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A.W. Green Shield Trials 2019-20

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A.W. Green Shield Trials 2019-20

Following the most successful season in the Club’s records, Sydney Uni is excited to announce its A.W. Green Shield program for 2019-20.

The program will be lead by Henry Clark and Ryan Danne, both seasoned Premier Cricket players, with Ryan having progressed from Greenies to 1st Grade himself. They will be supported by the extremely valuable knowledge and experience of Director of Cricket, Cam Borgas. The side will be managed by Anand Karrupiah.

The selection process for 2019-20 takes on a slightly different look as follows:

  • Sunday 16th June | 9.30am - 11.30am | Martin Lambert Indoor Nets | OPEN SELECTION TRIAL

  • Sunday 23rd June | 8.30am - 2.30pm | Robertson Fields (Moore Park) | PRELIMINARY SQUAD MATCH DAY

  • Sunday 30th June | 9.30am - 11.30am | Martin Lambert Indoor Nets | PRELIMINARY SQUAD COMPETITIVE NET SESSION

Following the first open selection trial on Sunday 16th June, a Preliminary Squad of 32 players will be selected to continue on to a Match Day (23rd June) and a Competitive Net Session (30 June). Following this session, the final A.W. Green Shield Squad of 15 players will be announced.

Those players intending on trialing for either squad on Sunday 16th, please complete the registration form by clicking here.

Also, this season, Sydney Uni will be introducing and U14 Developmental Academy who will gain access to a high performance winter coaching program designed to prepare players for higher representative honours over the coming seasons. Further information about this Academy squad will be released shortly.

For full information on the A.W. Green Shield Program and the Selection Trials, please visit our A.W. Green Shield webpage by clicking here.

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Remembering the fallen... HN MacLaurin

Lt Colonel Henry Normand MacLaurin

Born in Sydney 31 October 1878

Killed at Gallipoli 27 April 1915.

 

MacLaurin is remembered at Gallipoli by a landmark called ‘MacLaurin’s Hill’.

He was a highly successful barrister, active in the militia forces when he enlisted on 15 August 1914, almost as soon as war was declared.

Tony  Cunneen, who has done invaluable research into lawyers’ service in the Great War, has written about the NSW legal profession:

         ‘While they were certainly members of what the historian Manning Clark called the ‘comfortable classes’ they were also willing to forgo the security and safety of that class and give all their support to the cause of national identity and honour on the battle fields on the other side of the world.’

MacLaurin played only two seasons for Sydney University CC.  In 1896-97, after scoring only 44 runs at 7.3 in 2nd Grade, he was inexplicably promoted to 1st Grade (1st Grade cap number 53) where he played another two games without distinction. In the season when the Club was readmitted on humbling terms to the Grade Competition in 1898-99,MacLaurin was selected in 1st Grade  twice more. An energetic 54 was followed by a non-descript 5 and he played no more.

His father, Sir Henry Normand MacLaurin (1835-1914), a Scotsman, was Chancellor of the University of Sydney from 1896 until his death. He was also President of the Legislative Council, the Upper House of the NSW Parliament. A dominant figure in conservative politics, he was nevertheless admirably open to fresh educational ideas, especially those brought forward by the NSW Labor Government of 1910 which related to the reform of the Senate of the University. His second son, named after his father, was educated at Blair Lodge School at Polmont in Scotland and then at Sydney Grammar School. Two other sons, Charles and Hugh both served in the War.

Charles was the father of Catherine who was in turn the mother of Alistair Mackerrass, Headmaster of Sydney Grammar from 1969 to 1989. 

After graduation BA in 1899 and admission to the NSW Bar,  MacLaurin carried on his work as a barrister from 11 Wentworth Chambers in Elizabeth St, specialising in accountancy. He also pursued a military career. Commissioned in the NSW Scottish Rifles in 1899, he eventually rose to command the 26th Infantry Regiment in July 1913. When he enlisted in the AIF, he was immediately appointed Lieutenant Colonel, commanding the 1st Infantry Brigade, a force of 4000 men. At 36 years of age, he was young for such responsibility but he wisely chose more experienced men to command battalions under him.

