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From the Chairman...

FROM THE CHAIRMAN

 

It’s hard to think of a more proud moment in cricket than last Thursday when Dave Stanton took the Club photo with the Club Championship trophy. In all our long history, we’ve held it only three times…and this time by a monumental 190 points clear of second place!

This is a triumph for everyone involved in the Club, players, coaches, scorers, groundstaff, parents, supporters, former players. We can all deservedly feel proud.

This season has also been dedicated to Mick O’Sullivan’s memory. Micko’s spirit has been with us right through every game.

1st Grade…minor premiers by 15 points

2nd Grade…minor premiers by 19 points

3rd Grade…2nd

4th and 5th Grades..consistent and improving performances especially in the second part of the season.

6th Grade…semi finalists

 

Now…finals cricket is a level above what we’ve been through so far.

Let’s make the Presentation Night on 12 April ( GET YOUR ACCEPTANCE IN!) one for prolonged celebration.

James Rodgers

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Sesquicentenary Caps - decades of origin!

The following list depicts those who have ordered a commemorative cap to celebrate our 150th birthday! Order one to find your place in history at SUCC, and be sure to be at the Launch Dinner come April 12th.

PRE 1950s

1893 Tom Garrett RIP 1

1893 J P Strickland RIP 17

1906 Hector Clayton RIP 99

1909 A D Watson RIP 111

1940 Jack Dillon RIP 307

1950s

1952 Don Scott-Orr 389

1953 Eric Stockdale 398

1953 Jim Mackie 394

1954 Saxon White 401

1954 Graham Reed 402

1955 Frank Stening 407

1955 Dick Woodfield 409

1957 Alan Cash 419

1959 Jon Erby 426

1960s

1961 Alan Crompton 439

1962 Mike Pawley 443

1963 David Scanlan 450

1965 Alex Dietsch 454

1965 Philip Scanlan 456

1966 John Weight 457

1966 Dick Mesley RIP 458

1966 Rob Storey 461

1966 Ian Foulsham 462

1967 Rick Lee 471

1969 Ian Fisher 478

1969 Michael O'Sullivan RIP 483

1970s

1970 Rob Thomas 486

1971 Geoff Pike 493

1971 Andrew Falk 494

1973 Geoff Parker 499

1973 Laurie Bott 502

1974 Mick Allworth 505

1974 Steve Ward 507

1975 Chris Elder 510

1975 John Baird 512

1975 Tom Jenkins 513

1976 Jim L'Estrange 514

1977 Peter Wynn 517

1977 Mark Burgess RIP 518

1977 Murray Le Lievre 519

1977 Chris McRae 520

1978 Geoff Keighran 522

1978 Philip Beale 524

1978 Peter Armitage 525

1979 Ian Wilson 527

1980s

1980 Damien Grattan-Smith 528

1980 Craig Tomko 530

1980 Geoff Cooper 531

1981 Damon Ridley 532

1981 Andrew Shaw 535

1982 John Grimble 541

1982 Peter Hamblin 544

1982 Michael Counsel 545

1983 James Hay 547

1984 Andrew Green 551

1985 Gary Lennon 552

1985 St John Frawley 556

1986 Keith Pitty 558

1986 David Hamblin 560

1986 John Gavagna 561

1987 Trevor Howard 567

1988 Phil Garrett 575

1989 Adam Smith 581

1990s

1990 Andrew Ridley 583

1990 Brendan Hill 589

1990 Rob Crittendon 590

1992 Richard Wiles 594

1992 Dave Butchart 595

1992 Tom Watkins 596

1993 Darren McCoy 598

1993 Mick Farrow 603

1993 Angus Sharp 607

1993 Chris Williams 610

1994 Jamie Hollebone 612

1994 Matt Kelly 620

1994 Chris Pelly RIP 621

1996 Phil Stanbridge 623

1996 Tim Lester 627

1996 Luke Hartman 631

2000s

2000 Shane Stanton 656

2000 Adam Theobald 657

2001 Peter Sanders 665

2002 Will Gell 668

2002 Tom Kierath 678

2002 Huw McKay 679

2003 Matthew Phelps 680

2004 Greg Mail 686

2005 Mark Faraday 692

2005 Michael King 694

2006 Josh Ryan 704

2006 Ash Cowan 705

2007 Ben Larkin 709

2007 Tim Ley 711

2008 David Miller 712

2008 Matt Morgan 713

2008 Nick Larkin 714

2009 Nigel Cowell 716

2009 Josh Toyer 717

2009 Liam Robertson 718

2009 James Crowley 720

2009 Scott Henry 721

2009 Michael Culkoff 722

2010s

2010 Gary Whittaker Coach

2011 Will Somerville 725

2012 Jonte Pattison 731

2012 Jack Hill 732

2012 A J Grant 733

2013 Ryan Carters 734

2013 Steve Hobson 736

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From the Chairman

