Rod Lyall 03/07/2023
The relegation battle in the T20 Cup heated up considerably in Deventer on Sunday, when Salland gave themselves a real chance of staying up by beating ACC by 60 runs and changing places with them at the foot of the table.
ACC will now need to beat Excelsior ’20 in next weekend’s final round in order to avoid relegation, and with the Schiedammers fighting for a place on the finals day that will be no straightforward task.
The day had begun less promisingly for Salland, who lost a low-scoring game against HBS Craeyenhout by 13 runs after restricting their opponents to 109 for seven.
Reinder Lubbers struck an early blow for the home side by getting danger man Tayo Walbrugh caught at slip off the fourth ball of the match, and went on to complete an outstanding spell with figures of 4 – 2 – 7 – 3.
Manjinder Singh hit a lusty 10-ball 25 before becoming the second of his victims, but it was Nic Adendorff’s steady 47 which gave HBS a total they had some prospect of defending in the bowler-friendly conditions.
Julian de Mey maintained great pressure on Salland’s batters with a spell which gave him figures as remarkable as Lubbers’s, 4 – 1 – 5 – 2; and at 43 for five the home side were in serious jeopardy.
They were rescued by a stand of 50 between skipper Victor Lubbers and his elder brother Reinder, but once that had been broken by an outstanding piece of fielding by De Mey to run out Victor as they attempted a third run, the ask became too great for the remaining batters, and the innings closed on 96 for nine.
It soon appeared that the ground staff might have dropped in an entirely different pitch during the break as Salland, after winning the toss, ran up their highest total of the competition, their 174 for five built on a second-wicket stand of 100 between Talha Ahmed Khan (37) and Ganesan (62).
Sahir Naqash then contributed a 21-ball 43, inclduing four fours and two sixes, to ensure that ACC faced a very significant target.
They began briskly enough, reaching 76 for one in the ninth over, but once Akhil Gopinath had removed Shreyas Potdar, stumped by Rahil Ahmed, and Elam Bharathi had bowled Thomas Hobson for a fine 27-ball 46, the innings started to sag.
Gopinath claimed three more wickets to finish with four for 29, and there were two apiece for Reinder Lubbers and Bharathi as ACC were dismissed for a disappointing 114.
It was the Amsterdammers’ second defeat of the weekend, as they had also lost by 26 runs to Voorburg at Westvliet on Saturday.
There they were chasing a much more modest target, Voorburg having reached 125 for eight, Nehaan Gigani having top-scored with 32, but three wickets for Floris de Lange (at a cost of 20 runs) and a hat-trick by Mees van Vliet, who finished with four for 24, restricted them to just 99 all out.
Rain played havoc with Saturday morning’s programme, with the matches between HCC and VOC Rotterdam and Sparta 1888 and Punjab Rotterdam abandoned without a ball being bowled, and only eight overs per side being possible at Westvliet, where Voorburg beat HBS by 13 runs.
Voorburg’s 95 for four was dominated by Musa Ahmad’s 27-ball 64, which brought his tally for the tournament to 348, and although Walbrugh made 39 from 22 deliveries before he was caught behind off Van Vliet and Tim Drummond contributed an unbeaten 29, the Crows were unable to score at the nine and a half an over they needed.
Improving conditions in the afternoon meant that Sparta were able to take on VRA Amsterdam, who missed an opportunity to go clear at the top of the table when they lost a see-sawing encounter by two wickets off the final ball of the match.
The leaders had been put on the back foot early by a vintage spell from Mudassar Bukhari, who displayed all his guile in an opening spell of three for 21, and they were only able to recover from 53 for six to 122 all out thanks to valuable contributions from Udit Nashier (29) and Aaditt Jain (17); Prithvi Balwantsingh kept up the pressure for Sparta with three for 29.
Bukhari, Sam Ferguson, Garnett Tarr and Will Clark all got a start at the top of Sparta’s order and Khalid Ahmadi made 18 from just eight deliveries, but VRA kept taking wickets, and Eduard Visser’s final over began with 11 still needed and seven wickets down.
Balwantsingh fell to the first ball, but Tom Hoornweg struck the second to the boundary, and a string of singles left four required off the last and skipper Joost-Martijn Snoep on strike.
His lofted drive to long off eluded the fielder, and Sparta had secured the two points they needed to put an end to any fears that they might become entangled in the relegation tussle.
