nerve to finish as 19 run victors - Ley claiming the final wicket to end up with an impressive 3/33 from 9.1 overs (incidentally the final wickets he will take in his 20’s).

 

2ND GRADE

Sydney Uni 4-230: J Larkin 57, J Holloway 53*, R McElduff 44
St George 6-226: R McElduff 2-28, D Holloway 2-55

St George elected to bat on a greenish deck at Hurstville. Opening bowlers John and Joy bowled full and extracted some movement, with John picking up the first wicket caught at mid-off. It was to be a trend of the day, as Holloway replaced Joy and immediately had impact, picking up the other opener in the same fashion. As the heat set in, spin brothers Kierath and McElduff got into their work. They bowled 10 overs without change in an inspiring display of economy and tact. The fast bowlers were certainly thankful when the second drinks break arrived and already 39 overs had been bowled. St George were sitting at 140 at this stage, well behind any par total. Their ‘in’ batsman therefore turned up the heat on our bowlers and deposited anything loose over cover for six in the last 10. Perhaps Joy became too greedy or DHolloway was too wide, either way St George finished with 226 runs and the Uni were pleased to get out of the sun. 

The orders from Captain Larkin were to play with intent and attack the total. Opening batsman Craze would later say that he thought about scooping the first ball. Instead he looped a forward push to gully for a golden duck. Litchfield looked like a new man at the crease, charging the opening bowlers and in one of five attempts hitting him back over his head for four. Meanwhile McElduffwas a rock at the other end, working ones and twos and punishing anything on his pads. It took a questionable dismissal to end the partnership, with Litchfield given out hit-wicket after charging, missing the ball, scrambling back into his crease, and dislodging his own bails in the process. Despite the attempts of incoming batsman Larkin to get a decision reversal, Litchfield was forced to walk from the field. Larkin followed his ownorders and took a liking to the short boundary, swiping sixes and fours from one end. He raced to a run-a- ball fifty, before being caught on the rope, leaving the students with a required run-rate of less than 4 to win. J Holloway came in and struck the ball sweetly, running well with McElduff until the opener was caught short of his ground attempting a three. Salivating at the possibility of red-ink, Shaw strode to the crease and nudged single after single, frustrating St George into defeat. Holloway slapped a few boundaries and reached fifty on the last ball, Uni winning with 7 overs remaining.

 

3RD GRADE

Sydney Uni 5-142: M Powys 47, L Bedford 31
St George 8-140: L Whitaker 3-9, J Toyer 3-31

After a delightfully indulgent 3-week break, primarily spent consuming, the units arrived at fortress Camperdown eager to get back into the season and shake off some xmas mud. Your scribe in particular felt under some pressure, and the skins were put to a full test after apparently “shrinking in the wash” during the holiday season, or something.

Nash as always was a good contest and the sweaty conditions suited everyone who wasn’t marking Josh Toyer. The old had the benefit of the extra man and eventually that advantage paid dividends, with a late soccer goal sealing a hard-fought 2-0 win. Honourable mentions to Galv and Furby, dishonourable mention to the Mattress and his distribution from the back. Your scribe much improved after some time in the hall of mirrors midweek, but still off the pace (see previous comments regarding the xmas break etc and so on).

A green pitch awaited and there promised to be a bit in it early, but it would get better and be a belter later in the day (as there is every week, in every 3rd grade pitch in Sydney). The toss was run and won (new year, new me) and the Units elected to bowl and to apply some pressure early before the temperature got too oppressive.

Openers Toyer and Wood got us off to a solid start and some early wickets and good economy rates meant that the Units were soon well on top. The introduction of Danno and L Newington solidified this advantage before some late order cameos and application from the Saints batters turned the tide. It proved to be too little too late however, and 8/140 from the allotted 50 overs was always going to be tough to defend on a good batting track. Toyer picked up 3, Wood 1 and Leggie 1, Danno miserly (bowled well without luck).

Obviously, the main reason for this was the excellent off-spin bowling of Liam Whitaker. The young man has rediscovered his best form recently and it was on full display as he ran through the heart of the Saints batting line up (I believe most of whom he went to school with, fraternising $$$ bolstering the fines kitty). Liam varied his pace and extracted turn and bounce to which the batters had no answer, 2/0 off 4 becoming 3/9 off 10 straight in a match winning performance that was awesome to watch.

