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With one round-robin round remaining there are still issues to be resolved in the Championship Pool of this year’s Topklasse, ensuring that there will be plenty of excitement all the way to the finishing line.
Punjab-Ghausia and HCC all but made sure of the top two spots on Sunday, but VRA Amsterdam could still upset the applecart by beating the Lions in the Amsterdamse Bos next week and squeezing past them on net run rate, while HBS Craeyenhout, currently fifth, would overtake defending champions Voorburg were they to beat Hermes-DVS and Voorburg lose to Punjab.
Leaders Punjab certainly hammered home their advantage at the Zomercomplex on Sunday, dismissing HBS for 152 and then cruising to a nine-wicket victory in just 21.4 overs.
Converted into a batting allrounder, Lucas Del Bianco was the only HBS batter to look comfortable against the Punjab attack, making a solid 59, and then bowled with genuine pace when the home side replied.
But the rest of the Crows’ line-up had no answer to the nagging accuracy of Suleiman Tariq and Khurram Shahzad, while Shoiab Minhas cleaned up the tail with four for 15.
Minhas then shared an opening stand of 132 with Jonathan Vandiar, who smacked a 51-ball 62, including seven fours and four sixes; Minhas was more restrained, his unbeaten 69 coming from 67 deliveries and seeing Punjab to the win in company with Asad Zulfiqar.
HCC were scarcely more troubled in completing a six-wicket victory over Hermes-DVS at De Diepput, a result which ended the promoted Schiedammers’ last faint hope of reaching the semi-finals.
Murid Ekrami, another makeshift opener in the absence of Daniel Doyle, made an aggressive 66 at the top of the Hermes innings, sharing an opening stand of exactly 100 with Ash Ostling (34), but the rest of the batting crumbled against an HCC attack in which Hidde Overdijk was the star with four for 38.
Sebastiaan Braat did his best to keep his side in the game with three for 36 when HCC replied, but with Tonny Staal contributing a hard-hitting 75 and Jed Wiggins making a composed 55 not out, the Lions made sure of the win with almost 20 overs to spare.
Battling with national team commitments and their second team’s relegation struggles, Voorburg went to the extreme lengths during the week of flying in Otago left-handed allrounder Oliver White, but he was unable to change the outcome of his new side’s match against VRA at Westvliet.
The Amsterdammers posted the highest total of the day with 235, largely thanks to Elijah Eales’s 73, with smaller contributions from Johan Smal (39) and Luke Scully (30), Mees van Vliet taking three for 62 for the champions.
Voorburg were soon in trouble against the left-arm pace of Ben Fletcher and Ashir Abid, but it was the off-spin of Leon Turmaine, who claimed five for 36, four of his victims dismissed leg-before, as the home side collapsed to 145 all out.
It might have been even worse but from a defiant 36 from Tom de Leede, batting at nine, who ensured that 54 runs were added by the last two wickets.
All three Championship Pool matches followed the form book, but the day’s big surprise came at Het Loopveld, where already-relegated ACC pulled off their first win of the competition, beating VOC Rotterdam by five wickets.
The bowlers played their part by restricting their visitors to 194 for nine, Jason van der Meulen top-scoring with 40, but the victory was crafted by Ben van der Merwe, who reached a richly-deserved century when he took the winning single, finishing on 100 not out.
He had shared a solid third-wicket stand of 126 with Izhaan Sayed (54) which had laid the foundations of the win, but thereafter he dominated the innings, only 17 of the remaining runs coming from his partners, who were largely content to hold up one end and prevent the mid-order collapse which has caused the Amsterdammers so many problems this season.
The other Relegation Pool match was a strange affair, reduced to 40 overs a side because of issues with the mat at the Bermweg.
The game between Sparta 1888 and Excelsior ’20 was just five deliveries old when there was a delay because of a dangerous hole in the pitch, causing a reduction of eight overs a side, and after a further, briefer interruption for more repairs another two overs were lost.
Cameron Fraser and Martijn Snoep put Excelsior under early pressure, but a 110-run stand for the third wicket between Derek Mitchell (71) and Lorenzo Ingram (62) gave their side a basis for a decent total before Khalid Ahmadi engineered an extraordinary collapse, four wickets falling in six deliveries as the Schiedammers went from 171 for six to 171 all out.
Ahmadi claimed three of them, finishing with four for 31, Max Hoornweg picking up the other for figures of two for 26.
Sparta were soon in desperate trouble at 11 for three, but Juandre Scheepers held the innings together, adding 82 for the fifth wicket with Fraser (35) and finishing on 92 not out as the Capelle side won by four wickets with 26 deliveries to spare.
