Team Announcements: Round 7

Team Announcements: Round 7

Round 7.jpg

2ND GRADE

Syd Uni vs Northern District
Uni No1 Oval
10am

Jack Holloway
Jack Hill
Charles Litchfield
James Larkin (c)
Nicky Craze
Matt Powys
James Crowley +
Tom Kierath
Jono Craig-Dobson
Kieran Tate
Ben Joy

 

5TH GRADE

Syd Uni vs Northern District
Storey 10am

Suda Sivapalan
Liam McElduff
Hugh Farrow
Ned Barnett
Zohirul Islam
Rob Browne
Christian Lorenzato
Shivansh Pathak
Andrew Wilkinson
Jon Phoebus
Murray Miles

3RD GRADE

Syd Uni vs Northern District
Asquith 10am

Ryan Danne
Ben Larkin
Ed Arnott +
Alex Shaw
Lewis Bedford
Ash Cowan (c)
Tom Galvin
Josh Toyer
Sam Wood
Liam Whitaker
Jack Lawson

 

METRO CUP

Syd Uni vs Warringah
St Paul's 10am

Liam Hughes
Muhammad Ghumman
Nick Mortimer
Julian Dimas
Oscar Kirk
Max Veltro
Jon Aylward
Ashwin Kirubanandan
Greg Cade (c)
Tom Draca
Om Prakash Sah

4TH GRADE

Syd Uni vs Northern District
Marrickville 10am

Alex Bell
Brayden Dilley
Kevin Jacob
Tom Fullerton
AJ Grant (c)
James Robertson
Oliver Thompson
Hayden Storey +
Aidan Peek
Jazz Rinka
Shehan Canagasingham

 

SYDNEY UNI LIONS

Lions vs Cricketers Club
Camperdown Oval  1:30pm

Jacob Pockney
Tim Synnott
Tim Croft (c)
Tom Derrick
Ethan Jamieson
Pieter Mees
Olly Ottossan
Prasan Adikirage
Phil Bowman
Nick Bowman
Champe Joo Lennox

Round 6 (Day 2) Match Reports

Round 6 (Day 2) Match Reports

1ST GRADE

Sydney Uni 8-351 (dec): S Hobson 109, T Cummins 73*, B Trevor-Jones 41
Sydney 5-192: D Malone 4-45
*Match Abandoned 

Following Steven Hobson’s remarkable 109 and Tim Cummins’ 73 Jazzy Rinka, the students had set Sydney a total of 350 to chase on day 2. 

In light of Damien Mortimer owing the first case of the season, the boys had even more of a reason to be fired up and ready to get stuck in after what was a fiery first days play (premium only thanks Darren). Tim Ley and Joe Kershaw led from the front and bowled tight lines to apply pressure to Sydney’s top order. 

This pressure led to the breakthrough provided by Hayden Kerr (1-38), who bowled in tandem with Dugald Holloway to set up what looked to become an exciting afternoon session. 

Enter Devlin Malone (4-45) who had everything to prove after his abysmal performance in Nash which some would say cost the Bowlers the game….  With his iconic wrong-un, Devlin tore through the middle order and was simply a class above. With promising signs at 5/190, the students looked to be on top in what would be an exciting last session, however, the cricket gods had other ideas with the rain settling in for the afternoon session. 

Match drawn, and the students look to build upon their shorter format form that was displayed on Sunday for the last 2 rounds before Christmas.

 

2ND GRADE

Sydney Uni 117 & 3-132: J Holloway 37
Sydney 180: L Neil-Smith 3-37, K Tate 3-50

Back over the bridge to Drummoyne, and back to business. Nash was unsurprisingly difficult for the young, losing 4/0 again, and thus having a 23/0 aggregate over the round, this was a bitter pill to swallow.

