SUCC's Annual Corporate Golf Challenge

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SUCC's Annual Corporate Golf Challenge

Sydney Uni Cricket Club is proud to present our Annual Corporate Golf Challenge, supported by BMW Sydney, on Wednesday 21st October at St Michael's Golf Club from 7:30am. Click here for full details

An exciting day is planned on the beautiful coastal course with bragging rights up for grabs and the opportunity to help us raise much needed funds to support our high performance programs and our many student athletes to success both on and off the field.

With the switch to a morning tee time, a delicious cooked breakfast and made-to-order coffee will start the day before a shot-gun start at 8am. With plenty of on-course activities throughout your round, the laughs and challenges will be plenty. Following your round, a BBQ buffet lunch and small bar tab will be available back in the club house, prior to the presentation ceremony and the announcement of the champions.

Tombola's will be available around the course, fantastic prizes for the day's victors, and a small silent auction will round out the day, all thanks to our sponsors - our presenting partner, BMW Sydney, and our major partners, Kingsgrove Sports and Surjits Indian Restaurants.

The picturesque 12th hole at St Michael's Golf Club, Little Bay

The picturesque 12th hole at St Michael's Golf Club, Little Bay

Spots are beginning to fill quick, and there are still some hole sponsorships available, so please get in touch with the Club quickly to discuss how we can help promote your business to our wide network of players, supporters and corporate contacts. (In-kind hole sponsorships are available with the right package).

Join us for what is always a wonderful day at one of the most picturesque courses in Sydney.

Click here to visit the registration page.

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SUCC Triumphs Over UNSW in Practice Match

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SUCC Triumphs Over UNSW in Practice Match

The Sydney University Cricket Club's 1st Grade campaign is ramping up towards the season proper with an emphatic victory of UNSW in its practice match on Saturday.

Under cloudy skies and with some light early morning showers, UNSW won the toss and elected to bat first, in what has become a traditional pre-season clash.

UNSW were in trouble early as Ben Joy (2-13), Joe Kershaw (1-38) and Dugald Holloway (1-45) made in-roads to have UNSW 4-50. A determined partnership of 111 runs between UNSW skipper B Wakim (72), and middle order batsmen B McLean (55), built the innings to a strong position though.

Tight bowling by Will Somerville (0-30 from 8 overs) and Greg Mail (1-18 off 5 overs) kept the run rate down, before Liam Robertson chimed in with 2 wickets to see UNSW finish their 50 overs on 7-195.

In reply, SUCC cruised throughout the innings to peel off the required total with 7 wickets and 5 overs to spare.

NSW star Ryan Carters (38) and fan favourite, Will Hay (42) opened the SUCC account with an 85 run stand before both fell together. Grade cricket legend, Greg Mail, made the most of the final hit out to effortlessly compile 29 runs before retiring, to allow Robertson (27), Tim Ley (36no) and Ben Trevor-Jones (9no) some much needed time in the middle. Ley launching bombs in his typical fashion, his runs coming from just 24 balls with 4 sixes.

With a solid performance on the field, SUCC will enter its Round One clash with North Sydney high on confidence.

The only disappointing aspect to the day was a serious hand injury to star off-spinner Will Somerville who was in contention for a NSW berth for the Matador Cup. Our wishes are with Will for a speedy recovery.

Round One commences this Saturday, with our Season Launch scheduled for Thursday 24th at The Grandstand from 6:30pm.

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In the sheds... The Pre-season

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In the sheds... The Pre-season

Welcome to our second edition of "In the sheds...", brought to you this week by a quick bowler who has devastated most (if not all) batting line-ups in Sydney.

In the sheds... The Pre-season

If you have been lucky enough to go deep into the prior season's finals series you will know the feeling of disbelief when the first pre-season session is announced in July.

The atmosphere at home is typically tense with Hayza bemoaning the fact that we are all going round again, how early in the year it is, how cold it is etc. That being said just before 8pm on July 28 we bustle into the team bus/family wagon to be greeted by the chirpy faces of club stalwarts James Crowley and Dave Miller. The disbelief on all our faces is evident when we turn up to the SCG nets to see training in full swing with 60-70 eager players already charging in and flashing cover drives…here we go again.

