A.W. Green Shield Squad 2018-19

A.W. Green Shield Squad 2018-19

Following an exhaustive selection process over the last 2 months, we are proud to announce our A.W. Green Shield squad for 2018-19.

  • Haider Ali
  • Sanjay Anandarajah
  • Tom Armstrong
  • Saarangan Arvind
  • Ethan Fitzpatrick
  • Morris Fredrikkson
  • Raphael Giles
  • Matthew Johns
  • Oscar Kirk
  • Curtis Mackinnon
  • Gurkeerat Mann
  • Tom Phelps
  • Ritish Sethi
  • Adi Srivatsan
  • Eesan Sureshkumar

The squad will be coached by former Sydney Uni all-rounder, Darius Visser, and aim to become the first Sydney Uni 'Greenies' squad to win the A.W. Green Shield title.

We thank all of those players who have trialed for the Club over the last few months, it was a tough process to select a squad with so many talented young cricketers on show.

The Green Shield schedule for 2018-19 is as follows:

Round 1: Sunday 16th December
Round 2: Tuesday 18th December
Round 3: Thursday 20th December
Round 4: Saturday 5th January
Round 5: Sunday 13th January
Round 6: Tuesday 15th January
Round 7: Thursday 17th January

History beckons for Jack Maddocks

History beckons for Jack Maddocks

If Jack Maddocks takes the field in tomorrow night's Bledisloe Cup match, he will win his first Wallaby cap and carry on a long tradition of Sydney University cricketers turning out in Australian colours.

In recent times, the increased professionalism in sport, and the greater need for specialisation, has made it rare for sportsmen to compete in two sports at a high level.  Jack Maddocks' cricket ended when he signed a professional contract with the Melbourne Rebels, but not before he made his First Grade debut for University as a middle-order batsman.

Now he's about to become the club's first Wallaby since Bob Egerton, the brilliant winger/fullback who won nine caps in 1991, the last of them as a member of the side that won the World Cup final at Twickenham.  Once an ACT Under-19 cricketer, Egerton never played a full season of cricket for University, but often turned out to fill vacancies in the lower grades.  

Before Egerton, Wallaby centre Michael Hawker played for the club in 1979-80, as a wicket-keeper batsman in the lower grades and in the Poidevin-Gray side.  He represented Australia 25 times between 1980 and 1987.

In earlier times, when there was a clear demarcation between seasons and Rugby Union was strictly an amateur game, it was far more common for sportsmen to excel at two games.  Dr Saxon White opened the batting in University's 1956-57 First Grade semi-final team, and played for Australia as a centre seven times between 1956 and 1958, touring the British Isles in 1957-58.  Legendary loose forward (and later Wallaby coach) Dave Brockhoff played as a lower-grade batsman in 1947-48 and 1948-49; Neville Emery, who hit a First Grade century for University in 1948-49, won 10 Wallaby caps as a fly-half; and occasional First Grade wicket-keeper Hugh Taylor played 4 Tests in the 1920s.  Dr Alec Ross, who scored a double-century in First Grade for University, was considered the finest full back of his era and played 20 Rugby Tests between 1925 and 1934.

Only two men have represented Australia in both cricket and Rugby Union Tests, and both were Sydney University players.  Johnny Taylor played 20 cricket Tests between 1920 and 1926, and two Rugby Tests in 1922; Dr Otto Nothling played 19 Rugby Tests between 1921 and 1924 and played a single cricket Test, as an all-rounder, in 1928-29.  Another outstanding University sportsman, Jack Massie, was picked for the 1913 Wallaby tour to New Zealand but withdrew because of exams, and was chosen on the 1914-15 cricket tour to South Africa, which was cancelled due to the outbreak of war - so he was selected for Australia in both games but actually played in neither.

Finally, let's hope that Jack Maddocks avoids the fate of Norman Lamport, the Sydney University middle-order batsman and scrum-half, who was named on the Wallaby bench for Tests against New Zealand in 1929 but never made it onto the field.  

Preseason Program 2018-19

Preseason Program 2018-19

Update: Preseason Program 2018-19

Welcome to all new and continuing Sydney University Cricket Club players,
 
With preseason training now underway, we wish to provide an update on the schedule and structure for the remainder of the preseason, leading in to Round 1 on the 22nd September.
 
With 7 teams and some 100+ playing members, it is impossible to provide a suitable training environment for all club members at one set time with only 3 indoor nets to work with.
 
Therefore, we have made the decision to create 2 training groups to maximise player time, eliminate congestion and allow more skill work during these preseason sessions.
 
The squads are called: “1st Grade Squad” and “Full Club Squad”.
 
We have established a Facebook group titled “Sydney Uni Cricket Players Group 2018-19”- we ask that ALL players please search for this on Facebook and request to be added, as the majority of communication relating to training and matches with be via this group.
 