Two rounds to go, and in the Championship Pool all six terams still have at least a theoretical chance of making it into the semi-finals on 1 September. For Hermes-DVS that means winning both their remaining games and two of three teams above them losing both theirs, so the theory in question approximates that involving phrenology or a flat earth, but still, you never know. In the Relegation Pool, with three rounds to play and ACC already certain to go down, the only thing at stake is pride, which can sometimes be in short supply at this fag end of the season. You’d hope that individuals at least might have a point to prove – and those whose enthusiasm is waning could do worse than have a look at the latest Freddie Flintoff series currently airing on BBC. Words like ‘inspirational’ can be over-used, but there has never been a better illustration of sport’s, and specifically cricket’s, ability to transform lives. Anyways . . .
RL: The obvious candidates for the double-loss scenario are Voorburg, with almost half their side either engaged in national team commitments or already back in South Africa, and their options further restricted by their second team’s battle to stay up in the Hoofdklasse, where they need two more wins to be safe. Their opponents at Westvliet this Sunday are VRA Amsterdam, and they will have been encouraged neither by their visitors’ effortless demolition of HBS last week nor by their own performance against HCC. That is not to say that the defeat of their half-strength side by the rampant Lions was altogether without redeeming features, and they will be hoping that their top order can conjure up some of the stickability shown by the bowlers under pressure, and wit the bat by stand-in captain Floris de Lange. Mees van Vliet and Michael Molenaar remain key, but even without Vikram Singh and Teja Nidamanuru VRA’s batting line-up is menacing, and the pace attack, led by Ben Fletcher and Elijah Eales is capable of exploiting any sign of weakness in Voorburg’s top six.
BdJ: The national selectors’ wait-and-see call on Fletcher has left VRA’s seam attack largely intact, and while they’ve lost their new spin acquisitions for the duration of the international series, having the likes of Turmaine, Nashier and Iles to fall back on means the Amsterdammers are hardly short of slow bowling either. Voorburg are more appreciably weakened by national call-ups, and though word is they’re looking into exercising their right to reinforcement under the 3+ call-ups rule, with a southpaw spin all rounder reportedly on a plane from New Zealand as we speak, there’s no question the young side will start as underdogs on Sunday.
RL: Having both lost last Sunday, Punjab-Ghausia and HBS Craeyenhout will both be exceptionally keen to claim the points at the Zomercomplex, but the stakes are subtly different: a win here would likely guarantee Punjab a top-two finish and the double crack at a grand final spot which comes with it, while for their visitors there is still a slight chance that they could miss out on the semi-finals altogether. Given Hermes’ recent efforts, it would not be an attractive prospect to be going to Schiedam next week on a must-win mission, so Tayo Walbrugh’s side will really want to ease the pressure by taking advantage of Punjab’s occasional fragility. The absence of Lehan Botha as well as internationals Wesley Barresi and Kyle Klein gave the Crows a somewhat makeshift look against VRA, but by the same token Punjab’s collapse against Hermes suggested a greater malaise than can be explained by the loss of Musa Ahmad, or even of Ahmad Shafiq, for whom Khurram Shahzad has proved a more than adequate replacement. Like Walbrugh for HBS, Jonathan Vandiar has a talismanic quality for the Rotterdammers, but his struggles with fitness in the course of a long innings are increasingly evident, and others will need to chip in if they are to avoid a repeat of last week’s subsidence.
BdJ: HBS too are understood to be calling up reinforcements this week in the form of various Vinks and perhaps Visées, and after a near-flawless season to date Punjab do suddenly look vulnerable to a blast from the past. Nonetheless the loss of their skipper along with their most consistent performers leaves a big gap in the Crows line-up, and despite a surprise loss to Hermes one still feels it will take something special to unsettle an enviavbly settled Punjab side.
RL: Hermes-DVS showed considerable resilience in overcoming Punjab last Sunday, but they will need to summon up even greater reserves of determination when they travel to De Diepput this week to take on HCC. The Lions have begun to roar with a vengeance, and they know that wins here and against VRA next week would ensure them a top-two position for the semi-finals. They have lost only one of their last six games, and although Conor McInerney has departed from the top of their order they have a settled side which consistently produces the goods with both bat and ball. That said, Sebastiaan Braat’s outfit know that they have to keep winning, and despite the loss of Aryan Dutt and Olivier Elenbaas to the Dutch national side and Daniel Coyle to Spain’s, they have twice pulled off unlikely victories against more fancied opponents, and you can’t rule out the possibility that they will do it again.
BdJ: The newly-promoted Hermes have already achieved more than they set out to at the start of the season, and it seems as though the total absence of pressure that their unexpected situation as top-six underdogs affords them has turned them into a dangerous wildcard fixture at the back end rather than the easy beat some might have expected. The loss of Doyle-Calle to Euro-qualifier duty certainly removes some of that threat, but HCC looked rather unconvincing against a depleted Voorburg last week, and indeed were it not for Daniel Crowley’s solo showing would likely have lost to a second string VCC side. The pressure will be all on the Lions to cement a top-two finish before the rest of the field recovers their strength, while the men in sky blue will have nothing to lose.
