SUCC Feature: Milestone Monday

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SUCC Feature: Milestone Monday

Nigel Cowell had a memorable week, joining the NSW Sheffield Shield squad for the first time, and taking his third five-wicket haul in First Grade, a match-winning 6-46 against Hawkesbury.  He also collected his 300th wicket for the Club when dismissed Hawkesbury opener Brent Atherton with the first delivery of Hawkesbury’s innings.  He became the 21st bowler in the Club’s history to reach 300 wickets.

Greg Mail recorded his 200th win as a player in the weekend's match against Hawkesbury. 

Josh Toyer moved into 22nd place on the Club’s list of wicket-takers with 298 (passing Alan Baigent on 297) when he dismissed Hawkesbury’s Third Grade opener, Jarod Brent, with the second ball of the innings.

Nick Larkin and Liam Robertson both passed 600 runs for the Club for the season.

Will Hay’s 50 in First Grade was his 20th half-century in Firsts, three of which he converted into hundreds.

Kieran Tate’s outrageous figures of 6-4 in Second Grade were his best in Seconds, his best for the Club and his third five-wicket haul of the season.

Lewis McMahon took his 100th wicket for the Club when he bowled veteran Hawkesbury batsman Dean Laing in Third Grade.

Tom Decent’s 79 against Hawkesbury in Third Grade (most of it scored on one leg) was his second half-century, and highest score, for the Club.

Jack Gibson (3-26) improved on his best bowling figures in Third Grade.

Ryan Danne (4-18) returned his best bowling figures in Fourth Grade.

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SUCC Feature: Five things we learned... Round 12

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SUCC Feature: Five things we learned... Round 12

We’re going to quotients

Three rounds out from the qualifying finals, the top end of the First Grade competition table is so badly congested that it seems inevitable that the last couple of places will be decided by quotients.  Bankstown looks comfortably placed at the top, six points clear of Penrith and Sydney, with premiers Manly surging up to 41 and Campbelltown on 40.  But then it gets really interesting, with six teams on 36 (and Easts on 35).  This should create some interesting tactical decisions over the next few weeks – is it better, for example, for a side batting first to lose wickets trying to add quick runs late in the day, or bat more sedately and not damage its for-and-against?  Adding thirty runs while three wickets fall might give the bowlers more runs to defend, but adding fifteen runs without losing a wicket improves the quotient.  In practice, teams very rarely think like this – they play to win, and let quotients take care of themselves.  But if (as seems very possible), someone misses out on the finals by 0.09 on quotient, it will be hard to resist looking back at places where that extra few runs might have been found.

 

Manly isn’t going quietly

Current premiers, Manly, had a dismal start to the season, losing its first three matches.  But in Round 12, Manly firmly grasped a top-four place by accounting easily for Sydney, who had led the table for so much of the season.  Manly’s top five – Jack Ritchie, James and Adam Crosthwaite, Ahillen Beadle and Jay Lenton, is efficiently productive, while Beadle, Michael Visser and Nick McLachlan have led the attack. Manly is starting – at the right end of the season – to resemble the ruthless side that claimed last season’s title.  

 

Jono Cook can bat, too

Last round we mentioned how well Wests’ new recruit, Jonathan Cook, has performed with the ball this season, and the leg spinner’s four wickets against Bankstown gave him 16 from his four games since Christmas.  On Saturday, he went in to bat at five for 124, with Wests only fifty ahead in its second innings and Bankstown headed for an outright victory.  In just over two hours, Cook hammered three sixes and 13 fours, adding 197 with Chris Ridley (110 not out) and reaching his first century in Sydney First Grade.  He seems to think it’s quite an easy game at the moment.

