SUCC Stats: The Top Ten

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SUCC Stats: The Top Ten

Each week we will bring you the current SUCC Top Ten run-scorers and wicket-takers for the entire Club. This top ten will be an all inclusive list and take every grade and competition into account.

Following Round Two, our Top Tens are as follows:

BATTING:

The batsman with the highest aggregate runs at the end of the season claims the H. O. Rock Award. Youngster Lachlan Carfax took out the award in 2014/15.

The batsman with the highest aggregate runs at the end of the season claims the H. O. Rock Award. Youngster Lachlan Carfax took out the award in 2014/15.

BOWLING:

The bowler with the highest aggregate wickets at the end of the season will claim the Michael O'Sullivan Award. Ben Joy took out the award for 2014/15.

The bowler with the highest aggregate wickets at the end of the season will claim the Michael O'Sullivan Award. Ben Joy took out the award for 2014/15.

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Help SUCC sweep The Clubbies Awards!!!

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Help SUCC sweep The Clubbies Awards!!!

Sydney Uni Cricket Club have been shortlisted in four of the six categories for Inside Sport's "The Clubbies" Awards and we need your support to take victory.

The Clubbies Awards are designed to recognise the success, dedication and passion involved in grassroots sport in Australia.

Nominations have been shortlisted for:

  • Club of the Year - Sydney University Cricket Club
  • Player of the Year - Nic Arnold 
  • Coach of the Year - Gary Whitaker
  • Team of the Year - SUCC 2nd Grade

With a $40,000 vehicle and other prizes up for grabs, we need your vote. Vote yourself, share it with your family, friends and colleagues for them to vote, or ask the person next to you on the bus to vote. Every vote counts!

Our goal for 2015/16 is to claim every trophy or title on offer, help us to achieve this goal.

To vote, please visit http://www.insidesport.com.au/theclubbies/vote/

Thank you and #upthestudents

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SUCC News: Australian Uni Games

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SUCC News: Australian Uni Games

We apologise for the tardiness of this news item, but our AUG-winning side has just finished celebrating...

Led by 1st Grade keeper-batsman, Ben Trevor-Jones, the Sydney Uni team came into the final of the Redbull Campus Cricket tournament last Friday full of confidence having dominated all week and taking the mental edge over opponents UNSW with a victory on the Wednesday.

'BTJ' continued his toss domination, again winning, and again batting first. For the first time all week though, some butterflies emerged and tight bowling coupled with some poor shot selection saw Sydney Uni limp to 5-42 from 10 overs.

The depth of talent in the roster was needed, and up stepped the unheralded Hayden Kerr. Brimming with energy and mixing power with finesse, Kerr guided the team to a respectable total of 117 from the 20 overs.

Confidence still high with a bowling attack that would be the envy of any grade club, let alone University side, Joe Kershaw started proceedings with two quick wickets, reducing UNSW to 2-5 from 3 overs. Kerr backed up his batting efforts with a miserly bowling performance to see the required run rate climb.

Needing just over a run a ball with four overs remaining, the match was up for grabs, but with the talent of Kershaw and Dugald Holloway closing the innings, made it difficult for the UNSW to get off strike or hit the long ball.

With a dot ball on the penultimate delivery from Kershaw, victory was secured with UNSW needing 11 from the final delivery. Concentrating on delivering a fair delivery, Kershaw served up a juicy ball in the slot that was dispatched over deep square for six but it didn't matter as the team leapt for joy at claiming the title and securing a berth at the World Campus Cricket Games in Sri Lanka in October 2016.

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SUCC ICYMI: Runs galore for stars

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SUCC ICYMI: Runs galore for stars

With the Matador BBQ Cup commencing today with some dominant performances put on the board, there were some runs for SUCC stars, current and former, in the lead-up to the competition, in case you missed it.

Ed Cowan and Nick Larkin displayed outstanding form in the warm-up matches for this season’s Matador BBQ Cup.  Cowan helped NSW in an earlier warm-up match to run down a Victorian total of 271 with an assured 76 from 88 deliveries, sharing an opening stand of 105 with Nic Maddinson.  The selectors could find no room for University captain Nick Larkin in the squad for the 50-over tournament, but he gave them food for thought with a colossal innings of 143 from only 120 balls for a NSW Invitation XI against the Victorians.  Larkin’s dynamic innings helped the Invitation team to overhaul Victoria’s 344 and emphasised the depth of talent within the Blues’ squad.

Meanwhile, up north, Scott Henry has made an excellent start to his challenge for a place in the Queensland squad, hitting 81 and 101 not out in his first two innings of the Premier Cricket competition for University of Queensland.