It doesn’t take long before Hayza’s storm clouds lift as he spots his usual targets (Henry Clark a prime example) for some light-hearted sledging. Crowls scurries away to the keepers’ corner whilst myself and Dave wander up towards the bowlers.

The first 10 minutes on arrival is spent shaking hands and saying hello to the familiar faces, wandering passed the newbies in their colourful kits and looking in amazement at the full time students who have all grown 6 inches taller and put on 30kgs of muscle (Dugald Holloway comes to mind).

Then the dreaded time comes where bowling begins.

The young punks are all full of beans - charging in, claiming an extra 2 feet over the front line, and bowling at 150 kph (or thereabouts). Then I’m up… trying to remind the muscles which haven’t used for 3 months what they are supposed to do, barely being able to reach the popping crease, sending the ball down at a pace Jimmy Rogers would be disappointed with.

To make matters worse, the batsmen are waiting and licking their lips – embracing the flat flat flat SCG indoor nets – looking to take advantage of the early season freebies as they dispatch the ball to all areas of the nets. Fortunately, bowlers don’t leak too many runs in pre-season nets courtesy of having fielders in the perfect positions for each ball.

After an hour of pain and suffering the first session is over. The mood in the car is more buoyant on the journey home, exchanging the stories which have been told through the evening and discussing the new look to the squad.

During this year’s pre-season we have been lucky enough to send a squad to England and two squads to Queensland for some IV games (against Oxford, Cambridge, UQ, Melbourne and Adelaide). These trips have been a great mix of cricket and team bonding as we look to build on a solid 2014/15 season.

These trips have been as important as the pre-season net sessions in preparing for the year ahead, thrown together with some team social functions for dessert and just quietly, the SUCC squad looks like it is ready for the season to begin.

The buzz of anticipation for the season ahead, coupled with the desire to lift more premierships in April, means the feeling in the sheds leading in to round one is always one of excitement. There are some big shoes to fill given Adam Theobald’s retirement and Scott Henry and Sean Abbott both moving on, however it gives some great opportunities for someone to come through the ranks and make a name for themselves.

Good luck to all as we lead into the start of the 2015/16 season – the sheds will be rocking.

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Team selections - Practice Match 19th Sept 2015

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Team selections - Practice Match 19th Sept 2015

We are excited to announce the teams selected to participate in our final practice matches for the pre-season against UNSW.

First to Fourth Grade matches are scheduled to commence at 9:00am on Saturday across Sydney Uni and UNSW campuses.

Our combined 5th Grade / Metro Cup match vs South Sydney Shires is scheduled to commence at 9:30am on Sunday at Alan Davidson Oval.

Please click here to see the selected teams. (A link is under the 'Players' drop-down menu on the website)

Should you have any queries, please do not hesitate to contact Gary Whitaker or your captain.

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You might not remember... The Rothman's Cup

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You might not remember... The Rothman's Cup

This season we will be regularly posting a series of articles titled "You might not remember..." in which we shed some light on a particular moment in our history. We commence this series with:

You might not remember... The Rothman's Cup.

The Sydney Cricket Association recently resolved that players’ performances in the Rothmans Cup competition will now be included in their First Grade career records.  But who remembers the Rothmans Cup?

Indeed, who remembers Rothmans?  It was a tobacco company, which was later absorbed into Philip Morris, which in turn became part of British American Tobacco.  But back in the 1960s, Rothmans did a roaring trade in Australia, and its business was boosted by its heavy sponsorship of sport.  As news began to seep out that smoking might not be entirely beneficial to one’s health, Rothmans responded by sponsoring any sporting event it could put its name to, as well as by employing a number of international sportsmen as sales representatives.  Smoking might be bad for you, but look - Doug Walters was the best batsman in the country, and he worked for Rothmans.