This week, with little to reflect on from last weekend – all games washed out on Saturday and half a game played on Sunday – I thought another look at our 1st Grade Premiership side  of 100 years ago – 1913-14.

One of the giants (literally – he was 6 feet 4 inches) of that side was Jack Massie.  In just four seasons in 1st Grade, he took 166 wickets at 13.8; in 16 1st class games, he took 99 wickets at 18; in the 13-14 Premiership side, his 69 wickets still stand as the Club’s 1st Grade record.

The following is taken from ‘Summertime Blues’ written by Max Bonnell and me and which will be revised and renewed for the 150 celebrations later this year:

“No writer of fiction would ever have dared to invent the character of Jack Massie: non-one would have believed it.  A young giant, powerful enough to excel at boxing, rowing and rugby, lithe enough to be a champion hurdler, precise enough to be an expert rifle shot and with the fine co-ordination of an outstanding cricketer – that would be hard enough to credit.  But who would suspend disbelief so far as to accept that such an athlete could also be a brilliant scholar, a successful businessman and an unflinchingly courageous, highly-decorated war hero?  No, Massie’s story is completely unbelievable, except that every word of it is true.

It was in cricket that Massie’s blend of strength, athleticism, stamina and skill found its fullest expression.  He was a fast left-arm bowler, who generated uncomfortable pace and bounce but also possessed a range of bewildering variations.  His exceptional fitness enabled him to maintain his pace over lengthy spells and, unusually for so fast a bowler, in most matches in which he played he bowled more overs than any of his team-mates.  The South Australian batsman, Johnnie Moyes, insisted that Massie left behind him a reputation for exceptional skill.  Those who played with him know just what a magnificent bowler he was, probably the greatest who never played for Australia and far more accomplished than many who did… Massie took a long run –with such long legs he needed it – and as he reached the stumps his ample chest would spread, his left arm would come over, completing an arc of menacing hostility.  He would swing with arm, fast and accurately, and had the nasty habit of dipping the ball right into the pads, so that it went into the stumps if the footwork was at all hesitant.  He could swing against his arm, which is infinitely more difficult…Massie could drop his pace and spin.  Give him a softish or worn wicket, and he was a terror.

When war was declared after the 13-14 Premiership, he enlisted immediately.  In September 1914 he was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant in the 4th Battalion of the AIF and he was appointed Assistant Adjutant to Iven Mackay, a former University cricketer who had coached Massie while he was at school.  In October, the 4th Battalion sailed to Egypt and, in April 1915, it formed part of the force that landed at Gallipoli.

Throughout that wretched campaign, Massie performed with reckless heroism.  On only his second day at Gallipoli, Massie’s unit made a suicidal advance towards the Turkish lines after an order was misunderstood.  When the Colonel leading the attack was shot down, it was Massie who tried to retrieve his body under withering Turkish gunfire.

 

But Massie occupied the front line so fearlessly that it was only a matter of time before he sustained a more serious injury.  It happened at Lone Pine, in August 1915.  Iven Mackay sent Massie to investigate the position of an outpost that was under heavy fire.  Precisely what happened next is unclear – Mackay recalled that a “Turk held a riffle over the parapet with one arm and firing it at random he hit Captain Jack Massie in the shoulder blade’.  The damage was severe; shrapnel wound in the back of the left shoulder, a splintered shoulderblade, broken ribs and a punctured lung.  Massie, listed by the Army as “Dangerously ill”, was evacuated to Alexandria and then to England, where he spent three month in hospital in London.  At the end of 1915, he was classified as temporarily unfit for active service and he returned to Australia for several months.