Sydney was 7 down with a lead of around 30, and Uni needed quick wickets to begin to dictate how the game should be played. Ben Joy and Kieran Tate did their job nicely, with a wicket in the first over of the day for the latter. Joy bowled with considerable pace which seemed uncomfortable for their English wicketkeeper-batsman, forcing him to have time out of the game after being struck on the head. It was a brief affair, and with Uni trailing by 80, we really needed a strong opening partnership between Litchfield and McElduff. They started positively, both scoring fluently in various areas of the oval. McElduff continued his work, scoring a valiant 90, his highest score at the club. Nicky Craze’s antics were equally Dravidian in the way he went to 0 off 49, before a marvelous single, accompanied by what was likely the loudest cheer Drummoyne has heard for years. He occupied an end for the rest of the curtailed day.

It was a miserly affair, with the state of the game being very mundane, hard to change and increasingly wet. At the stroke of tea, a most biblical storm decided to visit, and blew a gale over the covers, soaking both Sydney CC players and their wicket. It was a rather smug moment as the Uni boys tucked into the delights of tea, including croissants, bite-size Tim Tams and a myriad of coloured jelly sweets, whilst the home team slaved away on the cold and sodden covers in the rain. The game lacked impetus and we shook hands. We lost on the first innings deficit. As always, there were plenty of positives to take forward.

 

3RD GRADE

Sydney Uni 8-319: J Hill 110, J Crowley 53, T Galvin 41
Sydney 5-147: J Toyer 3-39
*Match Abandoned

After a series of dubious showers forecasts during the week caused covers panic for your scribe (more on that later), the BoM had outdone itself and declared a 150% chance of torrential rain on Saturday during the afternoon and evening. It was therefore unsurprising that the Units arrived at Camperdown to be greeted with a clear sunny day and the very real prospect of a full day of cricket in which to attempt to take 10 wickets.

Nash was a dour, insipid affair with the youth triumphant 1-nude after old squandered several good chances, L Newington impregnable in goal. Despite early season ineptitude, young have entered a bit of a renaissance period under their captain Ryan “trust the process” Danne. This has served to enrage Josh “hip and shoulder” Toyer which will no doubt cause a few spicy fixtures in the near future.

Toyerbald and debutant Aidan “Peeky” Peek (debutants as always receiving the simplest of nicknames) took the new ball and from the start it was difficult to extract any assistance from a very good pitch and a hard and fast outfield. Toyer burgled a wicket first ball but apart from that, the Sydney batsmen looked fairly comfortable and they got themselves into a pretty solid position at 1/100. Danno entered the attack with immediate results and broke a good partnership, and then the reintroduction of a fired-up Toyer and some beguiling work from Leggie Newington turned the screws and the game went back into Uni’s favour. With a few quick wickets prior to the tea interval and rain clouds circling, Uni had the ascendancy and Sydney were in a bit of trouble at 5/147.

Ultimately though the radar had other ideas, and for once during the week the BoM was absolutely spot on, and the rain started falling in earnest. A disastrous attempt to put on the big cover resulted in Crowls needing urgent medical attention as he suffered a puncture wound to the lower arm. Thankfully Kingy from Sydney was on hand to administer first aid, which he did in a gentlemanly fashion despite Crowls’s rampant sledging of his batting ability in the over before tea.

With the rain bucketing down the game was called for a draw, and the Units retired to the sheds to enjoy a couple of libations whilst garnering the resolve needed to put the big cover back in the shed, which was achieved with a minimum of fuss, unlike the last time. A disappointing draw after a solid performance across 2 days against a strong side, one who we expect will feature at the business end of the season. A trip to the rain belt awaits, and a contest against the defending premiers.

 

4TH GRADE

Sydney Uni 171: A Bell 45, T Fullerton 45
Sydney 6-117: AJ Grant 3-33
*Match Abandoned

Unbelievable scenes greeted us as we traveled to the picturesque Birchgrove to take on a strong Tigers outfit. Day 1 presented a beautiful day for batting and skipper AJ delivered, electing to bat, much to the delight of the top order.

The Unit’s started brightly with Dilley and McElduff building a promising opening partnership. However, a good spell from the Tigers quick saw both fall in quick succession leaving us wobbling at 2/38. This brought Bell and Fullerton together who batted patiently to build a solid partnership that frustrated the Tigers. Both will rue missing out on the opportunity to cash in on a big score in the afternoon session, falling for 45 apiece. Failure to convert these top order starts saw the Tigers get amongst our middle order. An elegant Jazz Rinka cameo of 20 red wrestled back some momentum but the Units fell for 171, a respectable but well below par score considering the position we had put ourselves in earlier in the day.

