Round 6 Preview

Rod Lyall & Bertus de Jong 27/06/2024


Last week’s full round of Topklasse fixtures produced, at least for the present, a very crowded table, with seven teams clustered within two points of each other (although with varying numbers of games played), and two more just a point or two behind. Although this Saturday notionally sees round 6, some sides have only played three matches, so assessing the standings is a bit like trying to figure out who’s leading an 800 meter race before the stagger unwinds. And last week’s results didn’t help much, either, although they did confirm that ACC will have a big fight on their hands to climb out of the relegation zone.


RL: Unbeaten VRA Amsterdam, having demolished HCC last week, return to the Bos to take on defending champions Voorburg in what promises to be one of the most significant matches of the round. With returning internationals Teja Nidamanuru and Vikram Singh now combining with Johan Smal, the chief contributor to their decent total against HCC, the VRA batting line-up looks remarkably strong, as it will need to be against a varied Voorburg attack. Neither top order, in fact, has been as consistent as its credentials on paper might suggest, but it is the champions who have so far relied very heavily on a single big partnership to boost their total. Still and all, the emergence of Ryan Klein as a powerful No. 5 is a real bonus, as is the growing role of Michael Molenaar as an allrounder. That said, it’s VRA’s pace attack which, on present evidence, is the more menacing of the two, and after last week’s disappointment against Punjab, Voorburg will need to be at their best to get the better of their hosts.

BdJ: There’s plenty of open questions around what indeed looks a potentially key match for both sides at the Bos, not least what sort of surface they’ll be playing on given the transitional custodial situation at VRA this week. It looks an inopportune juncture for VCC’s troubled top order to play themselves into form however, with the host’s bowling attack, already looking in fine rhythm, currently honing their skills across the border in Germany. Despite the emergence of a slew of promising youngsters at Westvliet, VCC look aside that may need another season to recover from the recent winter exodus, while VRA’s new-look first team seem to be hitting their stride.


RL: Level on points with the leaders but having played two more games, Punjab-Ghausia are also at home this week, taking on current wooden-spooners ACC at the Zomercomplex. It’s imperative for the Amsterdammers that they don’t let the gap at the foot of the table grow any bigger, but Punjab at home are never an easy proposition, and with their home-grown crop yet to make a significant contribution ACC will need strong contributions from their overseas contingent, Van der Merwe, Sheena and Sayed, if they are to threaten Sikander Zulfiqar’s side. For them, a century by Mohsin Riaz, a near-miss by Saqib Zulfiqar on his return from World Cup duty, and fifties for Shoaib Minhas and Jonathan Vandiar demonstrate the power of their top order, only Musa Ahmad yet to get past fifty. Punjab’s attack, moreover, seems well suited to exploiting the fragility of the ACC’s top five, and it would be one of the biggest shocks of the season were the Amsterdammers to head back north with the points.

BdJ: While they may find themselves at opposite ends of the table for now, both ACC and Punjab will be looking in the same direction at this point – namely down. For ACC the looming threat of relegation will be the principle focus, while Punjab have two losses against them and can ill-afford another at home to the league’s whipping boys if they’re to mount a serious challenge this season. It would indeed be the upset of the round if not the whole summer should ACC take two points back North on Saturday. The ACC top-order looks particularly out of their depth thus far, especially in the absence of Heino Kuhn, and without Dosti castaways Rahil Ahmed and Mahesh Hans the Amsterdammers have simply looked out of place in the top flight this year.


RL: Wins last week propelled both Excelsior ’20 and Sparta 1888 into the middle of the table, although the Schiedammers’ destruction of HBS was probably a more notable victory in the longer term than Sparta’s over ACC. Jason Ralston is unlikely to have many better days than he did against the Crows, but Niels Etman and Jens Blankestijn provide a useful foils, and the arrival of Victor Lubbers as a genuine allrounder gives skipper Roel Verhagen plenty of options. There are, perhaps, more questions about the Schiedammers’ batting, especially in the middle order, and in Cameron Fraser, Khalid Ahmadi and Martijn Snoep Sparta have a seam attack capable of causing their hosts some problems – if they can work their way through Excelsior’s solid-looking top four. Sparta’s own batting hasn’t really fired as yet, and one senses that that might be where this battle centres. But the winner of this encounter will stake a significant claim to a spot in the top six, while the loser may well find themselves dropping back into the relegation zone. So nowhere in this week’s games will the stakes be higher than at Thurlede.

BdJ: While back-to-back wins for both sides in the last couple of weeks may have put worries about relegation to rest for the time being at least, it still looks like the mid-table ain’t big enough for the both of them and which side gets to start setting their sights higher and which needs to start thinking about survival may well be decided at Thurlede on Saturday. For all the pedigree of their top order, Excelsior have had reason to be grateful for the depth that the arrival of Lubbers lends to the batting and a wagging tail of late, with only Tim Etman alone averaging over 30 and Niels Etman outscoring many recognised bats. Verhagen himself seems to have found some form in Germany however, and while Sparta’s seam attack has looked solid they still struggle to find fifty good overs in a game. The spartan trump card remains the destructive Riley Mudford of course, but the big-hitting keeper-bat has yet to replicate his short format form in the 50-over comp, and Sparta’s fans may be beginning to wonder how deep a hole that particular ace is hiding in.