After a sumptuous repast at one of the adjacent cafés, it was on to the chase and the unspoken 30 over target to achieve 7 points. Hillsy, fresh off a prolific Harry Kane-esq 2017 calendar year unfortunately nicked off early, but a disquietingly well-groomed Matt Powys and Lew Bedford set about putting together a strong partnership that took the impetus from the St George attack and left us feeling comfortable that the boni would be attained. Danno and Furby chipped in with Powys but after some good seam bowling from the ageless Steve Wark (who I understand grabbed his 700th wicket for St George trapping Danno in front, congrats on the achievement), the mood of the game changed a bit and the Saints sensed that they were in with a sniff.

Some jitters at 5/107 were quickly (and thankfully) eased when Tom Galvin and your scribe got together and set about scoring the remaining 35 runs as quickly as possible (20 balls I think). A couple of massive horns, including an impressive piece of legside hitting from Galvin meant that the game was won 5 down in the 27th over and 7 points attained. A quick trip back to No1 to watch the end of the 1s match and a few schooners capped off a great day for the club.

Back to back bonies and the season is well and truly back on track. It is now on to round 10 where we travel to leafy Mosman to take on Aadil and his Whales in a rematch of last year’s semi-final. Fraternisation $$$ and a hard-hitting contest await as we battle our old foes in another top-6 clash.

 

4TH GRADE

Sydney Uni 9-179: T Fullerton 68, AJ Grant 38, B Dilley 30
St George 141: S Canagasingham 3-28, R Browne 3-29, A Peek 2-26

The second half of the season greeted our cricketers with some stifling heat and a contest that could well count toward a finals berth for the victor. St George have always proved a thorn in the side for the Sydney University lower grade sides so our best cricket would be required, especially when first class cricketers of recent eras are named in the opposition. Thankfully, initial signs all pointed to a positive day for the students with the Nuffies gaining the right to claim an undefeated Nash record in 2018 and the skipper got the call right giving us first use of the new facilities at Olds Park. 

A disciplined effort was produced by the batsmen, led by Tom Fullerton's 68, and we were able to accumulate 179 from our 50 overs. Accumulate strikes me as the fitting word as Olds Park is genuinely an enormous oval and the boys were required to physically run for the majority of their runs. Five boundaries were scored across the entire innings despite the skipper trying his darnedest to find the rope. These conditions and the ambient temperatures made the compiled 179 quite a competitive total but still a strong effort would be required from the bowlers.

The bowlers produced a sound showing and the pressure largely remained on the saints young batting group across the after. Each of the bowlers worked hard to squeeze the batsmen and forced the false shot on a number of occasions. As the ball softened our bowlers only got better with a shout out needing to be given to Shehan, Robbie "Golden Arm" Browne and Olly, who put on a restrictive bowling clinic. Wickets started to fall in relatively quick succession and the uni boys were able to move through the afternoon and into a well earned song after dismissing the saints for 141. 

Now in the 6, the focus for the coming weeks will be to keep our momentum and push for March with a strong group.

 

5TH GRADE

Sydney Uni 4-210: M Robinson 66, V Umbers 57, J Dimas 46*
St George 209: M Miles 3-40, M Robinson 3-41

Arriving at St Paul’s to an Umpire removing his shirt from the plastic packaging, we knew that it wouldn’t  be a day without controversy. The pitch looked absolutely smashing and it looked that there was going to be runs scored all throughout the day. The late arrival of Islam was ignored by several members of the team and Nash got underway. Rare versus Non-rare Nash, with a few members of the team harshly judged to be rarer than others, much to the disgust of said players. The brand of Nash played was horrendous to say the least. It can really be summed up by the sight of Islam standing in the goals with headphones in trying to get his playlist right for the day. Rare ran out 6-5 winners at the end after a poor defensive start from the Non-rare. Two way running non-existent throughout the game.

The students were made to field, with Johnno grabbing the early scalp after some tight bowling, to start the opening spell well. Miles and Johnno were replaced by Robinson and Draca, with Robinson sliding one on to trap the number 3 in front. The umpire was quick to lift the finger to seemingly give his first dismissal in grade cricket - a special moment. The next period of the game did not go the way of the fielding team. A 40 metre, extremely generous guess, boundary and a pitch that gave nothing to the bowlers, the opening batsmen and their number 4 put on a 130 run partnership that featured some hacking and some undisciplined bowling. It took a drinks break and a spray from the captain to get the students back into gear and back into the game. Some tight bowling from N Barnet and Wilko as well as the heat got to the batsmen and cracks started to show the batting lineup. Disciplined bowling from meant St George lost 8/43, to be bowled out for 209 inside their 50 overs.