This left 10 overs to have a red hot crack at the Tigers top order with the hope of ruining a few weekends down the track. Jazz Rinka took the new ball and struck in his first over, leaving the Tigers at 1/15 at the end of Day 1.

With rain coming on Day 2, it was clear to both sides that each would need to push hard to squeeze in an early result. Grant struck early but the Units were frustrated by the emergence of a streaky 3rd wicket partnership with numerous false strokes evading fielders. Phoebus broke the streaky stand, aided by sharp, crab-like movement from McElduff at point, allowing the bowlers to roll through the Tigers middle order. The cats on the hill could sense momentum building with the small but vocal crowd turning on the home team. Grant was the main destroyer grabbing 3 poles aided by Rinka who bowled with superb control compiling the excellent figures of 11 overs, 8 maidens, 1/4.

With the Tigers wobbling at 6/117 we were poised for a tight finish. Unfortunately the rain came, ending the match before what would have been an exciting conclusion. Whilst the 6 points may have evaded us, the lads can take a lot out of the 2 days and take momentum into Round 7. 

 

5TH GRADE

Sydney Uni 205 & 1-48: Z Islam 59, C Lorenzato 51
Sydney 173: S Pathak 5-17, A Wilkinson 3-38

 

METRO CUP

Sydney Uni 6-330 (dec): J Aylward 102, S Sivapalan 53, M Ghumman 51
Randwick-Petersham 85 & 5-181: T Synnott 4-22, M Shanahan 3-23

With 1st Innings points lost on week 1 we headed back on down to the river with the anticipation of a new day and a fresh start and the aim of claiming outright points. With the weather forecast looking ominous we headed out to bat with a positive mindset knowing if we could post a decent total in and around 40 overs, then declare, we could make a game of it.

The loss of Rahman hit wicket early for 2 was little deterrent for opening partner Ghumman who continues to apply his trade with class and power on his way to another exciting 47. Mo is starting to show the sort of commitment and consistency (season avg 46.7)  that would be expected from a higher grader so hopefully, promotion is on the cards soon for the big fella.

Some cameos from Cade 18, Pockney 14 and Shanahan 13 but the regular loss of wickets every few overs hampered the run rate and thus our mission. When the heavens eventually opened we took an early tea but with the rain seemingly set in and a result more and more unlikely the game was called around 3pm. Uni 5-117 off 39 overs.

The overall result was very disappointing considering our reputation and place on the ladder. Every player who participated in the match put in full effort but having only 10 players and an extremely imbalanced lineup was a frustration. Thanks must go to Shez Canagasingham who worked tirelessly to try and get a full team on the field for this round. As a grade club, serious questions need to be asked and players held accountable regarding availabilities for matches. Late Friday dropouts due to "other commitments" should be unacceptable. We have a Lions team for those who wish to play casually...

Two more rounds before the Christmas break and a chance to reboot and get back on track with one dayers at Pauls.

 

Team Announcements: Kingsgrove Sports Twenty20 Cup and Sydney Uni Lions

Team Announcements: Kingsgrove Sports Twenty20 Cup and Sydney Uni Lions

Kingsgrove Sports Twenty20 Cup:

Sydney Uni vs Fairfield-Liverpool
Sunday 3rd December
Rosedale Oval

D Holloway
N Craze
B Joy
J Kershaw
T Cummins +
D Mortimer
B Trevor-Jones
T Ley
L Robertson (c)
J Larkin
D Malone
H Kerr
 

Sydney Uni Lions:

Sydney Uni Lions vs Beavers
Sunday 3rd December
Goddard Oval

Yap (c)
A Hunter
Mees +
P Bowman
N Bowman
Le Couteur
M Webb
O Ottosson
A Kirubanandan
M Ghumman
A Wilkinson

Best of luck to all players this weekend! 