In a letter to  Justice David Ferguson (whose son, Arthur, a Law student who had also been to Sydney Grammar, was killed in France in 1916)  in March 1915, MacLaurin confided that rumours of the soldiers’ bad behaviour in Cairo had been exaggerated.

          ‘With 20,000 men it can be easily seen that some would play up for a bit while their money lasted…’

He stood up for his men, attacking those civilians who were ‘doubtful and dissatisfied and critical’. Their accounts were ‘false and malicious’. Although he was a stern disciplinarian, he had a fine reputation among his men who respected his energy and enthusiasm especially when they trained under him in Egypt.

When orders of the landing at Gallipoli came through, Mac Laurin was said to have ‘happily cancelled his leave and bounded smiling up the stairs to the General’s office to plan the attack.’ (Cunneen).

During the afternoon of 27 April 1915, at about 3.15 pm, MacLaurin ‘was standing on the slopes of the ridge that now bears his name… in the act of warning soldiers to keep under cover when he too was shot dead…MacLaurin was buried by his men where he fell.’ In 1919, he was reinterred at the 4th Battalion Parade Ground Cemetery. He was posthumously promoted to Brigadier General.

He was the fifth of the 337 from Sydney Grammar who were  killed or who died in the War. An extraordinary 2172 ‘Old Sydneians’ enlisted. (I am indebted to Dr Philip Creagh who has carried out painstaking and forensic analysis of the Old Sydneians who enlisted). There was widespread grief among the legal profession. A ceremonial service was held at the Banco court and special mention was made in the minutes of the Bar Association.

He was the first of the Club’s former players to be killed.

CEW Bean, the Great War's preeminent historian, and the grandfather of Ted Le Couteur, a 1st Grader with the Club in the 1960s, wrote of him:

           ‘…a man of lofty ideals, direct, determined, with a certain inherited Scottish dourness…but an educated man of action of the finest type that the Australian universities produce.’

 

James Rodgers

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The Semi Final: History and Hope

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The Semi Final: History and Hope

The spires of MacLaurin Hall tower over the University in the distance.

It’s a sultry March Sunday.

Kids no more than 12 years old, with shirts, on which  the University badge sits proudly, are kicking soccer balls on the Arena. Undergraduates of the future? Here is hope.

 A year ago, Sydney University CC met Sydney CC in the 1st Grade semi final on this same ground on the same weekend. A year ago, University won by 298 runs after batting well into Sunday, having faced almost 124 overs. That’s history but today, University again bats  into the 124th over.

The riches of history and the hopes of the future rhyme in  peaceful surrounds on a pulsating afternoon.

This time last year, Larkin, Cowan, Joy and Neil-Smith all played with distinction. Last year, Trevor-Jones, McElduff, Walker and Kershaw were all elsewhere. This time, they are all part of a hopeful side that struggles manfully throughout an innings that yields little more that 2 runs per over. Four batsmen each face 120 balls or more.

Last year, Sydney failed by 298 runs.

This year, they pepper the boundaries and beyond. 11 sixes clear the ropes and sometimes the fence. Until…20 to win. 9 balls to bowl. One wicket to take. It’s dark. It’s raining. Umpires intervene. No more play.

 But something gnaws away at me.

One year ago, the cricket world was turned upside down. Overnight, news had seeped through that Australian cricketers had been caught in a ball-tampering incident. The incident became a scandal. The scandal became a shame. This incident traduced the very values and traditions of a game which we love. There was a pall over the ground a year ago as we watched a more innocent version of our game that owes so much to those in whose history it treads.

So much of the future looked bleak.

So look up at MacLaurin Hall again.

This is the stuff of history.

Henry Normand MacLaurin is remembered at Gallipoli by a landmark called ‘MacLaurin’s Hill’.

But this is not the MacLaurin that the Hall is named after.