RL: HBS Craeyenhout, back on their own astroturf to face VOC Rotterdam, will need to put last week’s remarkable collapse behind them quickly if they are to return to winning ways. Here, too, both sides need the points to stay with the clustering pack, and both will doubtless again be looking to their overseas contingent to provide a good deal of the muscle. Walbrugh, Botha and De Villiers all had off days for the Crows against Excelsior, leaving Wesley Barresi to fight a rearguard action in company with Julian de Mey, while Schiehout, Bettelheim and even the injured McKenzie proved their worth for VOC. The balance of the sides will be influenced by whether McKenzie is able to play this week, but it’s also significant that the Rotterdammers’ local brigade – especially Jelte Schoonheim and Asief Hoseinbaks – have been able to contribute more to their campaign than the Crows’ equivalents.

BdJ: A remarkable symmetry between the Crows and the Bloodhounds this season indeed, both mired in the mid-table and reliant on their overseas for most all of their runs and a good chunk of the wickets, albeit both boasting some promising youngsters that look at most a season away from being genuine assets. It would be nice to imagine that this weeks encounter will be decided by the efforts of a Boddendijk or a Jain, and indeed it may well be. More likely it’ll be down tom which side’s overseas have the best day out, and it’s a brave man who bets against Walbrugh at Craeyenhout.


RL: The same remark about a quick recovery applies to HCC, who this week face a potentially tricky visit to the Loopuyt Oval to take on Hermes-DVS. Sebastiaan Braat’s side gives the impression of having settled down as a unit more than the Lions, with Ostling, Doyle, Braat himself and the returning Aryan Dutt all weighing in with the bat and an attack spearheaded by the Elenbaas brothers, Braat and Niels Woermeijer, backed up by Murid Ekrami. HCC’s season, of course, has been badly disrupted by the weather, but they will be concerned that no-one has managed more than 36 with the bat in their three matches so far – and that came from bowling allrounder Daniel Crowley. So Boris Gorlee will be keen to step up himself and to get more from the rest of his top five. The bowling has been more effective, it is true, but whether setting or chasing the Lions will need a better start than they have so far been able to achieve.

BdJ: Survival was Hermes’ stated ambition at the start of the season, and despite having picked up just the one win thus far it could be argued they’ve set their sights a little low. While the bowling looked a little light ahead of the season, the efforts of Woermeijer, the brothers Elenbaas and reinforcements from south of the border have kept them competitive even in Dutt’s absence. HCC meanwhile have looked strangely out of sorts this season, for a side that’s maintained a core unit for a half-dozen summers now the Lions nonetheless look oddly incoherent and less than the sum of their parts. On paper the visitors’ extensive top-flight experience ought to make them heavy favourites against the newly-promoted Hermes, but it doesn’t really feel that way two days out.


RL’s picks: VRA, Punjab, Excelsior, VOC, Hermes.

BdJ’s picks: VRA, Punjab, Sparta, HBS, Hermes.

VCC vs Punjab at Westvliet | Topklasse Round 5 | 22.06.24

Ralston grabs seven for Excelsior, but VRA go top

Rod Lyall 23/06/24

For the first time in this season’s 50-over Topklasse competition the weather relented sufficiently for a full round of fixtures to be played, complete and uninterrupted, added interest coming from the return of the Dutch international side from the Caribbean.

VRA Amsterdam took full advantage of the fact, retaining their unbeaten record by bowling HCC out for 72 at De Diepput to win by 134 runs and move back to the top of the table.

The home side, also previously unbeaten, had done well to restrict the Amsterdammers to 206 all out, 92 from Johan Smal, who shared a third-wicket stand of 107 with skipper Teja Nidamanuru (39), instrumental in VRA’s achieving that total.

Conor McInerney removed both batters, going on to take four for 24, while Andrew Leonard returned to clean up the tail and finish with three for 29.

But when HCC replied Ben Fletcher (three for 12 in seven overs) and Elijah Eales combined to rip the top off the batting, and at 43 for six the Lions were effectively out of the game.

Shariz Ahmad now took over, taking four for 24 as the slide continued, and no-one was able to make more than Teun Kloppenburg’s 13 in HCC’s disappointing total.

If VRA’s demolition of HCC was a team effort, at Thurlede it was Excelsior’s Australian paceman Jason Ralston who was almost single-handedly responsible for his side’s even more dramatic destruction of the HBS battiing.

His figures of seven for 11 were the best ever in the club’s limited-overs top-flight history, beating Jorg Henneke’s seven for 25 against Kampong Utrecht in 1997, and they saw the Crows slump to 66 all out as they chased Excelsior’s fairly modest 163.

Kyle Klein had done much of the damage after Wesley Barresi put Excelsior in, taking four for 36, but Lorenzo Ingram stood firm, holding the tail together and making 62 before he was the last man dismissed.

Excelsior could also thank Niels Etman, who made 32 in an eighth-wicket partnership of 46 with Ingram before he was run out by Klein.

Lehan Botha and Reece Mason got the HBS total to 21 before Ralston struck, but then six wickets fell in 35 deliveries for the addition of just six runs, and although Barresi and Julian de Mey delayed the procession for a time until Jens Blankestijn removed De Mey, Ralston then returned to have Barresi caught behind for 21, the last four wickets falling for one additional run.

There was drama of a different sort elsewhere, not least at Westvliet, where defending champions Voorburg staged a strong fightback before losing to Punjab-Ghausia by six runs.

The Rotterdam side had set a fairly stiff target, their 248 for seven dominated by an unbeaten 97 from returning international Saqib Zulfiqar, and they appeared to have occupied the box seat when they had their hosts on 43 for four, with Michael Levitt, Gavin Kaplan and Noah Croes all back in the team tent.

Ahmad Shafiq had done much of that early damage, claiming three of the wickets at a cost of 10 runs, but then Ryan Klein, unable to bowl but undoubtedly fit enough to bat, and Michael Molenaar turned the game around with a fifth-wicket stand of 154.