Round 6 (Day 1) Match Reports

Round 6 (Day 1) Match Reports

1ST GRADE

Sydney Uni 8-351 (dec): S Hobson 109, T Cummins 73*, B Trevor-Jones 41
Sydney 0-4

 

2ND GRADE

Sydney Uni 117: J Holloway 37, J Craig-Dobson 24
Sydney 7-142: L Neil-Smith 3-37

 

3RD GRADE

Sydney Uni 8-319: J Hill 110, J Crowley 53, T Galvin 41

Day 1 of Round 6 and it was back to fortress Camperdown to take on the undefeated Tigers who are sitting one place above us on the ladder. A beautiful warm sunny day coupled with some quality cafes and lush surrounds meant that it was going to be an excellent spectating day, with local talent guaranteed to be out and about. Unfortunately, the only scantily dressed person on display was Liamo, who took it upon himself to have his rig out for most of the first session and his hours of sunbaking may have improved his tan, but certainly not his wallet as he was relieved of bulk $$$ in the post-match circle.

Nash was commenced with a couple of notable omissions from the young side, Danne and Kevvy battling the traffic to the tune of a case of premiums. This was to prove terminal for young, who went behind early and were never able to recover even with the arrival of their leader (and Kevvy). Good work from the underrated Peek and a really impressive piece of play from Galvin weren’t enough and old took the spoils in what would ultimately be a good indicator of the day to come.

“The sun even shines on a dog’s a*se somedays, anyone can win the lottery” and so it was to be as mathematics be damned, I actually won the toss and elected to bat on a hard wicket with a good coverage of grass. The units got off to a solid start, and the first strong partnership began when Dr Chris Brown met the Wombat in the middle and they got into the grind and started to get on top.

A classy 50-odd from Crowls, 40-odd from Galvin and some excellent late order hitting from Peeky on debut and the (now quite well tanned) Liam meant that we ended the day in an excellent position, 8/319 from the allotted 80 overs. Obviously, this was largely due to the excellent knock from Jack Hill. The day (and the weekend really) were his, and from the start he was in command displaying a full 45-degree range of strokeplay (both in front of and behind point for a mainly coloured in wagon wheel). Hillsy was extremely good all day, a chanceless ton which barely had a false shot. He stayed patient and accumulated his runs throughout the day, finally falling for 110 looking for quick runs with the score at 275.

All in all a great day, and with showers forecast for week 2 we are going to need to maximise opportunities to take the 10 wickets against a side that no doubt has a formidable batting line up, being undefeated this year.

 

4TH GRADE

Sydney Uni 171: A Bell 45, T Fullerton 45
Sydney 1-15: J Rinka 1-1

 

5TH GRADE

Sydney Uni 205: Z Islam 59, C Lorenzato 51
Sydney 3-117: S Pathak 2-12, A Wilkinson 1-15

 

METRO CUP

Sydney Uni 140: R Rahman 61, M Ghumman 42
Georges River 8-141 (dec): J Pockey 3-27, J Aylward 2-18, M Shanahan 1-23

Round 7 for Metro saw the team travel to beautiful Bland Oval to play George's River. Unfortunately due to some late unavailabilities, we are left one player short for the clash.
The toss is won and we choose to bat on what looks like a slightly thatchy but otherwise hard pitch.

The new opening pair Rahman and Ghumman have a measured and solid start both seeing off the new ball. After the first 15 overs the boys really found their range, particularly Rahman who began to open the shoulders and find the boundary as his confidence grew. Some glorious shots were played by the little fella who's fluidity some teamates have started likening to the great Tendulkar. An impressive stand of 101 until Mo Ghumman is caught for 42. Rahman is trapped in front soon after well forward of the crease for 61. A fine cricket innings!

Then came a disappointing display of cavallier cowboy cricket where neither the bowlers or the match situation were shown any respect. The batsmen refusing to try and build an innings before attacking all out. 7-18 lost and we're heading out to bowl in shock 40 overs early with only 140 on the board.

We certainly took the field with a positive attitude and were treating the situation as if the match was just starting and we were bowling first. With the turning deck, 45m straight boundaries and the earlier opposition demonstration of left arm orthodox being extremely effective some experimentation was in order and we opened the attack with the accurate pace of Prasan and a couple of overs of spin of from debutant Om Prekesh Sah. A bold but calculated move that would have paid off if a very confident LBW shout had been given in Om's second over.