RL: This week’s Relegation Pool match-ups are the reverse fixtures from last Saturday’s, so ACC, now certain to be playing in the Hoofdklasse in both formats next season, will be at home to VOC Rotterdam this week. The luck of the draw means that it will be a somewhat drawn-out farewell, since they will play all three of their final Topklasse matches (for now, at least) at Het Loopveld. It would be good for team morale were they to stage at least one ambush, but that seems unlikely to be against the Bloodhounds, who were clearly a class too strong for their opponents at the Hazelaarweg. VOC have little to show for their heavy investment in overseas talent this season, but no doubt the players themselves will be keen to make hay while the sun shines, assuming, of course, that it does.
BdJ: What’s the opposite of match of the day? It’s been an abject season for an ACC squad that, while weakened, still boasts enough young talent that you can fairly say they’ve under-performed drastically this summer. A 15-year run in the top flight comes to a regrettable but hardly undeserved end. VOC owe their own survival in large part due to their overseas, who have all have earned their keep this season, though for the rest of the squad it’s been a bit “get what you pay for.” The brothers Jain along with the unassumingly effective Asief Hoseinbaks are perhaps exceptions there, and a big part of the reason you’d back the Bloodhounds as favourites on Sunday with or without the overseas cohort.
RL: The rematch between Sparta 1888 and Excelsior ’20 is, if last week’s game at Thurlede is any guide, likely to be a good deal closer, and while these sides are unlikely to produce a classic, it promises to be another tight battle between teams which are pretty similar both in their strengths and their weaknesses. It’s not that long ago that Excelsior won the title three times in four seasons, but while they have had their moments this year, they have mostly been a pale shadow of their former selves. And with their second side languishing in the Tweede Klasse their medium-term prospects don’t seem a great deal brighter. Sparta don’t have the same sort of pedigree, although they have punched above their weight a few times in recent seasons; there is no doubt, however, that they have greatly missed Mudassar Bukhari and Ashan Malik this year, and they, too, will need to do some serious thinking about the way forward. In the meantime, we can look forward to another head-to-head between the two leading wicket-takers in the competition, Sydney-sider Jason Ralston and Capetonian Cameron Fraser.
BdJ: Another season where the Capelle club look set to survive thanks to some judicious acquisitions and captain-chair Martijn Snoep’s sheer force of will, still it’s hard to begrudge the Spartans another summer in the top flight even if they’ve never quite looked like they belong. Conversely it’s hard not to feel that the shock of relegation might have done Excelsior some good, even if it never looked remotely likely to happen. Ralston’s golden summer along with the efforts of the indefatigable Lorenzo Ingram have kept the Schiedammers well clear of danger even as the local core of the side has only regressed. Indeed one might almost think the multi-championship-winning side of the late 2010s was full of aging veterans rather than a promising squad full of prospects in their early 20s, who ought to be better players now than they were then. Even a coasting Excelsior side are at least paper favourites for this fixture however, certainly with Sparta having already secured their survival last week.
RL’s picks: VRA, Punjab, HCC, VOC, Sparta.
BdJ’s picks: VRA, Punjab, HCC, VOC, Excelsior.



































































Rod Lyall 12/08/24
The battle for a spot in the top four tightened still further on Sunday, with just four points separating the top five teams and two games remaining.
Leaders Punjab-Ghausia missed an opportunity to go clear at the top when they collapsed against Hermes-DVS at the Loopuyt Oval, CP Klijnhans spinning them to a 50-run defeat with figures of six for 13.
Both sides wasted promising starts, Hermes, after being put in, reaching 198 for two thanks to Ash Ostling’s 79 and Daniel Doyle’s 41, but then adding only 55 more in the final twenty overs to finish on 243 for nine.
Sajjad Kamal was the most effective of Punjab’s bowlers with three for 32, while Khurram Shahzad was again economical with just 23 coming from his eight overs.
The Punjab reply began haltingly, Ralph Elenbaas removing both Shoaib Minhas (from the first ball he received) and Mohsin Riaz by the time 46 runs were on the board, but then Jonathan Vandiar and Saqib Zulfiqar added 107 for the third wicket, and Punjab seemed to be on course for a fairly routine victory.
But then Klijnhans took the ball, and with his second delivery he had a tired Vandiar caught by Sebastiaan Braat for 69.
Saqib followed off the first ball of his second, departing for 58, and with the last he had skipper Sikander Zulfiqar before he had scored.
When he added the scalp of Burhan Niaz he had four for 7, and with the steady Murid Ekrami chipping in with two wickets at the other end, Punjab had lost six for 15 in 55 deliveries; Shahzad led some stubborn resistance, but then Klijnhans returned to claim the last two, and Punjab were all out for 193.