This was another club record for the top flight, following Kaplan and Croes’s 202 for the third wicket three weeks ago, and it took Voorburg to within 52 runs of their target before Sajjad Kamal induced a false shot by Molenaar, who was well caught by Saqib at straightish deep mid-on.

Molenaar had made a 76-ball 72, but Klein was still there, and it was clear that much now depended on how effectively he was able to manage the lower order.

Together with Laurens Boissevain, Stijn de Leede and Floris de Lange he added another 32, but with 20 needed he pulled Kamal to Mohsin Riaz at backward square and departed for 92, made from 75 deliveries with six fours and three sixes.

De Lange and Viv Kingma reduced the deficit to single figures, but then Sikander Zulfiqar returned, producing a captain’s spell to have both De Lange and last man Mees de Vliet caught behind by Fawad Shinwari, and Punjab had squeezed home.

The drama was equally tense at the Hazelaarweg, where VOC Rotterdam, having conceded the largest total of the day when Hermes-DVS posted 261 for seven, won by one wicket with two deliveries to spare.

The VOC attack was depleted by the loss of Jock McKenzie who, in his third over of the day, deflected a powerful straight drive from Daniel Doyle into the stumps to run out Ashley Ostling, but in the process injured his right hand so severely that he was forced to leave the field.

Doyle went on to make 40, and with 50 from Aryan Dutt and 77 from Sebastiaan Braat Hermes had good reason to be happy with their batting effort.

Ralph Elenbaas then had Francois Fourie caught behind before he had scored, but Ryan Schierhout (74) and Taylor Bettelheim (69) added 125 for the second wicket, putting their side in a strong position until Braat returned to remove Bettelheim and run out Schierhout.

Tim de Kok and Jelte Schoonheim steadied the VOC ship, but Niels Woermeijer and Braat claimed their wickets, and effective resistance from the lower order again kept the Bloodhounds in touch with the required rate.

So effectively did they do so, indeed, that Roman Harhangi and Asief Hoseinbaks needed only ten off Woermeijer’s final over.

Harhangi was trapped in front by the first ball, and there was uncertainty on the field as to whether the injured McKenzie would come out to bat as last man.

He duly appeared, and proceeded to hit a four and a huge straight six to give his side the victory which had eluded them against Excelsior a week ago.

In the crucial relegation battle at the Bermweg Sparta 1888 reduced ACC to 24 for five before Guy Sheena’s 61, supported by lesser contributions from Anis Raza and Izhaan Sayed, enabled the visitors to muster 148, Sparta skipper Martijn Snoep taking three for 15 from ten overs with no fewer than six maidens.

Sam Ferguson led the way for Sparta with 59, but it was Shaquille Martina, in his first substantial innings for his new club, who saw the home side through to victory with an unbeaten 54, adding 55 with Cameron Fraser in an unbroken fourth-wicket partnership with gave Sparta their seven-wicket win.

Round 5 Preview

Bertus de Jong 21/06/2024

Four weeks into the wettest season in recent memory we’re still a deal earlier in the competition than we might have hoped, with barely half the scheduled matches thus far actually having been played. The table, consequently, is a trifle messy, and the current pecking order in no small part a reflection of luck with the weather rather than performance.

Current table-toppers HBS Craeyenhout have amassed a total of five points on a 2-1 record plus the point they reluctantly took from the not-uncontroversial wash-out at de Diepput last week, where point were shared owing to HCC having already reached their two match rescheduling limit. They take on Excelsior ‘20 away at Thurlede, the Schiedammers fresh off their first win of the season having held off a spirited VOC fightback last week. That win was set up through the efforts of Jason Ralston with the new ball and Niels Etman at the back end, and as a bowling unit Excelsior look to be coming together nicely though the batting remains a worry. A full strength HBS, with Wes Barresi and Kyle Klein back from the World Cup, will be optimistic about holding on to the top spot for another week at least.

Defending champions Voorburg will likewise be welcoming reinforcements in the form of Vivian Kingma and Michael Levitt, and having gotten through the early season without their internationals with just the one loss will be bullish about their chances of defending their title. They won’t be welcoming back former skipper Sybrand Engelbrecht however, who called time on his cricketing sabbatical last week to concentrate on his career. They take on a Punjab-Ghausia side that may be a little rattled by their shock loss to Sparta last week, but still look capable of providing a stern test for the title-holders despite a disappointing 2-2- record thus far.

Meanwhile the only two unbeaten teams in the competition, HCC and VRA, will meet at de Diepput in hopes of getting a game played where others have failed. HCC are unbeaten thanks in no small part to three abandonments, but even under-strength looked in decent shape in the one game they did get in at Thurlede, young Teun Leijer again impressing with the ball. VRA meanwhile have bagged two wins already despite the absence of internationals Vikram Singh and Teja Nidamanuru, and will back themselves to make it three from three this weekend. An interesting question will be whether Singh returns to his customary opening slot or sticks with the number three role he’s been occupying for the Dutch, allowing the promising experiment of Demari Prince at the top with Shirase Rasool to run a little longer.

Over at Hazelaarweg VOC Rotterdam will welcome their second consecutive delegation from Schiedam in the form of Hermes DVS, but will be hoping for a different outcome from their valiant defeat at the hands of Excelsior. The newly-promoted Hermes already look a handful however, and with the return of Aryan Dutt from national duty could reasonably claim to be favourites. The batting card still looks a tad top-heavy, reliant on Daniel Doyle Calle in particular, but then a dependence on an in-form top order is probably preferable than looking to the lower order to dig you out of trouble, as VOC had to last week. The brothers Jain almost pulled off a remarkable recovery last week, and if the top order finds form the Bloodhounds will boast enviable depth, but another home defeat will make a top-four finish a tall order.