So Rothmans was the eager sponsor when a group of Sydney cricketers decided to launch the country’s first senior limited-overs competition.  In 1967, there was no serious limited-overs cricket played anywhere in the country, not even between States.  But at the start of the 1967-68 season, it was decided that Sheffield Shield cricket could now be played on Sundays.  This was regarded as revolutionary at the time (it forced the NSW captain, Brian Booth, into retirement, since he refused to play on the Sabbath), but a group of Sydney cricketers, led by Test batsmen Jim Burke and Norm O’Neill, decided that Grade teams could play on Sundays, too, and they launched, with the help of Rothmans, a limited-overs knockout tournament.  In the first year of the competition, it was an unofficial affair, with the NSW Cricket Association a mildly interested bystander.  Once the draw was made, it was up to the clubs to arrange their own fixtures whenever they could secure a ground.  That wasn’t always easy, since many local councils still refused to hire out their grounds for Sunday play.  As a result, Sydney University’s first game in the competition, against Northern District, was played at Somerville Oval at Epping, a ground more usually used for Fifth Grade games.

That match was played on 17 December 1967, the day on which Prime Minister Harold Holt went for a swim in choppy water at Cheviot Beach, and never came back.  Each innings was limited to 35 eight-ball overs (an extra over was added the following year), with bowlers limited to nine overs each. Coloured clothing was a decade away, as were helmets: white towelling hats were becoming popular. There were no fielding restrictions: reporting on a match at Waverley Oval, the Sydney Morning Herald huffed that Waverley’s captain was excessively negative because he posted a third man at the start of the game. This was blamed on his English upbringing and the corrupting influence of big money – after all, Rothmans was paying the winner of the competition $500.  Large numbers of spectators attended the games (clubs not only charged admission, but raised substantial amounts from doing so), and girls in short shorts and Rothmans T-shirts walked through the crowd handing out samples of the sponsor’s product.  “We used to have two or three thousand people turn up”, remembers Ian Fisher, who played Rothmans Cup for both Sydney and Sydney University.

University swatted Northern District aside in its opening match,  with Ron Alexander biffing 61 and John King 62 not out.  The second round was altogether tougher.  Most Sydney Grade clubs at the time could field at least one Test player and some handy Shield cricketers, and Balmain turned up to Drummoyne Oval with Test fast bowler Dave Renneberg, “mystery spinner” Johnny Gleeson and NSW all-rounder Ross Collins.  Batting first, University folded cheaply, and was knocked out of the competition, which was eventually won by Western Suburbs.

“The players really enjoyed it”, Ian Fisher recalls, “it was great fun. I was playing for Sydney when it started, and we ended up playing Cumberland two days in a row.  We beat them on the Saturday, then went back out there for the Rothmans the next day.  We called up a keeper called Don Harris for the Rothmans game, and he went in at eight or nine with his hero, Richie Benaud, bowling.  The game went down to the second-last ball, and Don had played pretty well, but he went down to Benaud and slogged.  He missed the ball, but the keeper missed it too, and it went for two byes, so we won.  It was probably the best game of cricket I ever played – although the visitors’ dressing room had no hot water.  When play ended on the Saturday, the Cumberland team offered us the use of their showers.  But they kept the door shut the next day!”

The general consensus was that the competition had been a huge success, and the NSW Cricket Association grabbed control of it, running it for nine more seasons.  University performed intermittently well, without ever progressing beyond the quarter-finals.  Alan Crompton’s 61 was the backbone of a good total against Waverley in 1968-69, but was trumped by 104 from State opener Bruce Francis.  In October 1969, University thoroughly outplayed Sydney, only to be thwarted by rain.  After Sydney’s star batsman, Rick McCosker, edged Rick Lee to Alan Crompton, University contained its opposition to nine for 144 from 36 overs.  University, at one for 28, was well ahead of the required run-rate when rain ended the game.  But University had been batting for only seven overs, and 15 overs needed to be bowled before run-rate calculations could be made.  Instead, the winner was declared to be the team with the higher run-rate in the regular First Grade season and, on that peculiar rule, Sydney was handed a thoroughly unmeritorious victory.

The following season, University shocked Sutherland, the reigning champions, with a thrashing in the first round.  On a soft pitch, slow left-armer Mick O’Sullivan snared 7-30 as Sutherland succumbed for only 84, after which Bruce Collins (57 not out) and Crompton knocked off the runs without any difficulty.  O’Sullivan was brought back to earth in the quarter-final against St George; his nine overs went for 78 runs, as State batsman John Wilson hammered 112.  Collins (69) and Crompton (41) maintained their form, but a target of 282 was never within reach.