Back to full pace mode and Max Shanahan joined Prasan in the attack. Max claims a pole in his second over and the score is 1-24 and team confidence is buoyed. Prasan unlucky with a missed slips chance bowls well but wicketless and is replaced by our very own Englishman Jacob Pockey in his first bowling outing for the season. Jacob showed a little understandable rust early but fired up in the second half of his spell taking 3-27 off 8 overs. The game is poised at 5-87 and we don't feel out of the contest.

Time to bring on Wild Thing Jon Alywood who was ferocious and basically unplayable. A wicket with his first and fifth balls and nobody wants to come out and bat against him at this point! Such a shame Jono was limited to 6 overs due to age restrictions. Om returns to bowl his spin and immediately makes an impact claiming 2 wickets in 2 balls in his first over. An opportunistic stumping to Cade and an undeniable LBW.

The score is 8-102. 39 runs to claim victory for George's River and 2 wickets required for the students to claim 1st innings points. The situation was certainly tense and runs were hard to come by as the overs ticked by. We toiled away with Shanahan and the Adikarage at one end and Om continuing from the other but with calm captain Jasper batting with big hitter Panchal our total was achieved with 3 overs left in the day. A surprise declaration sees our openers having to see out the final over of the day finishing 0-0. This leaves us with a massive opportunity to bat properly next week and claim outright points with our bowling heavy attack

 

Round 6 Team Announcements

Round 6 Team Announcements

Round 6.jpg

2ND GRADE

Sydney Uni vs Sydney
Drummoyne 10:30am

Jack Holloway (c)
Ryan McElduff
Charles Litchfield
Nicky Craze
Lewis Bedford
Matt Powys
Ed Arnott +
Tom Kierath
Lawrence Neil-Smith
Jono Craig-Dobson
Kieran Tate/Ben Joy

 

5TH GRADE

Sydney Uni vs Sydney
St Paul's 10:30am

Suda Sivapalan
Vince Umbers
Julian Dimas
Nick Mortimer
Rob Browne
Zohirul Islam
Christian Lorenzato +
Ashwin Kirubanandan
Shivansh Pathak/
Murray Miles
Tom Draca
Andrew Wilkinson (c)
 

3RD GRADE

Sydney Uni vs Sydney
Camperdown 10:30am

Ryan Danne
Kevin Jacob
Jack Hill
Alex Shaw
James Crowley +
Ash Cowan (c)
Tom Galvin
Josh Toyer
Aidan Peek/Kieran Tate
Liam Whitaker
Jack Lawson

 

METRO CUP

Sydney Uni vs Georges River
Bland Oval 12:15pm

Rakin Rahman
Jacob Pockney
Max Veltro
Harry Gibson
Jon Aylward
Tim Synnott
Muhammad Ghumman
Greg Cade (c) +
Om Prakash Sah/
Shivansh Pathak
Max Shanahan
Peasan Adikarige

 

4TH GRADE

Sydney Uni vs Sydney
Birchgrove 10:30am

Liam McElduff
Brayden Dilley
Alex Bell
Tom Fullerton
AJ Grant (c)
Oliver Thompson
Hayden Storey +
Hugh Farrow
Murray Miles/Aidan Peek
Jazz Rinka
Jono Phoebus

 

SYDNEY UNI LIONS

Lions vs Nondescripts
Alexandria Oval 1:30pm

Team TBA

 

Round 5 (Day 2) Match Reports

Round 5 (Day 2) Match Reports

1ST GRADE

Sydney Uni 320: D Mortimer 73, T Cummins 70*, H Kerr 59
Penrith 285: D Holloway 3-43, H Kerr 2-22, T Ley 2-51, B Joy, 2-69

Day 2- Probability of Precipitation (PoP) - describes the chance of precipitation occurring at any point you select in the area. [PoP = C x A where "C" = the confidence that precipitation will occur somewhere in the forecast area, and where "A" = the percent of the area that will receive measurable precipitation, if it occurs at all.  