The round’s final fixture pits ACC against Sparta 1888 at Bermweg, and the outcome already looks like it could be crucial to an impending relegation fight. The Amsterdammers especially look destined for a fight to stay up, and with two heavy defeats already weighing down their NRR taking points off Sparta looks almost indispensable to their hopes of top-flight survival. The hosts will be firm favourites however, showing admirable resolve to fight back from 4-40 to put a score of sorts on the board against Punjab before the ever-impressive Khalid Ahmadi and last year’s Team of the Year skipper Martijn Snoep showed their worth with the ball to take two points from a rain-shortened match against Punjab. Indeed on paper the Spartans ought to be at least in contention for a top four spot this season, and a second win might just get their season back on track. Conversely a home loss to the unfancied ACC, one suspects, could send it into a tailspin.

BdJ’s picks: HBS, VCC, VRA, Hermes, Sparta

Sparta and Excelsior break their Topklasse duck

Rod Lyall 16/06/24

Another day of delays, interruptions and abandonments nevertheless ended with two surprise victories, one of them another of the close finishes which have enlivened an otherwise frustrating season.

The match between HCC and HBS Craeyenhout was the first to be called off, and because HCC already have two matches waiting to be replayed – the maximum allowed under the Playing Conditions – the sides had to be content with a point apiece.

A couple of hours later, the condition of the run-ups at Het Loopveld was responsible for the game between ACC and VRA going the same way; clubs have, apparently, yet to learn that covering the approaches to the wicket is just as important as covering the pitch itself.

By the time that decision was made play had already started at the Bermweg, where Punjab-Ghausia had won the toss and elected to put hosts Sparta 1888 in.

Sparta soon found themselves in difficulties at 24 for three, with Shaquille Martina, Riley Mudford and Sam Ferguson all gone, but although Faizan Bashir’s 25 was the top score some dogged resistance from Manminder Singh, Umar Baker and Martijn Snoep in the lower order enabled them to reach 161 for nine; Burhan Niaz was the most successful of Punjab’s bowlers with three for 18 from seven overs.

The visitors quickly discovered that that was a better total than it may have seemed at the innings break, and Snoep and Khalid Ahmadi maintained the pressure effectively as Punjab, losing wickets at intervals, increasingly fell behind the DLS par score.

An interruption for rain after 17 overs, with Punjab on 58 for four, led to the match being cut to 45 overs with a revised target of 157, but when the players were driven from the field for what proved to be the last time Punjab were on 88 for five, 11 runs behind the par score, and Sparta had earned their first points of this season’s 50-over competition.

After long delays a start was finally possible at Westvliet, Voorburg winning the toss and electing to field against Hermes-DVS Schiedam in a match reduced to 23 overs a side.

Michael Molenaar and Philippe Boissevain collected two wickets apiece, but Daniel Doyle was again in great touch, smacking an unbeaten 86 from 53 deliveries with seven fours and three sixes.

With Hermes on 150 for four, however, and Doyle seemingly on the way to another century, the rain returned and no further play possible.

That left the game between VOC and Excelsior ’20 at the Hazelaarweg, where a delayed start meant that there was a reduction to 40 overs a side.

With Jock McKenzie taking four for 15 and Jelte Schoonheim three for 28 Excelsior were dismissed for 156, despite Roel Verhagen’s 53 which had seen them reach 113 for three; the middle and lower order was again unable to capitalise on that solid start, the last six wickets adding just 43 runs.

As at the Bermweg, though, VOC soon found chasing even a modest target tricky in the conditions, especially with Jason Ralston attacking the stumps at pace and bowling Francois Fourie, Taylor Bettelheim and McKenzie in the space of five deliveries to reduce them to 9 for three.

Ryan Schiehout watched the chaos from the other end, contributing a determined 46, but when he tried to hit Niels Etman over the top and was caught by Ralston at long off, the score was 82 for six the home side’s chances seemed to have dissipated.

They were rescued by a stand between brothers Arnav and Aaditt Jain, who added a precious 34 for the eighth wicket, and after Arnav had been caught behind by Verhagen of Etman’s bowling for 29, Aaditt and Roman Harhangi continued to push towards their target, so successfully that when Etman began the final over only eight more runs were needed.

Four leg-byes halved the deficit, but then Harhangi tried to hit over the top and was caught by Lorenzo Ingram; four were now required off four deliveries as last man Asief Hoseinbaks joined Aaditt Jain.

He pushed the next ball to cover and took off, the batters keen to get Jain back on strike, but Ingram gathered the ball and ran towards the stumps, his short-range throw quick enough to beat Hoseinbaks’ desperate lunge.

Ralston finished with four for 22 and Etman with four for 30.

It was the second time this season that VOC had been deprived of victory in the final over, and Excelsior, like Sparta, claimed their first points of the competition. The hunt for a top-six place is now definitely on.

Round 4 Preview

By a quirk of the schedule in this rain-disrupted competition, this Saturday’s matches pit the current top five sides against those in the lower half of the table, so most of the latter will need to produce a win if they are not to lose further ground on the pace-makers. But the forecast suggests that Messrs Duckworth, Lewis and Stern may get another workout, and we’ll be keeping our fingers crossed that at least there will be five completed matches by the end of the day.