After a well earned 45 mins out of the sun, play resumed with Duff and Vince opening up. With the pitch offering essentially nothing now, Uni got off to a good start before 2 quick wickets mean we were 2/39 and under pressure from some constricting bowling from the St George openers. After scratchy starts, respectively, Umbers and Robinson eventually found their groove and put on 104 to swing the momentum back into the students favour. Both Batsmen exploited the short boundary and the tired legs of the fielding team to their fullest, showing a combination of power and finesse throughout their innings. Robinson kicked one first rock off the leggie to depart for 66. The umpiring was once again in the spotlight when Vince was judged caught off the leggie, after he had hit the ball into the ground. The ball proceeded to rebound off the back of his bat and into the hands of the wicketkeeper. It was quite calm scenes was the captain, to the surprise of many at the game and those hearing it second hand, but in the end the students proved too strong. Some power hitting from J Dimas towards the end meant the game was wrapped up with 9 overs to spare and 6 points secured.

Four wins in a row for 5s, allowed for back to back clean sweeps for the club, showing that they can actually contribute to the club championships points tally. The win leaves them just outside the top 10 and with many bowlers and some batsmen starting to find some form, they could be a dark horse in the competition for a place in the Finals. 

 

METRO CUP

Sydney Uni 121: M Ghumman 39
Mosman 125: S Pathak 5-18

First match after Christmas saw Metro travel to beautiful Balmoral Oval to play Mo$man ($35 dollars for parking outside the ground!). Unfortunately on the day it seemed the team was suffering a bit of a New Years hangover with everything being a little sluggish in execution.

Toss is won and we bowl first on a green deck. The field is relatively slow and runs are hard to come by. Each of the early bowlers pick up a pole each before young leggie Shiv Pathak
comes on and demonstrates great control as well as a much improved and wicked wrong'un that
no batsmen was able to read. A wicket in his second over, three in his fifth including a super caught and bowled and Shiva rips through the middle order finishing with 5-18 off 7 overs.

Mosman finish bowled out for 125 off 39.2 overs which in honest assessment was 20 runs too many.

We'll keep things short describing our batting innings because there weren't many highlights.
Frankly we are not batting smart and playing "situational cricket". We must recognise what is happening in the game and adjust our play accordingly. We need to value our wicket more, show a little fight and not just do our own thing thinking the next batsman is going to get the runs if we throw it away. Every player in the team has the talent to make runs from 1-11 and it's disappointing to see potentials not being reached 2 out of the last 3 rounds. The good news is all these things can be addressed down to the man at training in the coming weeks.

We finished 4 runs short of the opposition total with reliable Muhummad Ghumman making 39, skipper Cade 23 and Pathak 16. A day to move on from quickly and start fresh this week with a home game to look forward to and getting back to a positive traditional Uni style of play.

 

SYDNEY UNI LIONS

SU Lions 5-181 off 35 overs: Stevens 62, Ghumman 42, Mees 35* 
Paddington 106: Ghumman 6-10

With temps over 40C at 1pm, there was some mumbling about playing a T20 or calling it off altogether.  But St Andrews looked a picture with a hard deck, and after a bit of discussion between the skippers the ‘we’re here we might as well play’ view prevailed.  Happily, we won the toss and had no hesitation is sending Paddo into the field in the heat.  Special thanks to Andrew Wilkinson, who answered a call at 1.30 to come down and help out (after a last minute withdrawal), notwithstanding the 40+ temp.

Angus Stevens opened up with Oscar Kirk from the Green Shield side.  Angus was suffering from his activities the night before, but still hit some out of the middle early. After Oscar departed without scoring Angus was joined by Mo Ghumman, who we have come to expect runs from.  And they were both savage on anything lose, peppering the short square boundaries.  Next wickets did not fall until 108, when Mohammed departed for 42.  That prompted a collapse, as Stevens went for 62, then both Le Couteur and Bibin Anthony without scoring.  We had lost 4-3. Fortunately Pieter Mees and Ajeet Kumar (14), got the scoring going again, and Pieter (35*) had some late help from Andrew Wilkinson (14*).  Each of Stevens, Ghumman, Mees and Wilkinson hit one six, with the highlight being a back foot smash by Mees over the longish extra cover boundary, pretty much the same spot where Stevens had deposited one off the front foot about 25 overs earlier.  The last 5 overs yielded 49 runs, and Vets finished 5-181.