Inquisitive students turned up on Day 2 to Howell Oval having been reliably informed by Tim Bailey and friends that in fact the entire days play would be lost to the 100% chance of rain forecast every hour till stumps. A confused Damien Mortimer took the field at 10:30am when even his Apple iPhone informed him that it was 100% raining. Well it wasn't and it wouldn't all day. The Penrith side got off to a brisk start and before long the score had moved to 0/48. Ben Joy provided the crucial breakthrough dismissing DiBartolo for a quickfire 35. From there, Uni applied constant pressure to claim another 4 wickets prior to lunch leaving Penrith at 5/84. Tim Cummins continued his brilliant game against his former team, taking some superb catches along the way. 

The middle session was hard toil with Penrith captain M Castle & J Sammut combining for a lengthy partnership. When D Holloway made the breakthrough it was his 3rd wicket for the day in a return of 3/43. The big left arm quick has been on the money of late and looks to be finding his feet in the top grade. Promising signs. H Kerr and B Joy returned to end the 7th and 8th wicket partnership respectively each taking their 2nd wicket of the day. When T Ley chimed in with the 9th wicket and the score on 237 the game looked all but over. However some missed chances in the outfield along with some quality batting by the Penrith skipper who by this stage had passed 100* meant the Cats now required less than 40. With the 2nd new ball finally available T Ley wrapped up the innings to hand the Students a well earned 6 points and another opportunity to sing the song. Still frazzled by the lack of rain despite his iPhone telling him it was currently raining D Mortimer led us in song: "Some come to fear us, while others..."

 

2ND GRADE

Sydney Uni 281: N Craze 129, J Craig-Dobson 37, R Danne 31
Penrith 8-282: K Tate 3-38, R McElduff 2-48, J Craig-Dobson 2-81

After Nicky Craze’s phenomenal century last week, Uni had set a total of 281 for Penrith in Day 2.

The Nash report was far less shocking than the prior week, it was a routing and after some initial pressure from the young side, the elders took control in what was a one sided affair. 5-0 to the elders was a fair result, and it must be noted that Nicky Craze hasn’t let a goal in on either week. Talent. 

It was another good wicket at No1 and looked well suited for the batting side from early on. The usual opening bowling spell from Neil-Smith and Dobson was fairly conservative, challenging the batsmen on line and length. However, the wicket offered little and subsequently entertained the wishes of Penrith, who won the first session fairly comfortably. It was a tough challenge for skipper Jack Holloway, who was forced to change plans fairly regularly in the hope that new bowlers would present new challenges, which he did well. To the credit of Ryan McElduff, our lone off-spinner, bowled with variety and guile. He opened up a window by sending back Long on, tempting the left handed batsman to advance and play in a way that Uni wanted. It did certainly feel that the day was drifting fairly quickly into Penrith’s hands, but, as many a cricketer will appreciate, it is rarely a story without twist nor turn. In a plot twist that both Machiavelli and Byron would be proud of, wickets seemed to tumble at regular and important times. A rejuvenated Uni side, led by Kieran Tate’s hustling seam bowling, quickly began to notch up the seemingly absent pressure, and now, the timings of the day began to coincide with the innings, and there were both concerns of time and wickets for Penrith. Uni were able to take 8 wickets, but missed out narrowly on points, after a bold strike finished the innings off for Penrith and they had won on first innings. 

In truth, there was very little that separated the two sides in terms of skills. Uni should be proud of their efforts considering their youthfulness and there are plenty of positives to take forward. Again, fine regards to Nicky Craze for his innings that gave Uni something to play with for the bowlers, and to Kieran Tate who scored 26* at 11 and bowled with pace and pressure. Thanks also to Lew McMahon and Fletch for their help at the ground throughout the day. 

Onto the next!

 

3RD GRADE

Sydney Uni 222: T Galvin 55, J Crowley 29, M Robinson 29
Penrith 132 & 2-93: S Wood 4-37, J Toyer 3-38 & 1-25, J Lawson 2-34

Day 2 of Round 5 was same bat time, same bat station at Cat Park. Once again, various means were used to arrive at the ground (Essence M2/M7/M4 the best, train to St Marys then beg teammates for a lift to the ground the worst). The inclement weather and dubious forecast was seen by some of the more inexperienced members as cause for a Friday meeting with P Epsi esquire, however wiser heads knew that regardless of the actual weather, an early start and 1-hour trip to Penrith was going to be required, so really, little was to be gained. Leggie Newington was the big loser on the day, he has presumably just returned to being sober while reading this report after his 19th b’day celebrations carried on in Shire into the early hours in what appeared to be a massive bender.