RL:  HCC, admittedly, are really only in seventh spot because they’ve played just the one game, their first two fixtures having fallen victim to the weather, and they will be aiming to move up the table when they welcome HBS Craeyenhout to De Diepput. While their bowling was decidedly more impressive than their batting as they demolished Excelsior last week, there’s no doubt they have a well-balanced side, and the way in which young Teun Leijer has slotted into the attack is an encouraging sign for the rest of the season and beyond. But the Crows have shown great early form, with Tayo Walbrugh and Matt de Villiers among the runs, and this game will be a good guide to the true strength of both sides. Once again, it may be the big guns who make the difference: HCC’s trio of overseas played a relatively small part in last week’s victory, but if Conor McInerney and Jed Wiggins come off with the bat then they might just have the edge over an HBS side which battled to contain Voorburg’s batting last Saturday.

BdJ: Indeed given the disparity in games played the table’s far from a fair reflection of the real state of play, and HCC’s win percentage is still 100% from that one game. Nonetheless HBS have looked the better all-round outfit thus far despite their opening loss to Punjab. HCC can afford their local talent in Gorlee and Staal to have a lean period with the bat, or their overseas to have a fallow spell, but not both at once. HBS do look reliant on their hired muscle at the minute though, and may not be too upset at the prospect of an early Dutch exit at the World Cup if it sees Barresi and Klein back in black.


RL:  There will be another such test at Westvliet, where Voorburg will take on a Hermes-DVS outfit still finding their wings in the top flight. The Schiedammers were untroubled in seeing off ACC last week thanks to Ralph Elenbaas’s destructive opening spell, and we can perhaps expect the brothers Elenbaas continuing to share the new ball. But here they will come up against Gavin Kaplan and Noah Croes, both of whom have been scoring heavily, and Hermes will need to get them early if they are to have a realistic chance. They will also need their own top order to fire, with Daniel Doyle, Ashley Ostling and CP Klijnhans facing the challenge of a Voorburg attack which, even without Kingma, Ryan Klein and Van Beek, has fared reasonably well, Mees van Vliet doing the heavy lifting and Michael Molenaar slotting in effectively alongside Floris de Lange. Points against Voorburg while their stars are away are, of course, worth their weight in gold for teams on the fringes of the top six, although Hermes will equally be looking forward to the return of Aryan Dutt. 

BdJ: Voorburg will be another club with mixed feelings about the Netherlands’ likely early return from the other side of the Pond, but fair to say the bench at Westvliet has proved deeper than at some other clubs missing fewer players. The development of both Elenbaas brothers into genuine all-rounders has certainly helped in terms of team balance, but the Schiedammers still look reliant on their top three for runs at this level. While there’s every chance Klijnhans and Doyle-Calle will be able to get on top of a depleted VCC attack, taking three first-choice bowlers out of their line-up doesn’t signal free-runs-day at Westvliet the way it might elsewhere.


RL: Currently fifth by virtue of a victory over Sparta 1888 last week, VOC Rotterdam are at home to Excelsior ’20, who have yet to post a win and will have been disappointed by their collapse against HCC. Strikingly, it’s been Asief Hoseinbaks, Jelte Schoonheim and Arnav Jain who have been the Bloodhounds’ principal wicket-takers, and apart from Jock McKenzie their overseas brigade have so far (which is, of course, not very far) not really lived up to expectations with the bat. Here they will encounter Excelsior spearhead Jason Ralston and an attack which was competent rather than truly threatening at Thurlede last Saturday. By batting Derek Mitchell as an opener Excelsior have exposed their middle order, where the South African was so effective in partnership with Lorenzo Ingram, and having failed to capitalise on a great start against Voorburg and then fallen to bits against HCC, the Schiedammers may need a rethink before taking on VOC. But Ingram is too good a player to stay quiet for long, and Excelsior will hope that he’s able to cash in with either the bat or the ball (and preferably both) against a VOC side which is also battling to cohere as a unit.

BdJ: While it’s understandable that VOC looked to reinforce their batting after the loss of Edwards and O’Dowd to Kampong over the winter, one wonders whether they’d not have done better to pull in a bowler too for the season, with young prospects Aaditt Jain and Roman Harhangi still looking a little raw at senior level. Excelsior meanwhile look a little light on batting, with Ingram’s lack of form with the bat a particular concern in a middle order that’s lent so heavily on him in the past.


RL: The Amsterdam derby, perhaps second only to the Schiedam version among such traditional encounters, is always a big occasion, and it’s VRA’s turn to make the short journey to Het Loopveld this week to take on ACC. Not for the first time, their fortunes this season have been markedly different, the visitors riding high at the top of the table after their Houdini act against Punjab-Ghausia last Saturday and the home side languishing near its foot. Short as the physical distance may be, it’s a far cry from VRA’s turf square in the Bos to ACC’s mat on the other side of Amstelveen, and even without Singh and Nidamanuru stand-in skipper Johan Smal’s side is much stronger on paper than that led by Shreyas Potdar. It was the spin pairing of Clayton Floyd and Shariz Ahmad which made the difference against Punjab, but ACC’s cutting edge comes from Indian overseas Izhaan Sayed, backed up by the spon of Devanshu Arya and Co. VRA, one feels, would have to be well below their best for their hosts to be in with a chance, but stranger things have happened on a ground where runs are never easy to come by.

BdJ: It’s been a long while since ACC have been anything but underdogs when one team or other shuttles up or down the Kalfjeslaan, and despite reinforcement in the form of old Dosti hands they’ve looked out of their depth in the one format where they’ve held onto a place in the top flight. VRA’s new arrivals have rapidly adapted to mat-cricket, perhaps helped by the fact that their home square has been out of commission for much of the season for one reason or another. The short boundaries, verdant outfield and idiosyncratic surface at ‘t Loopveld may be something of a leveller, but it will likely take more than that to tip things in ACC’s favour.