HBS Craeyenhout missed an opportunity to go top when they were comprehensively beaten at home by VRA Amsterdam.
Without Vikram Singh, spinners Shariz Ahmad and Clayton Floyd and the injured Teja Nidamanuru, VRA were arguably even more hampered than their hosts, who had lost Wesley Barresi and Kyle Klein to international duties and Lehaan Botha to demands back in South Africa, but they never took their foot from the pedal once Johan Smal had won the toss and put HBS in.
Playing his first first-team match of the season, opener Manjinder Singh made an aggressive 32, and Matt de Villiers held the middle order together for a time with 61, but left-arm paceman Ben Fletcher took three for 19 and off-spinner Leon Turmaine three for 35, and HBS were all out for 143.
Shirase Rasool and Demari Prince then smacked 52 off the first five overs of VRA’s reply, and although Julian de Mey eventually trapped Prince in front for 29, Rasool continued to a run-a-ball 59, while Smal hammered a not-out 50 to ensure VRA’s victory in just 20.3 overs, doing considerable damage to the HBS net run rate in the process.
It was more understandable that Voorburg, without four Dutch internationals and the departed Gavin Kaplan, should struggle against a near full-strength HCC, but in fact it was the season’s most outstanding allround performance so far to earn the Lions the points.
Coming in at 105 for four as Voorburg fought back from a shaky start in which Tonny Staal had struck a 25-ball 49, Daniel Crowley compiled a career-best 67, made from 56 deliveries and including ten fours and two sixes, guiding his side almost single-handed to a defendable 195 all out.
Ex-international Philippe Boissevain was the pick of Voorburg’s bowlers with three for 28.
Crowley then proceeded to rip through the comparatively inexperienced Voorburg top order, removing Nehaan Gigani with his fourth delivery and then claiming three more victims within his first three overs to reduce the defending champions to 9 for four.
Then he bowled Boissevain and Adam Leonard bowled Michael Molenaar, and at 27 for six Voorburg were in danger of a truly cataclysmic collapse.
They were to a degree rescued by a dogged knock from stand-in captain Floris de Lange, who top-scored with 28, but two run-outs brought the end at 114, Crowley finishing with five for 38.
In Saturday’s matches in the Relegation Pool, victories for Sparta 1888 over Excelsior ’20 and for VOC Rotterdam against ACC ensured that the Amsterdam club would be playing in the Hoofdklasse next season.
Izhaan Sayed again top-scored for ACC with 48, stands of 72 with Ben van der Merwe (26) and 56 with Guy Sheena (28) getting his side to 139 for five, skipper Anis Raza’s 39 enabling them to reach 184 for nine; Aaditt Jain took three for 36 for VOC.
Sayed had Ryan Schierhout caught behind with his second delivery, but any thought of an ACC victory was snuffed out by an unbroken third-wicket stand of 172 between Taylor Bettelheim and Jock McKenzie.
Bettelheim hit his first Topklasse century, his 108 not out coming from 112 deliveries with ten fours and two sixes, while McKenzie finished on 60 as VOC won by eight wickets.
The encounter between Excelsior and Sparta at Thurlede was a classic relegation battle, Sparta overhauling their hosts’ 185 for nine in the penultimate over with just two wickets in hand.
Stan van Troost’s 49 enabled Excelsior to recover somewhat after they slumped to 75 for six, Cameron Fraser again doing much of the damage with four for 28, and Sam Ferguson then made a solid 68 to bring Sparta close to their target.
Victor Lubbers kept Excelsior in the fight with four for 31, but it was Umar Baker, batting at nine against his old club, whose unbeaten 41 ensured that Sparta squeezed home with nine deliveries to spare.
Bertus de Jong and Rod Lyall 09/08/2024
The men’s international summer begins in earnest this week, casting something of a shadow over the back end of the Topklasse league phase. Combined with the start of the South African pre-season prompting something of an overseas exodus, the next few rounds will be a severe test of bench-strength for a number of clubs. The absence of the national team will be most keenly felt at the top of the table, and the effect inevitably somewhat uneven, making for a tricky phase of the summer for the Oranje’s chief suppliers as they jockey for position ahead of the knock-outs.
BdJ: Defending champions Voorburg will again be among the most heavily affected, losing Vivian Kingma, Ryan Klein, Noah Croes and Michael Levitt to national duty. Worse still, they will have to do without opener Gavin Kaplan for the rest of the season, the league lead-scorer having been recalled to South Africa. They will benefit from the availability of the itinerant Flip Boissevain, in the country yet surprisingly overlooked by the selectors, but it’s above all batting that they will miss on Sunday. Conversely HCC, having astutely sourced their overseas mostly from New Zealand emerge largely unscathed from the late season availability cull, losing only Conor McInerney to the Australian pre-season and young Teun Kloppenburg, who resumes his South African stint. Indeed HCC stand to benefit from the Dutch being in action, with Daniel Doram, flown back as a reserve for the ODIs (though likely to feature in the T20s) expected to turn out in yellow at the weekend. Though the Lions looked below their best for much of the early season, they look to be hitting their stride at just the right moment and now have a gift of an opportunity to push there way into the top two this weekend. Voorburg’s bench is one most clubs would envy, but that’s in part because their most promising understudies – the likes of Cedric de Lange, Michael Molenaar and Alejo Nota – are still so young. If Westvliet’s young guns do manage to pick up two points on Sunday they’ll be confident of holding on for a top two finish, but fair to say it’s a big ask.