 

Don’t expect bowlers to break many records this season

Last year, Manly’s Nick McLachlan was the leading bowler in First Grade with 50 wickets; the season before, it was Sydney University’s Nigel Cowell with 62.  With three rounds remaining before the finals, the leading bower in First Grade is Easts’ spinner Shane Devoy, who has 32 victims so far.  Even though in theory he could play six more games, it seems highly unlikely that he’ll get to fifty wickets.  In fact, generally, this is shaping up as the bleakest season for bowlers since 1989-90, when rain reduced the number of days played to such an extent that no-one managed more than 37 wickets.  Of the fifty leading wicket-takers in First Grade, almost one-third have bowling averages above thirty, and two have averages over forty.  Conclusion: it has not been a great vintage for bowlers.

 

Selections get interesting now

This time of year raises complicated selection problems, as clubs do their best to get the strongest teams possible qualified for the finals.  Usually, this means that a player needs to play three of the last five games in a particular grade (or a lower one).  With that in mind, and without suggesting that any club would do anything dishonourable or unfair, it’s time to consider the teams most likely to be stacked.  Take, for example, Western Suburbs’ Thirds – a team that has performed extremely well this season and sits in fourth place.  Let’s suppose that next week, someone in that side hits 160 not out – is there any chance that he’ll be promoted to Wests’ Seconds, who are currently 19th?  Similar questions will trouble Penrith’s selectors – there’s not much incentive to promote a player from Fourth Grade (who are fourth) to Thirds (18th).  And Randwick’s Fifth Grade (sixth) will be in no hurry to lift players in Fourths (16th).  Equal problems arise, of course, in clubs who are in contention in three or four grades, where there’s a need to balance fielding the best possible teams with the need to qualify enough players for each final. 

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SUCC Feature: Milestone Monday

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SUCC Feature: Milestone Monday

At the end of Round Twelve, Mark Faraday, Nick Larkin and Will Hay are clustered together in the club’s all-time list of leading run-scorers.  Faraday is in 8th place on 6156 runs, Nick Larkin ninth on 6146 and Hay tenth on 6135.

Jack Holloway (2-46) took his first wickets in Second Grade against University of NSW.

Tom Galvin (51) celebrated his debut for the club with his first half-century, in Third Grade.

Liam Whitaker has taken his 50th wicket for the Club.

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SUCC: Milestone Monday (on a Tuesday)

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SUCC: Milestone Monday (on a Tuesday)

Jack Maddocks became SUCC First Grader 775 when he made his debut against University of NSW.

Nicky Craze made his Second Grade debut for the Club (having previously played Second Grade for Campbelltown-Camden).

Kieran Tate’s 32 against University of NSW was his highest score in Second Grade.

Jack Gibson and Liam Whitaker both made their Third Grade debuts against University of NSW, and each took his first wicket in that Grade.

Tom Galvin made his debut for the Club in Third Grade against University of NSW.

Eoin Liehr’s 58 against University of NSW was his highest score in Fifth Grade.

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SUCC Event: Maasai Cricket Warriors

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SUCC Event: Maasai Cricket Warriors

Sydney Uni was privileged to host a warm-up match for the Maasai Cricket Warriors on Tuesday evening for their current tour of Australia, supported by The Primary Club.

The match against Sydney Uni was a fun affair played during twilight with the colourful outfits and smiles of the Kenyan tribesmen shining brighter than the lights it was played under.

The Maasai Cricket Warriors have been involved in The Primary Club's Marathon Cricket event being held at the SCG yesterday and today, with further matches to be held in Bowral as well as here in Sydney.

The Primary Club are hoping to raise funds to support the development of the Maasai Warriors Cricket Program.

Most of the Sydney Uni team was comprised of members from the Elite Athlete or Talented Athlete Programs, and enjoyed the opportunity to meet and compete with a group from such a different cultural background.

Not that it mattered, but for the record, Sydney Uni won the fixture 203 to 123. The experience alone for the boys as far more valuable than the runs scored, and we know it will be a memory that sticks with them for life.

Photos - http://on.fb.me/1TFdduD
Video - http://bit.ly/1R40lNN
Scorecard - http://bit.ly/1R40W1Z
Primary Club - http://bit.ly/1UMhSco

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