RL: Having suffered their first defeat of the competition at the hands of VRA last Saturday, Punjab-Ghausia Rotterdam travel to the Bermweg to face Sparta 1888. If not quite a full-on derby since Sparta made the move to Capelle a/d IJssel, there’s an element of local rivalry here as well, not to mention another encounter between potential title contenders and a side whose main concern may prove to be relegation avoidance. Punjab will have been encouraged by a more substantial contribution by Jonathan Vandiar against VRA, and their top order of Musa Ahmad, Shoaib Minhas, Mohsin Riaz, Vandiar and Sikander Zulfiqar is as imposing as any in the competition. It’s doubtful whether Sparta have the bowling resources to meet this challenge, although Cameron Fraser looked sharp against VRA and Khalid Ahmadi can be much more effective than we have seen this season. The reverse applies when Sparta bat: they are too dependent on Riley Mudford if they are to post significant totals, and Punjab’s bowling unit combines skilful spin with nagging seam bowling which can frustrate even the best sides.

BdJ: Khalid Ahmadi’s best performances this summer have been in the red of Belgium rather than Sparta, but he remains a potent threat on any surface. At full strength Sparta ought to be a match for most sides on paper, but too often they’re carrying passengers in an increasingly unforgiving environment. Punjab meanwhile have an embarrassment of riches on the batting side at least, and while they may lack a genuine spearhead with the ball they’re rarely short of options. One suspects it would take a red-inker of a day for one or more of the Spartans to put Punjab under pressure at Bermweg come Saturday.


RL’s picks: HCC, Voorburg, VOC, VRA, Punjab.
BdJ’s picks: HBS, Voorburg, VOC, VRA, Punjab.

VRA squeeze out a win to go top

Rod Lyall 09/06/24

Although we are only three rounds into the competition – and less when one remembers the four matches which have so far been postponed until July – there are already strong indications of who are most likely to be contenders for title, and who face a probable battle to avoid relegation.

Saturday’s games, for example, saw Hermes-DVS register an easy victory over ACC at the Loopuyt Oval, suggesting that the Amsterdam side, after defeats by HBS and Hermes, will need to lift themselves considerably if they are to come anywhere the top six by the end of July.

After being put in to bat by Sebastiaan Braat the Amsterdammers were rapidly reduced to 53 for six by Ralph Elenbaas, given a share of the new ball with his brother Olivier, his five for 29 in nine overs one of the most destructive spells of the season so far.

Murid Ekram and Braat himself then finished the job, as ACC were dismissed for 82 in just 26 overs, Guy Sheena and Mahesh Hans top-scoring with 16 apiece.

Although Joseph Reddy picked up two early wickets when Hermes replied, Izhaan Sayed adding another, opener Ashley Ostling’s unbeaten 48 from 50 deliveries saw the Schiedammers home inside 14 overs, ensuring that they received a healthy NRR boost in addition to collecting their first points.

There was a similarly comfortable victory for VOC Rotterdam at the Hazelaarweg, where Sparta 1888 could only manage 122, with Asief Hoseinbaks claiming four for 35 and Jelte Schoonheim two for 12.

Prithvi Balwantsingh and Gagandeep Singh had given them a decent start, Balwantsingh’s promotion to opener working well as he top-scored with 35, but once they had both gone three wickets fell for the addition of just one run, and although Cameron Fraser contributed a dogged 28 no-one else was able to get into double figures.

VOC lost both their openers by the time 14 runs were on the board, but then a stand of 91 between Taylor Bettelheim and Jock McKenzie doused Sparta’s hopes, and although Bettelheim fell finally to Manminder Singh for 56, Tim de Kok supported McKenzie as he knocked off the remaining runs and ended on 47 not out.

HCC, at last making it onto the park, were restricted to 185 for eight by Excelsior ’20 at Thurlede, but this proved to be more than enough as Teun Leijer’s brisk medium pace and Jed Wiggins’s off-spin dismissed the home side for just 125.

Excelsior’s attack worked their way steadily through the Lions’ batting, despite Boris Gorlee’s 31, and it took some spirited resistance from Daniel Crowley (36) and Patient Charumbira (27) to give their bowlers a reasonable total to defend.

Derek Mitchell and Tim Etman began the reply confidently enough, but once Crowley had removed Mitchell and Roel Verhagen, Leijer took over, claiming four quick wickets at a cost of 23 runs to run through the middle order and reduce the hosts to 82 for six.

Wiggins then finished the job with three for 16, a very disappointing outcome for the Schiedammers after they had put up a much more convincing fight against champions Voorburg the week before.

Voorburg themselves suffered their first defeat of the season at the hands of HBS at Craeyenhout, but their still-depleted side made a very good fist of chasing their hosts’ imposing 287 for six, the highlight of which was a third-wicket stand of 125 between Tayo Walbrugh (97) and Matt de Villiers (82).

Mees van Vliet ensured that the damage was not even greater, depriving Walbrugh of yet another century and then collecting two more scalps to finish with four for 37.

Nehaan Gigani got Voorburg’s reply off to a rollicking start with a 79-ball 71 which included six fours and three sixes, and then last Saturday’s centurion Gavin Kaplan contributed a valuable 57 before he fell to Benno Boddendijk.

That left the bulk of the task to Noah Croes, and as long as he and Michael Molenaar were together at the crease it seemed that the champions were in with a chance.

48 were needed off the last five and 25 off the final three, but when Croes holed out to Ferdi Vink as he tried to hit De Villiers over the top, departing for a run-a-ball 76, the challenge receded, and Voorburg finished 11 runs short of their target.