RL: There’s not much more to say about this, except perhaps that it will be interesting to see two rising young pace bowlers – Teun Leijer for the hosts and Molenaar for Voorburg – in action on the opposing sides. The Lions have indeed once again timed their run well, and will start as favourites against a half-strength Voorburg.
BdJ: Also heavily affected by the country’s call are HBS Craeyenhout and VRA, both of whom lose their captains to national duty. VRA are already on their second skipper owing to Teja Nidamanuru’s netting mishap earlier in the season, and now will also be deprived of deputy Vikram Singh as well as the spin duo of Shariz Ahmad and Clayton Floyd. They’ve no shortage of slow-bowling cover despite also losing Jack Balbirnie to injury, with Leon Turmaine and Udit Nashier already putting in some solid first team performances and Thomas Iles waiting in the wings, but will miss the in-form stand-in skipper at the top of what’s been a rickety-looking batting order. HBS meanwhile lose captain Wesley Barresi, as well as stand-out seamer Kyle Klein to national duty, and both Matt de Villiers and Lehan Botha to obligations back home in South Africa. While the crows have occasionally been able to call on old hands Stephan and Ferdi Vink, they don’t boast anywhere near the experience on the bench that VRA can fall back on. Much will likely depend on deputy skipper Tayo Walbrugh, whose presence at the crease tends to have a stabilising effect on the order, as well as delivering some 572 runs at an average over 80 thus far.
RL: This is a more even split, although the combined effects of national team commitments and the South African pre-season mean that HBS are hit a good deal harder than their visitors. They do have a crop of youngsters who have already gained a fair bit of first-team experience, but there’s been little sign so far that they are ready to step into a leading role against a side which, even without two key batters and a pair of front-rank spinners and despite their somewhat stop-start form, looks distinctly stronger on paper.
BdJ: The day’s final top-six match sees Hermes DVS welcome front-runners Punjab-Ghausia to the Loopuyt Oval, in what looks on paper to be an easy two points for the visitors. Hermes have already achieved their stated season goal of survival, and with their second team locked in a relegation battle there was already substantial demand on the Hermes bench, and on the evidence of last weekend they’ll likely be reluctant to divert playing resources to the first team’s unlikely attempt to break the top four. An injury to skipper Sebastiaan Braat and Dutch call-ups for Olivier Elenbaas and Aryan Dutt leaves the home side looking rather threadbare, though there’s still Daniel Doyle Calle and Ashley Ostling at the top of the order and young Sam van Giezen is expected to slot back into the seam attack alongside Ralph Elenbaas, who has outshone his brother with the ball thus far. Conversely Punjab only lose opener Musa Ahmad to Orange, and who will partner Shoaib Minhas in his absence is at this point an open question, but given the depth of the Rotterdammers’ batting it’s unlikely they’ll be sweating it unduly. They’ll nonetheless be keen to put some distance between themselves and the chasing pack ahead of a showdown with second-placed HBS next week, potentially locking down a top two finish and a double shot at the final.
RL: This should be a banker for Punjab, for whom Khurram Shahzad proved an outstanding replacement for Ahmad Shafiq last weekend. Hermes did show remarkable resolution towards the end of the first place, making sure of their spot in the championship pool, but things have not gone their way since then, and although Rinck van Dam made a promising start to his Topklasse career last week, it was a decidedly makeshift side which played those games. Punjab have earned their place at the top of the table, and with a double crack at the grand final the reward for a top-two finish, they will doubtless want to make sure there are no slip-ups on the run in.
RL: Whatever the mathematics may say, the prospect of ACC playing in next year’s Topklasse has long gone, and defeat by VOC Rotterdam on Saturday (when the relegation pool will be in action) would settle the issue definitively were Sparta to take the points against Excelsior. The Loopveld side has looked out of its depth all season, and although they have shown rather more fight in some of their recent games, they have managed overall to be less than the sum of their parts. VOC, too, have often failed to live up to their considerably greater potential – hence the fact that they find themselves in the relegation pool – but they should have little difficulty in taking the points back to Rotterdam with them. Never has the case for an eight-team Topklasse been made more eloquently than it has at Het Loopveld this year.