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SUCC News: Five things we learned from Round Two

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SUCC News: Five things we learned from Round Two

Sydney are the big improvers

Premierships aren’t won in October, and it would be silly to make predictions on the basis of the first two rounds.  No-one seriously expects to see Manly propping up the bottom of the ladder at the end of summer.  But the greatest improvement so far this season has come from Sydney, who managed only three wins in 2014-15 but hold a share of the lead this season, joining four other clubs with two wins from as many starts.  You could argue, perhaps, that Sydney has had a favourable draw, but its improvement has come without any major changes of personnel.  Swing bowler Alex Glendenning, from Wests, may turn out to be a useful recruit, but the early success has come from the steady leadership of experienced Dan Smith and good form from some of Sydney’s younger players.  Burly off-spinner Ben Manenti, still only 18, has seven wickets after two games; leg-spinner Nathan Sowter has benefited from a taste of county cricket with Middlesex in the off-season; and Beau McClintock and Harry Dalton have done well with the bat.  Sydney will fancy its chances against Parramatta in Round 3, so its run could continue for a while yet.

 

Ian Moran is in form

A few years back, if you were building the perfect First Grade team from scratch, you would have started by attracting one of Sydney’s leading all-rounders – Grant Lambert, Greg Mail or Ian Moran.  Sydney University, of course, had two of them, which accounts for much of the team’s success in the last decade.  Moran had a relatively quiet first season with Easts, but he bounced back strongly with 971 runs in 2014-15 and so far this season he has managed 63, 42 and 84 not out – 189 runs from only 168 deliveries.  At the age of 36, he remains a formidable competitor and it still seems unjust that his appearances for the State were confined to a handful of Twenty/20 games.

 

It’s not quite the same without Billy Hendricks

At the start of this season, Billy Hendricks announced his retirement from umpiring, after standing in 332 SCA matches, 265 of them in First Grade.  But he’s been a fixture in Grade cricket for even longer, because he played for Gordon between 1981 (after migrating from his native South Africa) and 1999.  He turned out in every grade, and took 319 wickets with skiddy leg-breaks, as well as batting stubbornly.  As a player, Billy was – well, if you played alongside him for Gordon, you’d say he was highly competitive.  His opponents usually found stronger ways of putting it.  Matches in which he was involved often seemed to become unnecessarily heated.  Which is worth mentioning now only because, as an umpire, his trademarks were fairness, a cool head, an easy rapport with the players and an ability to defuse tense situations.  He has made an outstanding contribution to cricket in Sydney over the last 35 years, and we wish him well in his retirement from the field.

 

Darwin was on to something

In On the Origin of Species, in which he first proposed his theory of evolution, Charles Darwin explored the way in which members of a species passed on their genetic advantages to their offspring.  Darwin actually performed his breeding experiments on pigeons, but Grade cricketers would have done just as well.  In the first round of the Twenty/20 competition this season, Manly handed First Grade debuts to Sam Gainsford (son of quick-medium Manly bowler David) and Zach Trewartha (son of dogged left-handed batsman Ross).  North Sydney fields a minimum of three Aitkens, the latest in the dynasty that originated at Parramatta, while at Parramatta itself, Adam Turrell and Tim Affleck play together in the side their fathers represented in the 1980s.  It’s possible that some time this season, Gordon will field a First Grade attack featuring the sons of two State opening bowlers – Charlie Stobo (son of Richard) and Jack Skilbeck (son of Mosman’s John).   But it’s a nice question whether these players are exploiting a genetic advantage or whether they simply adapted to being raised in a cricketing environment.  There’s a PhD thesis in this somewhere.

 

Sutherland is tough to beat

Twice this season, Sutherland has looked dead and buried – rolled for only 111 by Blacktown in Round 1, then 7-150 chasing 213 against Fairfield last weekend.  Each time they found a way to win, knocking over Blacktown for 96 and beating Fairfield with an over to spare after a gutsy partnership between Shayne Smith and Daniel Fallins.  Successful teams find ways to win matches from poor positions and Sutherland seems to have discovered the knack of doing exactly that.

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Milestone Monday: Many Milestones Monday

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Milestone Monday: Many Milestones Monday

This week's Milestone Monday sees a number of achievements for us to celebrate (along with a dominant round against Manly):

  • With his innings of 56 runs, Will Hay has passed 3,000 first grade runs
  • AJ Grant passed 1,000 fourth grade runs in his captains knock of 75 runs
  • David Miller's 28 runs was enough to see him clear 1,000 second grade runs
  • Jack Maddocks plundered his highest third grade score of 94 runs
  • Kieran Tate claimed his best bowling figures in third grade and his first 5-wicket haul for the Club with 5-17

Congratulations to all of these guys and may we see many more over the coming weeks.

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SUCC ICYMI: Nick Arnold at Under 17 National Championships

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SUCC ICYMI: Nick Arnold at Under 17 National Championships

In case you missed it: Sydney University's Nick Arnold has been participating in the Australian Under 17 National Cricket Championships this week for the Northern Territory side in Brisbane.

Arnold, who plundered runs for fun in the 2014/15 Green Shield season to set a new run-scoring record for SUCC, got his opportunity against NSW Metropolitan today and seized it with both hands. Nick compiled a stunning 108 not out for the Northern Territory to set NSW Metro a daunting total of 232 runs from their 50 overs.

The ton could not have come at a better time with Cricket Australia Talent Manager, Greg Chappell in attendance.

Congratulations to Nick and we can't wait to see you back in the Blue and Gold scoring runs!

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