De Villiers finished with three for 55 and Boddendijk three for 57.

The weather took a hand in the Amsterdamse Bos, where VRA took on Punjab-Ghausia: a wet outfield meant a late start and a match reduced to 47 overs a side, and thanks to Shirase Rasool’s 74 and a hard-hitting 36 from Clayton Floyd the Amsterdammers were able to set Sikander Zulfiqar’s side a target of 239.

Musa Ahmad was the most successful of Punjab’s bowlers with four for 37, including the wicket of his brother and fellow-Dutch international Shariz.

Although Musa and Mohsin Riaz were both out by the time Punjab had 50, Shoaib Minhas and Jonathan Vandiar took the score to 133 for two in 29 overs before a heavy shower drove the players from the field, 17 ahead of the DLS par score at that stage.

A prolonged delay dictated that when they returned the game had been further cut to 36 overs and the target reduced to 176, leaving Punjab to make 43 runs in seven overs.

VRA skipper Johan Smal relied on his spinners, Floyd and Shariz, to restrict the Rotterdammers’ scoring, and so well did they respond that five wickets fell for 36 runs, Shariz removing Vandiar for 50 and Floyd dismissing Minhas for 63 as the batters tried in vain to hit over the top.

So Punjab, like Voorburg, had suffered their first loss of the season, and it was VRA who, having escaped looming defeat, moved to the top of the table on net run rate.

Excelsior ’20 vs HCC at Thurlede | Topklasse Round 3 | 08.06.24

Round 3 Preview

Bertus de Jong & Rod Lyall 06/06/2024


After a rain-ravaged start to the season the weekend finally promises some proper cricket weather, and (touch wood) we may just be in for a full round’s worth of Topklasse Cricket. While we do have the distraction of the national team’s World Cup date with South Africa to contend with, the elements at least look unlikely to interfere with Saturday’s action.


BdJ: Current front-runners Punjab-Ghausia are on the road again as they head up to the Amsterdamse Bos to take on VRA Amsterdam for their first turf assignment of the season. A nervy, rain-abridged win over HBS followed by a more convincing win at home to Hermes has seen Punjab to the top of the table early, though VRA are also unbeaten having breezed past Sparta in the only match the weather has permitted them. That game saw a welcome return to form for keeper-bat Demari Prince, who had struggled for runs in the deeply Dutch conditions this season. Prince’s promotion up the order looks a sound move in the absence of Vikram Singh, though with skipper Teja Nidamanuru also absent and deputy Johan Smal in dubious form after a long lay-off the VRA batting still looks vulnerable. Not so Punjab, who displayed their depth on that front in their opener and saw off Hermes comfortably despite a lack of returns for danger-man Jonathan Vandiar. Their concerns are chiefly on the bowling front, struggling to contain Hermes’ top order even if they ran through the middle and tail easily enough. Unlike Hermes, VRA have the hitters down the order to capitalise on a platform if Punjab let them set one, and bowling attack better equipped to trouble Punjab bats, even if there are an awful lot of them.

RL: There’s a world of difference between Punjab’s relatively contained ground at the Zomercomplex and the expanse of Amstelveen, not to mention the adjustment from astroturf to grass, but Sikander Zulfiqar’s side undoubtedly have the quality in both batting and bowling to go toe to toe with a VRA outfit which wasn’t really tested at the Bermweg last week. Mohsin Riaz batted very well indeed against Hermes, and the Amsterdammers will need to remove both him and Shoaib Minhas early if they are to get on top of the leaders. Suleiman Tariq is still taking wickets, Sajjad Kamal and Burhan Niaz is more than useful additions to the attack, and Ahmed Sharif, wicketless last Saturday, will be keen to make amends in the Bos. VRA’s own spin unit, with Shariz Ahmad, Clayton Floyd and Udit Nashier, will be a major threat on their own turf, while the pace of Elijah Eales and Ben Fletcher, backed up by Ashir Abid, while Punjab will indeed present more of a challenge than Sparta were able to do, are likely to make effective use of the new ball. Even at this early stage both these sides look like serious contenders for the top six and beyond that the championship, and this has a good claim to be this week’s Match of the Day.


BdJ: Level with Punjab on points at the top are defending champions Voorburg, who have found a way to win both their first two matches, albeit in less than convincing fashion. They’ll have their first mat-match at Craeyenhout coming up against HBS, who bounced back from their opening defeat to Punjab with an eventually comfortable win over ACC last week. Neither side have looked exactly convincing, though VCC’s understudies have stepped up admirably in the absence of Kingma, Klein and Engelbrecht the batting especially looks dependent on new overseas (and ex-crow) Gavin Kaplan, and of course skipper Noah Croes, who was fortunately (from a VCC perspective) spared selection for the World Cup. HBS are in a similar position however, with stand-in skipper Tayo Walbrugh’s sudden return to form the main reason they bested ACC, with a hand from fellow overseas de Villiers and Botha. Who comes away with the points might be decided by which team’s youngsters step up, but equally likely it will come down to whose big guns fire loudest.

RL: Let’s not forget that Voorburg are also without newfound Dutch star Michael Levitt, and with Musa Ahmad now opening at Punjab, the top of their order has a slightly makeshift look. It asks a lot of young Cedric de Lange as well as of the more experienced Nehaan Gigani, and they will no doubt need time to settle into their role. Facing Lehaan Botha’s pace and Matt de Villiers’ spin will be a good test, but with Kaplan and Croes to follow they know that they have players behind them who were in superb form last week. I would actually have more questions about a Voorburg attack without Kingma, Klein and Van Beek, not to mention the now-departed Nieuwoudt, which struggled to make an early impression on the Excelsior top order last week, although they did hit back somewhat later in the innings. HBS certainly need at least two of Botha, De Villiers and Walbrugh to fire with the bat, and a real concern for them is the comparative lack of experience below their top five. Man for man, even without five first-choice players Voorburg probably have greater depth, and while the Crows are dangerous opponents, especially at Craeyenhout, for my money it’s the visitors who start as marginal favourites.