BdJ: Needing three wins from three and two neutral results to fall their way, ACC’s coinflip odds of surviving the season are a shade over 3%, but given the form they’ve shown so far you’d have to say that’s pretty flattering. That said, looking back at the season you could make a case that the only substantial difference between these two sides is VOC’s better choice of overseas signings, at least in terms of batting, and indeed smarter domestic acquisitions in the bowling department. Though VOC have nothing to play for but pride in this encounter, there’s little reason to expect they’ll take the foot off the gas in any discernible way, given that the pedal’s been a long way from the metal all summer anyway.
RL: A win here would confirm Sparta’s survival, in a match which pits the two most destructive new-ball bowlers in the competition, Sparta’s Cameron Fraser and Excelsior’s Jason Ralston, against opposing top orders which have frequently failed to fire. In Mitchell, Tim Etman, Verhagen, Ingram and Lubbers Excelsior have as good a top five on paper as anyone in the Topklasse, but they have been extremely inconsistent, and that week they had to rely on a fine partnership between Ingram and Lubbers to dig them out of trouble against ACC. Sparta lack batting with that sort of pedigree, but Riley Mudford showed signs of a return to form last weekend. Given the effectiveness of the Sparta bowling unit, Excelsior may struggle at Thurlede to post the sort to total their own bowlers can defend. Expect a low-scoring, hard-fought encounter!
BdJ: Another case where two sides’ relative standings can be explained largely by overseas signings paying off or not, Excelsior owe their assured survival almost entirely to the excellence of Ralston and Ingram with the ball all season. Sparta, conversely, have got a bit more out of their lowland contingent, the indefatigable Martijn Snoep again leading from the front with the ball, ably supported by Belgium’s Khalid Ahmadi. While Cameron Fraser’s been an excellent new-ball spearhead, the trio together haven’t been able to compensate for the Spartans shortcomings with the bat. While Excelsior’s domestic contingent have had a middling season with the bat at best, Sparta’s locals have been abject. With Mudford mostly misfiring in the longer format, Sparta simply haven’t been able to get runs on the board, and there’s little reason to think they’ll go any better coming up against the league’s leading wicket-taker.
BdJ’s picks: HCC, VRA, Punjab,VOC, Excelsior
RL’s picks: HCC, VRA, Punjab, VOC, Sparta.




































































Rod Lyall 05/08/24
The second phase of this year’s men’s 50-over competition got under way with a bang at the weekend with a complete double round of matches, the only really definitive development being the near-certain relegation of ACC.
In the championship pool the only side to win twice was Voorburg, who followed up a comfortable 100-run victory over HBS Craeyenhout on Saturday with a still more decisive win against Hermes-DVS on Sunday.
With four points now separating first and fifth and only three matches to play, it would take a remarkable concatenation of events to deny the defending champions, who have moved into second place on the table, a spot in the semi-finals, but national team commitments will deplete their side for the next two rounds, and they will be very glad to have the cushion provided by these victories.
The defeat of HBS was set up by a fourth-wicket stand of 111 between captain Noah Croes (80) and Ryan Klein (68), both Dutch internationals, enabling the champions to reach 262 for seven, and confirmed by a destructive spell of medium-pace bowling by Michael Levitt, another of the side’s international cohort, who removed Tayo Walbrugh, Matt de Villiers and Lucas del Bianco in the space of eleven deliveries to rip the heart out of the Crows’ batting.
Kyle Klein, who had claimed three for 29 in Voorburg’s innings, added 65 for the seventh wicket with Azzam Khan, and when Mees van Vliet removed both of them, finishing with three for 23, HBS subsided to 162 all out.
Having played a crucial role with the ball on Saturday, Levitt returned to prime form with the bat the following day, his 83-ball 105 setting up Voorburg’s monster total of 333 against a makeshift Hermes attack.
Already without Aryan Dutt and Niels Woermeijer, Hermes had lost skipper Sebastiaan Braat to injury in the course of Saturday’s defeat by VRA Amsterdam, and although stand-in captain Olivier Elenbaas and his brother Ralph toiled hard along with the rest of the bowlers, Olivier picking up four for 65, a second-wicket stand of 128 between Levitt and Gavin Kaplan set the stage for Voorburg’s monster total, their highest in the top flight since 1993.
Kaplan went on to complete his fourth century of the season, his 120 bringing his aggregate to 702; even more remarkable is the fact that he has passed fifty in all but three of his ten innings.
Voorburg collapsed from 304 for three to 333 all out – if you’re going to collapse, 304 isn’t a bad score to do it from – but that was far beyond Hermes, who despite opener Ash Ostling’s 52 were all out for 164, Floris de Lange taking three for 37.
Hermes had put up an heroic struggle against VRA in the Amsterdamse Bos on Saturday, despite being dismissed for just 165, of which Olivier Elenbaas made 37 and Braat 44; Ben Fletcher was the most successful of VRA’s bowlers with four for 42.