In reply Ajeet bowled some tidy overs, with Andrew Wilkinson generating a bit more pace and outswing from the other end.  Wilkinson had multiple LBW appeals turned down again Paddo’s left handed opener, Carroll, which caused both him and then Carroll to get a bit heated.  Ghumman replaced Ajeet and bowled one of the openers in his first over, and then Wilkinson finally got a decision in his favour against the Paddo number 3.  At the first drinks (12 overs) Paddo were 2-37, and it seemed that Carroll was the only batsman likely to stand between the Lions and victory. And within a few overs of the resumption Ghumman had put an end to that, with further wickets in his 4th and 5th overs, including Carroll, and then 3 wickets in his sixth over.  Mohammed finished with 6 overs, 6-10.  Well bowled sir; full, straight, skiddy and with a bit of inswing!!  Those wickets included two catches in slips, one each to Stevens and Yap - both sharp catches.  By 20 overs the game was over as a contest.  After that we saw a welcome return to the bowling crease for Ross Anderson, and Oscar Kirk take the final 2 wickets.  Special mention to Al Yap, who bowled 5 overs 0-18, while Ghumman was causing carnage from the other end, and went past the bat numerous times.  Paddo were all out for 106 in the 32 over.  A comprehensive victory for the Lions.

Team Announcements: Round 9

Team Announcements: Round 9

Round 9.jpg

Congratulations to Lawrence Neil-Smith who will make his 1st Grade debut in a strong line up!

2ND GRADE

Syd Uni vs St George
Hurstville Oval 10am

Jack Holloway

Ryan McElduff

Charles Litchfield

James Larkin (c)

Nicky Craze

Alex Shaw

James Crowley +

Tom Kierath

Jono Craig-Dobson

Dugald Holloway

Ben Joy

 

5TH GRADE

Syd Uni vs St George
St Paul's Oval 10am

Liam McElduff

Vince Umbers

Michael Robinson

Ned Barnet

Zohirul Islam

Ryan Bulger

Julian Dimas +

Tom Draca

Andrew Wilkinson (c)

Jon Phoebus

Murray Miles

3RD GRADE

Syd Uni vs St George
Camperdown 10am

Matt Powys

Ryan Danne

Jack Hill

Lewis Bedford

Tom Galvin

Ed Arnott +

Ash Cowan (c)

Josh Toyer

Sam Wood

Liam Whitaker

Jack Lawson

 

METRO CUP

Syd Uni vs Mosman
Balmoral Oval 10am

Rakin Rahman

Muhammad Ghumman

Nick Mortimer

Ethan Jamieson

Harry Gibson

Jon Aylward

Shivansh Pathak

Greg Cade (c) +

Max Shanahan

Om Prakash Sah

Prasan Adikarage

4TH GRADE

Syd Uni vs St George
Olds Park 10am

Alex Bell

Brayden Dilley

Hayden Storey +

Tom Fullerton

AJ Grant (c)

Hugh Farrow

Oliver Thompson

Shehan Canagasingham

Aidan Peek

Jazz Rinka

Rob Browne

 

SYDNEY UNI LIONS

Lions vs Paddington
St Andrews (Sun) 1:30pm

P Moorhouse

M Ghumman

R Anderson

A Kumar

A Yap

P Mees +

A Stevens

O Kirk

S Pascoe

B Anthony

P Adikarage

Round 8 Match Reports

Round 8 Match Reports

Over the weekend, Sydney Uni Cricket took its first clean sweep of the year during Round 8 of the NSW McDonald's Premier Cricket Competition against Fairfield-Liverpool. All players across the Club's 6 teams performed outstandingly as they head into some well-deserved time off over the Christmas break and into the new year.

Congratulations to all players on their achievements during the 2017-18 season so far. We wish you all the best over the Christmas break and look forward to a successful remainder of the season in 2018. 