Congratulations to the following players who have been selected in the preseason 1st Grade Training Squad. This squad will be revised on the 17thSeptember. If anyone feels they should be in this squad but have been left out, please feel free to get in contact with Cam Borgas – 0408 852 892.

Jack Lawson
Matt Powys
Ryan Danne
Tom Galvin
Josh Toyer
Hayden Kerr
Devlin Malone
Nicky Craze
Dugald Holloway
Ryan McElduff
Charlie Cassell
Varun George
Kieran Tate
Liam Whitaker
Charles Litchfield

Nick Larkin
Ed Cowan
Liam Robertson
Damien Mortimer
Tim Cummins
Ben Trevor-Jones
Ben Joy
Tim Ley
Joe Kershaw
Dom O’Shannessy
James Larkin
Jack Holloway
James Crowley
David Miller
Max Hope

Congratulations also to the following players who have been selected in the Elite Athlete Program:

Will Masojada
James Robertson
Hugh Farrow
Cullen Hathurusinghe
Matt Moran
Aidan Peek
Michael Robinson
Max Shanahan
Liam Coelho
Tom Brooks

Hayden Kerr
Devlin Malone
Nicky Craze
Dugald Holloway
Ryan McElduff
Charlie Cassell
Varun George
Kieran Tate
Liam Whitaker
Charles Litchfield

Congratulations to the following 'new' players who are invited to participate in the next phase of the preseason program as part of the "Full Club Squad" (note this is not a guarantee of selection and this group may be reduced at a later date)

Tom D'Arcy
Fraser Noack
Matthew Staples
Lewis Ansell
Jack McLaine
Travis Fleming

Nihir Gandhi
Aaron Crofts
Murray Watts
Vikrant Nehru
Tom Crawford
Pierce Foley

The training program for the 1st Grade Squad will be communicated directly to the squad.

Please click here for the preseason training program for the "Full Club Squad"

We thank you for being patient and understanding as we transition through some of these training improvements. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact the Club.

Henry William Lawyers partners with Sydney Uni Cricket

Henry William Lawyers partners with Sydney Uni Cricket

Continuing with the great sponsorship news this week, leading commercial law firm, Henry William Lawyers, has agreed to partner with Sydney University Cricket Club for the 2018-19 season.

Henry William Lawyers will become a Gold Partner supporting our 2-day cricket programs and various events, including The Great Cricket Debate and annual Golf Challenge, throughout the season.

Sydney Uni Cricket General Manager, Dale Bryant, said: "We are delighted to welcome Henry William Lawyers to the Club. Having quickly built a reputation for excellence, Henry William Lawyers will be a great fit for the Club moving into a bright future."

Mark Faraday, Executive Lawyer and Director of Henry William Lawyers, said: "Sydney University Cricket Club provides outstanding sporting and developmental opportunities for young cricketers. The firm is very excited to be able to support the Club in helping its cricketers achieve their potential on and off the field."

Henry William Lawyers has become a highly respected force in the Sydney legal market. The firm and a number of its lawyers are recognised as being amongst the best in their areas of expertise by Doyle’s Guide and Best Lawyers, Australia.

The Club looks forward to forging a strong partnership with Henry William Lawyers into the future.

ICYMI: Former SU Cricketer set to become Prime Minister

ICYMI: Former SU Cricketer set to become Prime Minister

The final outcome of Pakistan's 2018 general election may not be known for some time yet, and it seems likely that the eventual government will be a coalition - but that coalition will be led by the party with the most seats, Tehreek-e-Insaf, whose leader is Imran Khan.  When Imran is confirmed as Prime Minister, he will become the second man to lead a national government who also played cricket for Sydney University.

The first was Edmund Barton who, as the leader of the Protectionist Party, served as Australia's first Prime Minister, from 1 January 1901 to 24 September 1903.  Barton enrolled at Sydney University in 1867, having been school captain at Sydney Grammar.  Immediately, he joined the Cricket Club,  playing with significant success in the Second Eleven where, in his first season, he averaged 15 with the bat and took 13 wickets at a cost of four runs each.  His efforts in the Firsts - eight runs in four innings - were less eye-catching.  After that first season (when he also took two cheap wickets in the Firsts), he never bowled again, possibly because it involved too much effort.  Barton was famously immobile in the field, although he had safe hands when the ball was hit to him, and he was often hidden away at long-stop, behind the wicket-keeper.

Barton spent two seasons flitting between the Firsts and Seconds, and then settled into a regular First Eleven place.  He seldom scored heavily - matches were generally low-scoring anyway - but he often made useful runs.  The scorecards of his matches are littered with the great names of early Australian cricket: when the Albert Club demolished University for 26 in 1872-73, Barton was one of the two men who escaped dismissal by the great bowler Fred Spofforth, who claimed 9-10.  Two years later, he stood up to Spofforth to score 25, while in the match against the Warwick Club, he played well against Test players Billy Murdoch, Ted Evans and Charles Bannerman.  He was the first University captain to allow the young Tom Garrett to bowl, two years before Garrett opened the bowling in the first of all Test matches.  When University played Bathurst in 1874-75, Dave Gregory joined the team, with the result that man who would become Australia's first Test captain played under the leadership of the man who would become the country's first Prime Minister.  Numerically, Barton's best effort was an innings of 61 against the Caxton Club in 1871-72.