At 59 for four and 88 for five the Amsterdammers seemed in danger of defeat, but they were rescued an unbeaten 59 from Shariz Ahmad, who added 55 with Udit Nashier to see his side home.
There was no such rescue-act for VRA on Sunday, however, as they fell 68 runs short of Punjab-Ghausia’s 253 all out at the Zomercomplex, their top order again letting them down before Elijah Eales top-scored with a defiant 63; for Punjab it was opener Shoaib Minhas’ 43-ball 71 which set the tone for their winning total.
The defeat means that VRA remain one win outside the top four, and they will need to win at least of their remaining three matches while hoping that one of their rivals falters on the run in.
Punjab’s victory kept them at the top of the table, a single point clear of Voorburg and HBS, after they lost to HCC at De Diepput on Saturday.
A fourth-wicket stand of 109 between Mohsin Riaz (78) and Saqib Zulfiqar (47) had set up their total of 261 all out, but HCC captain Boris Gorlee led the reply with a fine 97, adding 104 for the third wicket with Shirsak Banerjee (41), and after Khurram Shahzad had removed both of them, taking the first four wickets to fall at an eventual cost of 26 runs, Jed Wiggins saw the Lions to a four-wicket victory with an unbeaten 56.
The most exciting game of the weekend came at Craeyenhout on Sunday, where HCC came within seven runs of the Crows’ total of 227 all out.
Although HCC had done extremely well to contain their hosts for much of the innings, Wesley Barresi making 45 and De Villiers 40 and Teun Leijer adding to his growing reputation with four for 34, their efforts were to a degree undone by a dogged last-wicket partnership between Amrit Singh and Henrio Venter, which took the total from 192 to nine to 227.
Tonny Staal made a rapid 42 when HCC replied, but with Lehaan Botha claiming four for 44 and Kyle Klein three for 40, even fighting contributions from Hidde Overdijk (36) and Yash Patel (39) proved insufficient.
Final pair Adam Leonard and Leijer came together at 194, and for a time it seemed that they might emulate Singh and Venter’s efforts, but in the end Klein removed Leijer to give the Crows their narrow victory.
In the relegation pool two more defeats for ACC all but sealed their fate, although with four games still to play they retain a mathematical possibility of escape.
Dismissed by Sparta 1888 for 81 on Saturday, Cameron Fraser demolishing them with five for 16 in eight overs, the Amsterdammers lost by ten wickets as Riley Mudford and Sam Ferguson needed only 12 overs to knock off the runs.
The wooden-spooners put up more of a fight against Excelsior ’20 at Thurlede on Sunday, but a stand of 156 for the fourth wicket between Lorenzo Ingram (86) and Victor Lubbers (84 not out) enabled the Schiedammers to recover to 243 for four.
Then Ingram and Lubbers combined again, this time with the ball, taking three wickets apiece at a cost of 29 and 43 respectively, and although Guy Sheena’s 54 helped ACC to pass 200 for the first time this season, they remained stranded on 206 for nine at the end of their 50 overs.
ACC’s last remaining hopes of staying up came courtesy of Sparta’s defeat by VOC Rotterdam in a hard-fought game at Sportpark Bermweg on Sunday.
Sparta’s disciplined attack kept VOC’s batting under tight control for much of their innings, and although Taylor Bettelheim achieved his best score of the season with 91, another five-wicket haul for Fraser – his third in four games – ensured that the home side were only chasing a total of 206 all out.
Ferguson made 52 when Sparta replied, but Jock McKenzie (three for 42) and Aaditt Jain and Asief Hoseinbaks with two wickets apiece, made scoring equally difficult for the Capelle side, and even Umar Baker’s unbeaten 31 could not get them closer to their target than 191 for nine.
At the Hazelaarweg on Saturday Ryan Schierhout starred in an unfamiliar role, claiming an improbable six for 8 with his off-breaks as Excelsior collapsed to 72 all out; he had bowled only three overs before this, without taking a wicket, but his tally was the best in the Topklasse since Anees Davids’ seven for 6 against Sparta in July 2019.
Jason Ralston claimed all three wickets to fall as VOC chased down their paltry target in ten and a half overs, and with the two he added on Sunday he now has 29 at 12.93, four ahead of Cameron Fraser’s 25 at 14.84.





















































Bertus de Jong and Rod Lyall 01/08/2024
While it may seem as though the summer has barely begun, and indeed weather-wise it only just has, Phase 2 of the 2024 Topklasse is already upon us and we’re suddenly a mere month away from the knock-outs. Straight out of the break and head-first into a double-weekend, by this time next week we’ll likely have a good idea of which of the top six are likely to feature in that final phase, and which of the bottom four will be staring down the barrel of relegation.