The scheduling of matches was more casual than it is today.  In 1971-72, Manly reached the final, only to learn that its State all-rounder, Terry Lee, would be on an interstate study trip when the match was due to be played.  Manly asked the NSWCA to change the date, arguing that the final would attract more spectators if the big-hitting Lee (who had hit 28 sixes in the season so far) played.  Amazingly, the NSWCA agreed to shift the game so that Lee could play, and Manly went on to beat St George in the final.

One of University’s better results in the competition came in December 1972, when a powerful Northern District team was beaten by three runs.  Northern District fielded six players who had represented NSW, or soon would, including Test batsman Ian Davis and spinner David Sincock.  But Ian Fisher’s aggressive 56 and some late swiping by Mitch Thompson and Peter James pushed University’s total to 8 for 201.  Northern District was always just behind in the chase, losing wickets regularly to leg-spinner Alan Manzie, medium-pacer Greg Harper and left-arm seamer Geoff Pike, and ended the game nine wickets down and a boundary away from victory. 

The popularity of the competition encouraged the NSWCA to expand it, and soon teams representing Newcastle, the ACT and the Illawarra were included.  “We were forever being drawn against Newcastle”, says Alan Crompton, “and we never played them at home. The M1 hadn’t been constructed yet, so that meant getting up at 5am on Sunday to be in the car and on the road by 6.  Usually some of the players in the back of the car were a bit the worse for wear after Saturday night.  After we drove up the old winding road, we sometimes had to hunt around the Newcastle suburbs for the ground.  Then when we got there, we played a combined team drawn from the Newcastle competition – and they were a really good side.  It was a time when players were still sometimes chosen directly from the Newcastle competition to play in the State team, and they were always keen to knock off a Sydney club.  I’d say we lost more against them than we won.”

“I played against Newcastle a couple of times”, Fisher says, “once at Newcastle, and once at Waitara Oval.  When we played them at Waitara I invited both teams to my place for a barbecue after the game.  But they brought buses down with all their supporters!  I finished up with a couple of hundred people crammed into my two-bedroom house!”  Newcastle ended University’s promising campaign in the 1972-73 quarter-final, after the Students had outplayed Sydney and Northern District.  The following season, University was badly embarrassed at Gosford by a Hunter Valley team, collapsing for only 85.  But the fast-medium Peter James (5-40) and O’Sullivan (4-7) bundled out the home team inside 22 overs, salvaging a tense five-run victory.  Damon Ridley had played a crucial innings of 14 in what is now recognised as his First Grade debut – almost seven years before his next appearance.

There may never have been a stronger Sydney limited-overs team than the side Western Suburbs assembled in the mid-1970s.  The formidable Bob Simpson opened the innings, followed by Test-class strokeplayers Peter Toohey and Gary Gilmour, who was a one-day match-winner in international cricket, let alone in the Sydney suburbs.  Opposing batsmen had to contend with Gilmour’s lively late swing, and two other NSW representatives, burly speedster Brian Rhodes and wily swing bowler Wally Wellham.  Like Balmain, Western Suburbs won the Rothmans Cup twice.

University ended the competition the way it began, with a match against Northern District.  Peter James, with 5-37, restricted the powerful Northern District side to 150, but an interesting chase was cut short by rain, and University lost on run rate.  Altogether in Rothmans Cup games, James took 23 wickets at 21.22 and scored 251 runs at 27.88.  If the six wickets he took in Rothmans Cup games in 1973-74 are added to his 65 First Grade wickets, then he collected a total of 71 wickets in Firsts that season, which would stand as a club record.  No-one scored more runs for University in the competition than keeper-batsman Alan Crompton (271 at 19.36) while, to no-one’s surprise, the leading wicket-taker was Mick O’Sullivan (26 at 14.46).  When the Club’s records are adjusted, James will move past 300 wickets in First Grade, and O’Sullivan past 800 in all grades.  Although they played only occasionally, Bruce Collins (164 runs at 54.66) and Mitch Thompson (157 at 31.40) did well with the bat, while left arm swing bowler Geoff Pike took ten wickets at 14.50 apiece.  Opening bowler Chris McRae played only one Rothmans match, against Manly in 1973-74, in which he took 4-10 yet still finished on the losing side: University needed three to win from as many deliveries when McRae was dismissed by the tall Manly leg-spinner, Tom Spencer.  Stuart Grant appeared in the match against Newcastle in 1974-75 and now, forty years after the event, is awarded his one and only First Grade cap as a result.