HN MacLaurin was a highly successful barrister, active in the militia forces when he enlisted on 15 August 1914, almost as soon as the Great War was declared. He had played  two seasons for Sydney University CC.  In 1896-97, after scoring only 44 runs at 7.3 in 2nd Grade, he was inexplicably promoted to 1st Grade (1st Grade cap number 53) where he played another two games without distinction. In the season when the Club was readmitted on humbling terms to the Grade Competition in 1898-99, MacLaurin was selected in 1st Grade  twice more. An energetic 54 was followed by a non-descript 5 and he played no more.

His father, Sir Henry Normand MacLaurin (1835-1914), a Scotsman, was Chancellor of the University of Sydney from 1896 until his death.  

The Hall that peers down on the cricket ground is named after the Chancellor.

His second son graduated BA in 1899 and was admitted to the NSW Bar. When he enlisted in the AIF, he was immediately appointed Lieutenant Colonel, commanding a force of 4000 men.

He stood up for his men, attacking those civilians who were ‘doubtful and dissatisfied and critical’. Their accounts were ‘false and malicious’. Although he was a stern disciplinarian, he had a fine reputation among his men who respected his energy and enthusiasm especially when they trained under him in Egypt.

When orders of the landing at Gallipoli came through, MacLaurin was said to have ‘happily cancelled his leave and bounded smiling up the stairs to the General’s office to plan the attack.’

During the afternoon of 27 April 1915, at about 3.15 pm, MacLaurin ‘was standing on the slopes of the ridge that now bears his name… in the act of warning soldiers to keep under cover when he too was shot dead…MacLaurin was buried by his men where he fell.’

He was the first of the Club’s former players to be killed.

That’s history. Our history.

But look up at MacLaurin Hall.

That’s his father who ruled the University with great vision.

And experience that old building standing sentinel while generations beneath it play this noble game.

The future is now bright.

The tidal wave rises up, where hope and history rhyme.

 

James Rodgers

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SUCC in the Community: Riverview T20 Charity Match

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SUCC in the Community: Riverview T20 Charity Match

Not only is Sydney Uni dominating on-field (more to come later today), but our members are also going above and beyond off the field with a number of our members supporting the T20 Charity Match at St Ignatius College Riverview on Monday 18th March.

The ‘Celebrities’ team will have a distinct SUCC flavour with Ed Cowan, Ryan McElduff, Tim Croft and potentially a surprise appearance by SCG MacGill all slated.

Club legend, James Rodgers, will be coaching the Riverview side.

The charity T20 match is in memory of James’ son, Patrick, whose idea this was over 9 years ago.

Proceeds of the event go to support Jarjum College Redfern, a small primary school for indigenous kids who would otherwise not go to school. Last year, this event raised over $25,000 to the cause.

Anyone interested in supporting the fundraising efforts of James and the Riverview team, please visit https://www.riverview.nsw.edu.au/t20/ and purchase a raffle ticket. Some amazing prizes on offer, and all money goes to a good cause.

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Family Day Fun!!!

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Family Day Fun!!!

Bring the whole family down to our inaugural Family Day 2019

Sydney Uni Cricket are pleased to announce that its inaugural Family Day, proudly brought to you by FDC Construction & Fitout, will be held on Sunday 17th Feb 2019 in conjunction with the NSW Premier Cricket Limited Overs Cup Quarter Final at University Oval.

Thanks to FDC Construction & Fitout, we will have plenty of activities for the kids, including cricketing challenges, face painting and a jumping castle. There will be heaps of giveaways and prizes, not just for the kids but for parents as well.

If that isn't enough reason to join in the fun, there will be a fiercely contested Limited Overs quarter final between Sydney Uni and Penrith from 10am. The two sides are fighting it out for the Club Championship at the moment, and have already met twice in the T20 Cup earlier this year (with Sydney Uni victorious in the Sydney Thunder Conference Final).

Some of the best cricketers in Australia will be on show during the match, with plenty of exciting cricket action on display. Check out our highlights video below.

Show your interest by either registering to attend on our website or our Facebook Event page. Follow the event on Facebook for any updates. One lucky registered attendee will win a $150 prize pack thanks to FDC Construction & Fitout and Sydney Uni Cricket.