His bravery at Gallipoli was not forgotten.  In January 1916, he was mentioned in despatches and in February the French government awarded him the Croix de Guerre.  No one could have blamed him if he had rested on these laurels, but Massie was determined to return to action.  By late 1916 he was back at the front, this time in France with the 33rd Battalion.  He had already been wounded four times, but nothing tempered his complete disregard for his own safety and in April 1917 he was again mentioned in despatches, this time by Sir Douglas Haig.

He was injured, not at the front – where his outlandish bravery earned him a further mention in dispatches in 1918 – but behind the lines at a training camp, of which Massie was appointed Commandant.  A German aeroplane flying over the camp dropped a single bomb, and shrapnel from this random explosion ripped through Massie’s foot.

His shoulders had recovered from the wounds at Gallipoli, but the injury to his foot reduced his mobility permanently.  Yet not even this injury prevented him returning to France – after six months of treatment and convalescence – for further service before the end of the War.  By the time of the armistice, Massie had reached the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel.

Although his days as a competitive cricketer ended in 1918, Massie did not abandon the game.  On Saturday afternoons, he turned out for the University Veterans, bowling well enough from an apologetic run-up of a few steps to scythe through the batsmen of the City and Suburban competition.  In 1921-22 he claimed 85 wickets in the competition, a record for the University Veterans that still stands.  One of the fieldsmen who held his catches was Iven Mackay, his commanding office at Gallipoli.”

Read about him and many of the other extraordinary players in this extraordinary University side when the book comes out in October.

 

James Rodgers

 

 

 

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SUCC Operations Manager - Position Vacant

Position Vacant - Operations Manager
 
Maximum Term Contract (two years, negotiable);
Full-time; 
Job description and duty statement available upon request.
 
The Operations Manager of the Sydney University Cricket Club (SUCC) reports to the Chairman of SUCC and Sydney Uni Sport and Fitness (SUSF) Club Development Manager and is largely responsible for the daily running of the Cricket Club including the smooth running of all five grade teams, Green Shield and Poidevin Gray sides.
 
For further enquiries, please contact SUCC Chairman, James Rodgers (0419 662 236) or SUSF High Performance Manager, Matthew Phelps (0421 899 175).
 
To apply, please send your application to HR Coordinator at jobs@sport.usyd.edu.au
 
Applications Close: COB, Tuesday 11 March 2014

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Larkin stars in 2nd XI

Congratulations to Nick Larkin who has made 113 for NSW 2nd XI against the ACT yesterday. NSW won the match in which Nigel Cowell also boasted the impressive match figures of 3/26 off 20 overs. Well done guys.

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A huge weekend of fixtures coming up on Saturday and Sunday

On Saturday, 1sts, 2nds and 4ths play 120 over fixtures commencing at 9:30am while 3rds and 5ths play one day fixtures starting at 10am. 

Sunday is an even bigger day for the club with a replay of the washed out 1st grade limited overs Final to start on no1 at 10am and the annual fixture for the SUCC Foundation to be played on no2 starting at 12:30pm. 

Spectators will need to choose on Sunday between watching 1sts - Mail, Henry, Abbott, Carters, Larkin, Cowell et al, or the Foundation - Burgess, Sanders, Draper, King, Rodgers, Bonnell, Ward, Bragg, Burke, Harrington, Gray, Quilter and co. 

We hope to see plenty of SUCC supporters down at Uni over the weekend. 

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RIP David Walker

The club is sad to hear the news of the death of Mr. David Walker in England last week.

David was 1st grade player number 396. He played 1st grade from 1953 until 1958, taking 131 wickets at 25.1 as a left arm opening bowler, including 26 at 18 in the 1956/57 1st grade semi finalist side. 

There will be a more comprehensive obituary in the next few weeks and in the 2013/14 club annual. 

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