BdJ: Working our way down the ladder we come to HCC, who sit in 5th place by virtue of not having played at all yet, courtesy De Diepput living down to its name thus far. They head to Thurlede to take on Excelsior ‘20 who sit in 6th after a fighting defeat to VCC last week. There were plenty of positives for the Schiedammers from that game, not least runs for Tim Etman and new opening partner Darren Mitchell, though the middle order looks a tad soft, especially should Lorenzo Ingram’s lean patch prove the start of a decline rather than a rough patch of form. Jason Ralston looks to be taking to Dutch conditions however, and Victor Lubbers’ arrival from the East strengthens the lower order and bowling both. Whether HCC’s lack of game time will affect them unduly remains to be seen, they’ll certainly be fresh, one would expect.

RL: Still something of an unknown quality in this format, the Lions nevertheless seem very likely to be serious challengers for the top six once they actually get on the park. Their three overseas players have plenty of one-day experience, while we know that skipper Boris Gorlee, Tonny Staal and Hidde Overdijk can be match-winners on their day. They will, of course, miss Clayton Floyd, Henrico Venter and Doram/Pringle from their attack, although Daniel Crowley and Patient Charumbira bowled well in the T20 Cup, adding to the incisiveness of Overdijk and Adam Leonard. But a very businesslike Excelsior away is a tough way to start, and while Roel Verhagen’s side will lament their inability to cut short the Kaplan-Croes stand and defend 254, they will have learned a good deal from the experience. Mitchell, Ralston and Ingram – the last now with 5496 Topklasse runs and 201 wickets to his credit – are as powerful a trio as HCC’s McInerney, Wiggins and Leonard, and much may depend at Thurlede too on which set of imports has the better day. Even if that’s a perception I’d love to see proved wrong!


BdJ: Meanwhile VOC Rotterdam welcome Sparta 1888 to Hazelaarweg, the former having not gotten on the park last week and the latter probably wishing they hadn’t. Both sides have looked (do we sense a theme emerging?) heavily dependent on their overseas for runs this season, Riley Mudford in Sparta’s case the chief threat with the bat, though the lower order showed commendable fight against VRA. Belgian international Khalid Ahmadi has been the stand-out with the ball too, especially given Ahsan Malik’s sporadic absences. VOC’s main advantage simply looks to be that they have more high-calibre overseas to call on, though the brothers Jain remain a key component in the Bloodhounds’ attack, while Asief Hoseinbaks has quietly made himself indispensible.  All told one would think VOC have a clear advantage on home turf, though Sparta have the matchwinners to spring a surprise if they can back them up.

RL: Apart from Mudford, Cameron Fraser impressed last week, more with the ball than the bat, but overall Sparta, admittedly on the evidence of just one 50-over outing, seem to be more likely to be battling relegation than pushing for a place in the top six. That’s not to say they do not have both plenty of experience and undoubted potential in their squad, but against sides with seven or eight top-level performers they are going to find the going tough. VOC are something of an enigma: again, they’ve only played one 50-over match, losing only in the final over and in controversial circumstances, but their performance in the T20 Cup was less than stellar, and with the exception of Jock McKenzie it’s been the old routiniers like Jelte Schoonheim and Hoseinbaks who have been most effective. One senses that they may be just one good performance away from clicking as a side, and should that happen soon they could still have a significant impact on the top-six battle.


BdJ: Finally the Topklasse’s newest turf wicket will finally see some fifty-over action when Hermes DVS welcome ACC to the Loopuyt Oval at Harga. Hermes continue to look like a top-heavy team on the batting side, but then the weight at the top in the form of Daniel Doyle Calle and CP Klijnhans will have that effect. Olivier Elenbaas’ promotion to three last week can be accounted a success, however, and if he and Sabba Braat can continue to find runs Hermes have a decent enough top five at least. Conversely the ACC batting card has looked deeper than it does dangerous, with a lower-order rally saving them some respectability against HBS but not threatening a serious score. That the ever-elegant but rarely reliable Rahil Ahmed has been their best bat this season says a fair bit about an ACC side that looks a little flimsy in the absence of Heino Kuhn.

RL: Still adjusting to the demands of Topklasse cricket, Hermes performed creditably against a stronger Punjab last Saturday, although their subsidence from 125 for one to 196 all out raises some serious questions about the durability of their batting. But as m’colleague observes, it has more quality in the top five than do this week’s opponents, greatly as Rahil Ahmed’s return to something like the form which once took him into the national team is to be welcomed. Few players have had as dramatic an entry into the Dutch competition as Izhaan Sayed, removing Lehaan Botha with his very first delivery, but Het Loopveld last week was an even less hospitable for batting than usual, and Ben van der Merwe and Guy Sheena may relish the chance to bat on the hybrid turf at the Loopuyt Oval. They’ll be facing the bowling of Elenbaas and Braat, of course, and of Abdul Jabar Jabarkhail, who suggested against Punjab that he’ll be an effective foil for Elenbaas.


BdJ’s picks: VRA, HBS, Excelsior, VOC, Hermes.

RL’s picks: VRA, Voorburg, Excelsior, VOC, Hermes.

ACC vs HBS at ‘t Loopveld | Topklasse Round 2 | 01.06.24