Barton served as club secretary for many years, and the name Barton appears on a First Eleven scoresheet as late as 1885, although with no initial, so we cannot be sure that it was Edmund.  He also umpired, most notoriously in a match between New South Wales and the touring English team in 1878-79, when a run out decision by his fellow official, George Coulthard, resulted in a riot.  On that occasion, Barton was credited with restoring order and calming the crowd who had invaded the field.

Barton's term as Prime Minister was brief; he stepped down from the position to take a seat on the High Court, which he considered to be a more important role.

Imran Khan's career as a Sydney University player was brief, consisting of half a dozen matches in 1984-85.  He had been enticed to New South Wales to become the State's second professional imported from overseas (after West Indian Andy Roberts, seven years earlier).  The NSW Cricket Association assigned Sydney University as his Grade club, and Imran (who had played for Oxford University as an undergraduate in the early 1970s) turned out for the students when he was available.  At first, he did little bowling, as he was recovering from shin splints.  He was a positive presence around the team, though, and his team-mates enjoyed the experience of playing with one of the great all-rounders of the modern game, and marveled at his extraordinarily active social life.  

The last match before Christmas was a Saturday/Sunday game at University, against North Sydney.  University batted for most of the first day, managing only 191 on a slow, grassless pitch.  Opener Greg Bush and Test batsman Trevor Chappell batted stubbornly for North Sydney, and at lunch on the second day, North Sydney needed about ninety runs to win with eight wickets still standing.  The rest of University's team loitered in the changing room or wandered off to the nearby hospital canteen, but Imran had a better offer, from a glamorous young woman who had arrived  at the ground in a red sports car just before the break.  When play resumed, University had only ten players on the field - no Imran.  After a few minutes, a red sports car appeared and Imran took the field.  Chappell and Graham Spring continued to push and nudge North Sydney towards victory when Imran walked up to Mick O'Sullivan and announced, "captain, I will bowl now".  Almost at once, he found life in the pitch that had eluded every other bowler in the game, unsettling Spring with sharply lifting deliveries before firing an inswinging yorker into his stumps.  From 23 overs, he took 4-25, stealing an improbable win for University by only nine runs.  Back to full fitness, he went on to help New South Wales win the Sheffield Shield.

It would be difficult to imagine two cricketers - or, indeed, two men - less similar than Edmund Barton and Imran Khan.  Nonetheless, they share a unique distinction in the history of the Sydney University Cricket Club.
 

ISC joins the Sydney Uni Cricket family

ISC joins the Sydney Uni Cricket family

Sydney University Cricket Club is very proud to announce that it will partner with leading Australian apparel supplier, ISC Teamwear, for the next three seasons.

As the leading force in Premier Cricket in Australia, Sydney Uni is excited to collaborate with ISC Teamwear to provide our players with cutting edge new ranges of apparel both on-the-field and off.

ISC News Story Announcement.jpg

Sydney Uni Cricket General Manager, Dale Bryant, said: "We pride ourselves on striving for the best on-the-field, and this partnership with ISC Teamwear will ensure we provide our players with the best quality apparel to help achieve personal and team success in 2018-19 and beyond."

ISC Teamwear Managing Director, Jason Schulman, said : "We are delighted to be partnering with one of the oldest and most prestigious cricket clubs in Australia and look forward to being a part of the exciting developments Sydney Uni Cricket have  planned over the next three years and beyond"

ISC Teamwear have been designing and manufacturing the highest quality apparel for elite Cricket, Rugby League, AFL, Rugby Union, Netball, Football and Basketball teams for over 20 years and Sydney Uni Cricket Club is excited about joining ISC on the next phase of that journey.

Green Shield Train-on Squad 2018-19

Green Shield Train-on Squad 2018-19

We are proud to announce the Green Shield train-on squad for 2018-19. The squad is:


Eesan Sureshkumar

Matthew Johns

Ben Crawford

Nathan Gibbons

Jack Bekkar

Fitzgerald Bowman

Louis Madison-Hanlon

Gurket Mann

Rex Quail

Miles Ward

Tom Thorpe

Tom Armstrong

Raphael Giles

Adi Srivastan

Anish Joseph

Haider Ali

Tom Phelps

Ethan Fitzpatrick

Morris Fredrikkson

Oscar Kirk

Sanjay Anandarajah

Ritish Sethi

Curtis Mackinnon

Saarangan Arvind


The squad will have a training session on Sunday 12th August 2018 from 9.00am to 11.00am at the Martin Lambert Indoor Nets.

Congratulations to those who have been chosen in the squad.