In 1976-77, the Rothmans Cup was shelved, crowded out of the schedule by a new, short-lived competition known as the State Cup, which was designed as an additional tier between Grade and State cricket and featured teams like City Central and City West.  It was another ten years before a distinct limited-overs competition was reintroduced to Sydney cricket, in 1985-86.  Remember the Benson & Hedges Cup?

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Even in winter, Greg Mail scores runs

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Even in winter, Greg Mail scores runs

He already holds the record for the most runs ever scored in the First Grade competition, but Greg Mail’s tally increased again during the off-season, even though he didn’t pick up a bat.

The Sydney Cricket Association has determined that performances in all Grade Twenty/20 matches are now to be taken into account in players’ First Grade career records.  Richard Cook of Fairfield, a member of the SCA Committee, has explained that this step was taken in response to a request from the SCA players’ consultative group, which was then endorsed by the captains’ forum.  One outcome of the decision is that Greg Mail’s record number of First Grade runs now rises, slightly, to 14,279. 

Mail was not the only beneficiary of the decision: the inclusion of some slogged Twenty/20 runs pushed Mark Faraday past 5000 First Grade runs and 4000 First grade runs for University (he now has 5179 runs in total, 1121 for Manly and 4058 for University).  Tom Kierath’s Twenty/20 wickets carry him past 200 wickets in First Grade – he now has 203.  Admirers of slow-medium bowling will be delighted to learn that Ed Cowan’s tally of First Grade wickets rises by two, to capture his unfortunate victims from the 2008-09 Twenty/20 competition, when Ed abandoned his usual leg-breaks to experiment with low-bouncing seamers.

In a further decision made last night, the SCA has resolved that First Grade career records will now include all First Grade Limited Overs matches – stretching back to the 1967-68 Rothmans Cup.  This means that one-day games played between 1967-68 and 1992-93 will now be counted in First Grade performances.  The low moaning sound you hear in the distance comes from club statisticians wondering how they are going to rework 25 years of records…

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Discovered: Our oldest First Grade record

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Discovered: Our oldest First Grade record

Painstaking research by Cricket NSW Librarian, Colin Clowes. has uncovered one of Sydney University’ oldest records: the most wickets taken by a bowler in a First Grade match.

 For several decades, the Club’s records have shown that the fast-medium bowler, Tom Garrett, took 8-43 in the first innings of the match against Canterbury in 1893-94, and five wickets in the second.  But no complete score, and no bowling analysis, was found for the second Canterbury innings.  This was because many of the newspapers that reported on the match had print deadlines before the close of play on the last day of the three-day match, 24 February 1894.  Now Dr Clowes has unearthed a report in a paper named Truth, published on 25 February 1894, which shows that Canterbury, chasing a target of 169, ended the game on nine for 131.  Test batsman Harry Donnan was run out for 29; Garrett took all the other wickets, finishing with eight for 53, which included a hat trick.  “The University captain bowled with capital judgment all through the innings”, reported Truth.  In fact, he bowled unchanged through both innings, claiming 16 wickets for 96 runs altogether – a match record that has never been bettered in the Club’s history.

 1893-94 was the very first season of the Grade cricket competition, but it was Garrett’s 21st season with the Club.  He had enrolled in University at the age of fourteen, and had made his debut for the Club in 1873-74, before his fifteenth birthday.  He was still only 18 when he opened the bowling in the first of all Test matches, in Melbourne in March 1877.  He played 19 Tests, represented NSW between 1876 and 1898, and (as far as we can tell from surviving records) scored 5017 runs and took 625 wickets in First Grade for University.

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