At any rate, the Units were faced with a hard green pitch and overcast conditions, which caused Chrissy Withers to start salivating and skipper Greigo to decide that he would revert to bowling seam up given the conditions, his offies copping some treatment the previous week. Nash was commenced, and an on-time start was forecast.

In the middle of a spirited contest, the youth found themselves ahead and we were playing on the “skipper’s watch”, which is basically that game time is unlimited until old get ahead, at which point it is “last play”. It then started raining. Given the competitive nature of 3rd grade Nash, no quarter was asked or given, and the game continued. At some length. The rain got much heavier, but as we were still behind, the game continued. At some length. After 20 mins or so, the game was finally called in the pouring rain and we retired to the sheds, young having sealed the win. Penrith no doubt thought we were ridiculous in playing the game in the rain, a fact made clear to me as we enjoyed some libations (in excellent company) post-match.

The game situation required us to get 65 runs with 7 wickets in hand, which wasn’t going to be easy, as the conditions favoured the home side. Crowls and Robbo got us off to a solid start, but after they both departed the cats had a bit of a sniff. This did not deter Tom Galvin, who in a spectacular piece of batting, got the job done in excellent style in what was without doubt his best innings for the club. A cameo from Wood later on also yielded good results, and we ended up posting a Benaud’s 222, and a lead of 90.

An ultimately futile attempt at maximum points was entered into, but a classy 50 from one of the cats’ young guns meant that we were no danger. Special mention to Galvin once again, as he put together a pretty useful piece of bowling in the middle in his first overs in 3rd grade.

After the game fines, a few beers and a catch up with the Penrith lads was one of the highlights of the day. This is something that is woefully underutilised in the lower grades, there should be more of it. 4th on the table and it is on to next week when we return to fortress Camperdown to take on the 3rd placed Balmain tigers, who will provide a stern test.

 

4TH GRADE

Sydney Uni 85 & 3-51: A Bell 32 & 25*, L McElduff 17
Penrith 8-108 (dec): J Rinka 3-20, S Canagasingham 3-40

4th Grade arrived at Snape Park on Day 2 with 58 runs left to defend and 8 wickets still to take. With the cloudy skies and the occasional spray just prior to the commencement of play, the students were determined to utilise the favourable conditions to apply some real pressure on Penrith.

Stand-in skipper Olly Thompson made it clear that high energy was required and it started with Nash. The Julios were confident as ever, but a sneaky run through from Christian Lorenzato early in the piece gave the Nuffs an advantage which the Julios weren’t able to claw back. 4-1 to the Nuffs.

The new look opening combination of Jazz Rinka and Shehan Canagasingham looked to start things off well with the ball. Much like last week, dot balls eventually led to a breakthrough for Jazz and the students were in with a chance. However, Penrith’s 4th wicket partnership took control of the game for the Cats, before Olly’s quick reflexes removed their skipper, with a classic run out at the non-striker’s end. Penrith’s incumbent batsman was clearly distraught and it seemed clear that Penrith didn’t have much batting left. Sure enough, a few quick wickets followed for Jazz (3-20), Shehan (3-40) and Murray Miles (1-28), before some lower order hitting took Penrith over the line.

At 8-108, Penrith declared and sent us back in to bat following the tea break, with a slim lead of 23, in a somewhat wishful attempt to claim 10 points. For us, it was a good opportunity to get some time out in the middle, following two poor performances with the bat. Openers McElduff and Storey set the tone nicely. Alex Bell top scored once again (25*), showing a combination of solid defence and controlled aggression, to ensure that Penrith’s captain finally called it a day at around 4.45 pm, with the students on 3-51 after 27 overs.