MATCH RESULTS
 

1ST GRADE

Sydney Uni 6-314: N Larkin 136, H Kerr 62, T Cummins 43*
Fairfield-Liverpool 9-267: L Robertson 2-29, T Ley 2-43, D Malone 2-68

The students turned up to a sweltering Rosedale Oval keen on grabbing an all important win to round out the first half of the season. Nash ball was gain a hotly contested affair with the batsmen going down in dubious circumstances. Onto the fixture and Uni won yet another toss and quickly elected to bat. The return of Nick Larkin to the top of the order settled some nerves as he settled into his work. It was his opening partner Hayden Kerr however, who again led the early charge with some clean ball striking. Kerr passed 50 for a 4th time this season before being dismissed for a well made 63. The dynamic right hand bat as truly brought another dimension to the uni side up the top of the order in white ball cricket. Fingers crossed he stays off the Christmas ham and continues his form into 2018. 

Upon HK's dismissal bowling all-rounder Ed Cowan joined Larkin in the middle and immediately began to put the Fairfield side under immense pressure with a brilliant display of running between the wickets and backing up. Such was his enthusiasm that the heat eventually got to him as he was dismissed for a quickfire 30. By this stage Larkin had well and truly settled into his work and provided the much needed backbone to the uni innings. Another handy contribution by Tim Cummins (43*) along with some brutal stroke play to the end the innings saw Uni eventually finish on 6-314. Larkin solid throughout the innings only to be dismissed on the final ball for a breath taking 136. Nick now joins Ed Cowan on 12 First Grade hundreds for the club. A remarkable and well deserved achievement for a player who has worked tirelessly at his game. 

Defending 314 for a place in the top 6 before the break, Tim Ley (fresh off his engagement to fellow mid-tier member Briony Campbell) got the students off to the perfect start trapping Srivastava in front for a duck. Hayden Kerr chipped in with the 2nd wicket as the score had moved to 64 in just the 12th over. Enter the spin twins who quickly settled into their work strangling the batsmen. It was Malone who grabbed the big breakthrough after a sharp piece of work behind the stumps saw Critchley stumped for a quickfire 49. Not to be outdone - Tedro Cowan deceived up and coming batsmen Luke Ohrynowsky with some delicious flight to have him well caught in the outfield by fellow twin Malone. 

With uni looking well on top at this stage it was only the heat that provided a real threat. Tim Cummins had to see out the remainder of the game from the sidelines as the mercury went through the roof. With 10 men on the field Liam Robertson chipped in with some vital breakthroughs to halt any hopes Fairfield had of a victory. From that moment Devlin Malone and Joe Kershaw returned to grab a couple of freebies as the students claimed a hard fought victory and celebrated well into the night. See you in 2018 for what promises to be a closely contested run to the finals. 
 

2ND GRADE

Sydney Uni 5-300: N Craze 162*, A Shaw 43, J Larkin 35
Fairfield-Liverpool 8-211: B Joy 4-25, J Craig-Dobson 2-35
 

3RD GRADE

Sydney Uni 0-113: B Larkin 72*, M Powys 41*
Fairfield-Liverpool 112: J Lawson 4-33, L Whitaker 3-27, J Toyer 2-24

What a difference a week makes. After a couple of lean (nude) rounds the Units travelled to the outer suburbs hungry to take some points against the Lions going into the festive period. Fairfield Oval was the venue, and on a bright sunny day we were greeted by a good pitch that promised plenty of reward for the batsmen who applied themselves. Despite my repeated comments during the week that we would be treated to multiple (mixed quality) baseball contests on the adjoining diamond, lamentably it was not to be, and we had the 3-hectare complex to ourselves.

In a move that shocked your scribe, everyone was bright eyed and bushy tailed and on time, so young had the extra man in Nash which they used to good effect, coming away with a hard-fought victory to end the year on a high. Much soul searching and time in the Nash nets for your scribe over the next 3 weeks, it was another absolutely horrific performance from one who was once rightly considered in the top handful at the club (circa 2006) but now appears to be languishing in an extended dotage (2010 – present).

At any rate, it was back to type as I lost the toss and the units were asked to field. A solid start from the Lions built a platform but this was rapidly undone by the devastatingly rare spin partnership of Leggie and Whit. The spin twins took wickets at both ends (including a catch each off the other’s bowling) to rip the heart out of the Lions’ middle order, with a relatively stable 2/63 becoming 9/97. Toyerbald chimed in at the start and the finish, taking as many wickets as he went through playing shirts (2) and also effecting a comical run-out after, in the words of Wood, performing “the worst drop he has ever seen”… All out 112, and on a road that was never going to be enough, the only questions being how many overs it would take, and how many wickets would be lost. The answers were not many and nought, respectively.