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Australia Day... at University Oval

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Australia Day... at University Oval

By James Rodgers

THE PROLOGUE

Nick mows our lawns.

He also works as a grounds man on the Bankstown cricket ovals.

He had seen the Club’s match against Bankstown a few weeks ago.

He confides to me as I set out on Saturday that “those Uni cricketers are not only good players, they’re good blokes. They know how to play the game. They even went out of their way to talk with me.”

That unsolicited ringing compliment is still with me as I walk down Lawson St Redfern. A sultry January day crackles with anticipation. Mounted police clip-clop up Abercrombie St. Other police saunter on foot in pairs.

Today is Australia Day, a day of conflicting emotions for many of the 13,000 indigenous people who live in Redfern. Redfern, the birth place of urban Aboriginal civil rights movement in Australia in the 1960s and 70s.

On this day (‘first landing day’ as it used to be called), 231 years ago, eleven ships from Great Britain, carrying about 700 prisoners, entered Port Jackson and in the evening, Captain Phillip, watched by members of the Eora nation, raised the Union Jack and drank to King George III at a place he called Sydney Cove.

This morning, Luke Slattery writes:

“There remains no parallel in human history for the early Australian story of mass human transformation – or elevation – from such lowly beginnings…a story of universal moral value.”

 The sandstone University, now also a mass of modern construction sites, seems a world away from Redfern although 370 indigenous undergraduates now study here.

THE LOGOS

The oval’s eccentric scoreboard, a jumble of numbers and half numbers, needs mathematical interpretation. With help from John Kilford, I can see that the batting side is 1-20 chasing 260. Campbelltown are batting; University are in the field.

The hands of ‘Victor’ the clock on the Grandstand are forever set at 12.20. It will tell the correct time twice a day but not now. It’s 2.15pm.

By 3.15, Campbelltown are starting to bat themselves into a strong position. Wells and Browne have put on almost 70 despite steady bowling on a flat wicket.

Robertson induces Wells to hit to mid on. A scrambled run. A direct throw from Malone to Robertson’s hands. Umpire Patel signals Wells out. A vital wicket. But what’s this? The skipper talks to the umpire. The appeal is withdrawn. The decision is reversed. Robertson has broken the stumps without the ball.

“They know how to play the game.”

This is no isolated incident. Earlier in the season, Robertson signals ‘no catch’ after the umpire had given an Easts’ batsman out.

In his hands, under his leadership, the ‘spirit of cricket’ is not some document at the bottom of a cricket bag.

It seems right when Robertson has Wells caught by Kershaw a few overs later.

Another story of universal moral value.

A wander around the ground.

Guarding the boundary is University cricket royalty. At long off is Ed Cowan. At deep cover is Nick Larkin who has scored 138 earlier in the day. Between them, they have 30 centuries for the Club in 1st Grade, nearly 14,000 1st Grade runs.

The quality of the cricket, the quality and integrity of the cricketers are causes for pride. Former Club President, Jim Mackie, who has died a few weeks ago, was a player of integrity says current Club President Bruce Collins who rests a hand on my shoulder and admits in a voice with a slight quaver, “This is what makes us so proud to have played here.”

THE EPILOGUE

Burke of Campbelltown who’s been playing 1st Grade for 18 years garners all his experience and all his fortune to survive 2 dropped catches and 2 opportunities for run outs until he is eventually run out for 40 from 40 balls by Mortimer throwing from the deep. Holloway takes a tumbling diving catch on the boundary near the scoreboard to send the six hitting Cormack back. The 3rd Graders, fresh from triumph at St Paul’s, send up a cheer and then another more lusty one as Robertson bowls the last batsmen when Campbelltown need 12. The strains of the victory song echo across the ground from the change rooms …”we are the Uni boys…” They’re also good blokes, good players in a Club that leads the Club Championship by a long way.

This was Australia Day.

231 years ago, the British first came here to stay.

165 years ago, University cricketers first played cricket and are continuing to play and to win and to instill pride in all of us.

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