Overall, a disappointing result for 4th Grade, but nevertheless, still many positives to take from the performance. To have kept the game alive for 42 overs considering there were only 58 runs left to defend at the start of Day 2 is a credit to the overall efforts in the field by all 11 players. The bowlers toiled all day with their consistent line and length and great support was provided by the fielders, with the likes of Hugh Farrow and Liam McElduff leading in this department. In the end, we were probably 40 runs short with the bat.

The lads will be determined to turn things around next weekend as we come up against last season’s 4th Grade Premiers, Sydney.

 

5TH GRADE

Sydney Uni 82 & 80: N Mortimer 30 &20, T Derrick 24
Penrith 8-294 (dec): Z Islam 3-35, A Wilkinson 2-45

 

METRO CUP

Sydney Uni 6-330 (dec): J Aylward 102, S Sivapalan 53, M Ghumman 51
Randick 85 & 5-181: T Synnott 4-22 & 2-50, M Shanahan 3-23, J Aylward 2-41

A reluctantly agreed on 30 minute delay to the start was simply putting off the inevitable for Randwick as they faced a stoic and determined Metro side on day 2 at St Paul's. Continuing to bowl with the opposition score on 3-50 the plan of attack was to tie down one end
with the leg spin of Tim Synnott (a glaring omission from the Clayton graph just quietly)
and continue rotating the quicks downhill from the street end.

Randwick's plan appeared to be making every effort to slow things down hoping the weather would save them while also trying to block out the 80 overs. A futile effort that played into our well made plans. Synnott rolled through maiden after maiden finishing with an incredible 8 maidens out of the 13 overs he bowled. The batsmen had no answer and Tim finished with 4-22. Adikarage and Shanahan bowled with good range finishing with 0-14 and 3-23 respectively.

Once the first couple of wickets fell the opposition couldn't stem the tide and were eventually bowled out for 85 after 21 overs of the days play. There was no hesitation in enforcing the follow on and our focus became simulating semi-final cricket and bowling Randwick out for a second time in the day.

Randwick changes tack in the second dig and alternated between aggressive patches of hitting out and conservative blocking stages. This made it hard for the Uni bowlers to get into a good rhythm until the score was on 63. Wild thing Jon Aylward bowling off a shorter run and within himself striking with a signature off cutter rattling off stump. Oliver Ottosson then was rewarded for his great shape and lines picking up his first wicket for the club.

Another 50 odd run partnership followed until the return to the bowling crease of Synnott.
A sharp stumping to Cade and the score is 3-119 off 31 overs with 26 overs left in the day. Then a harrowing moment as diving for the ball through point, debutant S.J DeSilva dislocates his shoulder. In distress, the enthusiastic young player is sent to the hospital for assessment.
Arriving back at the ground we are given the good news by S.J. that the damage is minimal. A minor miracle based on the earlier diagnosis from his 10 amateur doctor teammates who were convinced the season was over for the Sri Lankin!

The day wound down into a bit of a stalemate but based on the recent events in third grade we had no intention of winding up early and pushed on with the same level of energy that was on display the entire day.

In the final over of the day rain started bucketing down just as Tim was releasing a vicious wrong'un. Distracted, the batsman played all around the ball and was bowled. A fitting way to wind up the day. 5 wickets claimed in the second dig and 6 points in the bag.

In the lead up to Christmas, we need to continue the upward trend for the Metro team if we are going to stick with competition leaders Gordon and Penrith. Thanks to the club for helping put a competitive team on the field this round. With players coming back there will be some selection headaches this week no doubt after some impressive performances from rookie players!

 

Five for Kershaw in Adelaide

Five for Kershaw in Adelaide

Joe Kershaw continued his outstanding start to the Futures League season by grabbing five wickets for ACT/NSW Country against South Australia in Adelaide today.

ACT/Country was defending a modest first innings of 198, but Kershaw kept his side in the game by removing SA captain Jake Winter and former UNSW Bee, Ben Wakim, in a hostile opening spell.  He then ran through the lower order, dismissing Daniel Drew, Nick Winter and Luke Robins to finish with the excellent figures of 5-79, holding South Australia to a lead of only 105.

Kershaw has been in outstanding form this season, after missing most of 2016-17 with injuries.  He has now taken nine wickets in his first two Futures League appearances.

A short time ago, ACT/Country had reached 43 without loss in its second innings.