After a sumptuous pork roll ($3 each, god knows how that little bakery ever stands to make any profit with those razor thin margins) openers Larkin and the newly promoted Powys set about ticking off the runs. Larkin in particular was disdainful, batting as he liked as the poor bowlers were dispatched to all parts of complex including a magnificent straight 6 off a medium pacer. It has often been said that Chip has the full range of shots, but he has the supreme patience to not use them (I said it to at least 4 different groups of people on Sat arvo/evening, and it’s probably been said by someone else once) and indeed it was the case on the day. Joe Dirt for once was the slow and circumspect partner, and his run a ball 41* was overshadowed by Chippers masterful 72*.

To chase the total none down in 16 overs was a pretty comprehensive display, and the Units retired to the shade at No1 in good time to tuck into a few of TK’s ice-cold premiums (Stone and Wood, delicious) and prepare for the xmas party. Multiple stories emerged from the evening’s festivities, and these are quite obviously not suitable for publication in this forum. Suffice to say a good night was had by all.

We go to the break poised in 7th and with 3 tough fixtures early in the new year we have an opportunity to test ourselves against the best and hopefully leapfrog some teams above us at present and get back to where we belong.
 

4TH GRADE

Sydney Uni 5-101: T Fullerton 39*
Fairfield-Liverpool 100: AJ Grant 4-23, A Peek 3-24, R Browne 2-13
 

5TH GRADE

Sydney Uni 9-245: A Wilkinson 49*, R Bulger 38, J Robertson 36, H Storey 35
Fairfield-Liverpool 148: M Miles 3-23, M Phoebus 3-25, R Bulger 2-39
 

METRO CUP

Sydney Uni 3-138: J Dimas 47, N Mortimer 40*, R Rahman 29
Randwick Petersham Green 133: M Shanahan 5-32, A Kirubanandan 3-16

A home game and some welcome general lineup stability for Metro this week against our recent arch rivals Randwick Petersham Green. Fortunately an official umpire is appointed for the match, saving the Uni captain a trip to the doctor for blood pressure medication...for now. The toss is won and even though the pitch looks good, the once bitten twice shy Student captain decides to have a bowl and continue our excellent time with the ball from last week.

Ashwin Kirubanandan takes the new rock and has this scribes vote for the most improved player on the Uni scene from preseason to Christmas. Ashwin is bowling with real pace now and there is genuine thought and intent behind every ball bowled. He is also a gun fielder and developing nicely as a batsman as well. Ashwin picks up the pesky Randwick skipper for 0 in the first over with a beautiful in dipping ball that rattles the stumps. Music to our ears and a great way to start putting doubt in all their batsmans minds. Ashwin's day ended up with figures of  3-16 off 8 overs.

Mighty Max Shanahan holds up his end picking up the other opener for a duck as well, with a great take from Julian Dimas who most likely stole a catch from his fellow gripper Muhammad. There was some middle order resistance from Randwick and a 60 run partnership to which you can only say well played, as it was not easy against our attack. It's also a good lesson to us that we still have to earn our wickets even against the slightly weaker teams and never get complacent.

Max had a day in the sun combining with Julian Dimas at short mid-wicket for 2 more freakish catches and was on a hatrick at one point. Juilain's efforts in the field were pretty influential. He's a smart cricketer with amazing hands and offers regular tactical insights to the captain. Max finished with lifetime best figures of 5-32. Max is a hard trainer and we're all happy the long hours in the nets is baring fruit on the field for the left armer.

There was a little wag in the tail with the opening bowler having a swing against our spiiners but our Nepalese Nightmare spinner Om Prakash Sah picked up the final wicket caught behind to Cade.

Randwick finishing all out 133 off 39.5 overs. The captains broken record once more played the same old song at the break.. "The Job's Only Half Done".. It's an oldie but a goodie..

Openers Rahman and Ghumann set about the task and were dependable as usual putting on an opening stand of 43 before Mo was out caught for 12. A slight hiccup in the innings occurred with Rakin falling for 29 with the score still on 43. From then on it was smooth sailing with Dimas and Nick Mortimer combining for a 78 run partnership. Some great and controlled power hitting from the pair and it wouldn't be a day out at Paul's without a couple of lost balls in the infamous construction zone. Dimas eventually caught just short of 50 on 47.

Morts is joined by Gibbo and the final 12 runs are scored passing the Randwick total  in just 17.1 overs. Morts 40 not out doubling his run total for the season and a platform built for after Christmas.

As Kermit the frog once sang "It's Not Easy Being Green" and that just about sums up the day/season for the Randwick Green side. We were just a little more polished and experienced than them in all aspects of the game this season in our two outings against them. The opposition captain was overheard after the match observing that Uni "had a team of opening bowlers". A rare glimpse into how others might see our team at present.

Part 1 of the season done and dusted and an exciting new chapter after Christmas with it all to play for going into the break 3rd place on the ladder. A great place to be especially with the amount of lineup changes we've had so far.

Thanks to everyone who's been involved with the club so far this season for their efforts. From the entire Metro team we'd all like to wish you all a happy and safe holiday period. Please be kind to one another! 😀

 

GREEN SHIELD

Sydney Uni 8-244: B Mitchell 68, S Pathak 36, J Aylward 32*, N Barnet 31
Campbelltown-Camden 223: J Rinka 4-38, L Dimeglio 3-39

 

Team Announcements: Round 8

Team Announcements: Round 8

Round 8.jpg

2ND GRADE

Syd Uni vs Fairfield-Liverpool
Uni No.1 Oval 10am

Jack Holloway

Jack Hill

Charles Litchfield

James Larkin (c)

Nicky Craze

Alex Shaw

James Crowley +

Tom Kierath

Jono Craig-Dobson

Dugald Holloway

Ben Joy

 

5TH GRADE

Syd Uni vs Fairfield-Liverpool
Don Dawson 10am

Suda Sivapalan

Vince Umbers

James Robertson

Ned Barnet

Zohirul Islam

Ryan Bulger

Hayden Storey +

Tom Draca

Andrew Wilkinson (c)

Jon Phoebus

Murray Miles

3RD GRADE

Syd Uni vs Fairfield-Liverpool
Fairfield 10am

Matt Powys

Ryan Danne

Ben Larkin

Lewis Bedford

Tom Galvin

Ed Arnott +

Ash Cowan (c)

Josh Toyer

Sam Wood

Liam Whitaker

Jack Lawson

 

METRO CUP

Syd Uni vs Randwick Petersham Green
St Paul's Oval 10am

Rakin Rahman

Muhammad Ghumman

Nick Mortimer

Julian Dimas

Ethan Jamieson

Harry Gibson

Jon Aylward

Ashwin Kirubanandan

Greg Cade (c) +

Max Shanahan

Om Prakash Sah

4TH GRADE

Syd Uni vs Fairfield-Liverpool
Cahill Park 10am

Alex Bell

Brayden Dilley

Kevin Jacob

Tom Fullerton

AJ Grant (c)

Hugh Farrow

Oliver Thompson

Christian Lorenzato +

Aidan Peek

Jazz Rinka

Rob Browne

 

SYDNEY UNI LIONS

Lions vs Yaralla
Goddard Park 1:30pm

Yaralla forfeited
no match

Trio through to National Champs GF

Trio through to National Champs GF

A trio of Sydney University representatives have secured berths in the U19 National Champs grand final with NSW Metro and Cricket Australia XI to meet in the decider on Friday.

Opening bowler, Lawrence Neil-Smith, has been powerful with the ball for NSW Metro taking 14 wickets throughout the tournament at an average of 13.21. He was instrumental in the Qualifying Final win on Tuesday with 5 wickets and was superb again in today's Semi Final against Western Australia with 2-21 from 7 overs.

Ryan McElduff joins Neil-Smith in the NSW Metro squad for Friday's final. McElduff has found opportunities tough to come by with a star studded top order who has only lost 40 wickets across their 7 matches. McElduff scored an unbeaten 29 in NSW Metro's only loss, to a powerful Queensland team in Round 5.

Sydney University is assured a national champion, with Neil-Smith and McElduff on one side and with 15-year old A.W. Green Shield quick, Dominic O'Shannessy, part of the Cricket Australia XI. O'Shannessy gave his best performance of the tournament today in his team's semi final win over South Australia, claiming 4-53 from his 10 overs.

The Under 19 National Championship final will be played on Friday at 1.30pm at Blundstone Arena, and will be live-streamed and free-to-view via www.cricket.com.au.