BdJ: Starting from the bottom then, the weekend’s most significant fixture will be playing out at Bermweg where the still-winless ACC Amsterdam will be looking to kick off a comeback against Sparta 1888. While not quite at risk of arithmetical elimination on the first weekend of Phase 2, it’s hard to see the Amsterdammers surviving the season if they can’t take points off their nearest relegation rivals on Saturday. There’s been some signs of ACC belatedly finding some form of late, coming within two wickets of besting both VOC and local rivals VRA in their last two matches. ACC showed some genuine fighting spirit in both games, albeit let down by sloppy fielding and a shortage of runs on the board. Overseas left arm quick Izhaan Sayed and spin duo Sahil Kothari and Mahesh Hans can provide the wickets if ACC start holding their catches, and the top order provide something to bowl at. Sparta for their part have struggled to overcome Riley Mudford’s lack of form in the fifty-over format, reliant on their other overseas Scheepers, Clark and Fraser for runs, while Martijn Snoep has again led from the front with the ball. It’s been more than a month since their last win, against the same opposition at the same venue. A repeat of that result would all but settle the relegation fight with a month to go, or at least procure a welcome buffer for a Spartan side that’s mostly looked as fit for relegation as their opponents.
RL: Izhaan Sayed has not only spearheaded the ACC attack very effectively; he has also provided much-needed stability in the middle of the order, top-scoring in three of their last four outings. But he will need a great deal more support, especially from the rest of the top six, if ACC are to find a way out of the dungeon they’re currently in. Sayed’s opposite number in the Sparta line-up, Cameron Fraser, has not always been rewarded with the wickets he’s deserved, but he has 12 of them, boosted by his five for 45 against Voorburg. But the batting does remain vulnerable, and if ACC are to pull off what would be one of the great escape acts in the top flight, it really needs to start here.
BdJ: Saturday’s second relegation-pool match sees VOC Rotterdam face off against Excelsior ‘20 at Hazelaarweg, with both sides looking to take a step toward security. Excelsior are only a win or two off securing their certain survival, VOC one win behind, and indeed neither side is in serious danger as it stands. That’s just as well for VOC, who looked like they might lose to whipping-boys ACC last week and indeed have only had one convincing win all season. They may take some comfort from the form of habitual lower-order blush-saver Aaditt Jain, who racked up a century in the under 19’s victorious Division 2 Qualifier this week, especially given the fragility of the top and middle order this season. They come up against the competition’s leading wicket-taker in Italian prospect Jason Ralston, who may well give the senior Dutch team reason to worry if he does indeed turn out for the Azzurri next year. Excelsior for their part will be looking to put this whole season behind them as soon as possible after coming off the worse in their climactic first phase net run rate show-down with Hermes, leaving them to face this unfortunate epilogue in the lower pool.
RL: The fact that VOC find themselves in the relegation pool is evidence that their recruitment of four overseas players has been insufficient to compensate for the loss of Scott Edwards and Max O’Dowd to Kampong Utrecht. The foursome head the side’s batting averages, it is true, but they have not really dominated – the absence of the injured Jock McKenzie for a couple of matches didn’t help – and while local talents like Asief Hoseinbaks, Arnav Jain and Jelte Schoonheim have played their part in the attack, the middle order has let the side down even when the overseas players have given them a decent start. Excelsior’s batting concerns have arguably been greater: with Derek Mitchell and Lorenzo Ingram averaging in the high twenties with the bat, it was Ralston’s pace and Ingram’s guile which kept them in the hunt for a top six spot. With their places in next year’s Topklasse virtually safe – VOC are six points clear of ACC, and Excelsior two more – this might be the time for both clubs to start thinking about next year, and giving greater responsibility to local players whose efforts they may want to rely on more in the 2025 campaign. As for this game, the teams are evenly matched, and much may turn on the VOC batting’s ability to withstand the onslaught from Ralston.
BdJ: After a triumphant Schiedam derby-by-proxy Hermes DVS find themselves, perhaps unexpectedly, in contention for the knockouts, albeit with a fair hill to climb to make the top four. A fine first step would be an away win over VRA on Saturday, and with both skipper Teja Nidamanuru and deputy Johan Smal sidelined by injury the Bos-dwellers do look vulnerable. While stand-in skipper Vikram Singh has looked in phenomenal form for the hosts he’s had little support the rest of the remaining line-up has been inconsistent, though young spin all-rounder Udit Nashier has done fine work with the bat in the lower middle order. Hermes own batting card still looks rather top-heavy however. While Ashley Ostling has had an excellent season, Daniel Doyle-Calle has been more destructive than dependable in the fifty-over format and his absence this weekend on international duty will likely not be the last. All too often skipper Sebastiaan Braat has been left to salvage things with the middle and lower order, though he has performed that role well. In short it’s a tricky match-up to call, with the two teams’ first phase fixture and the rescheduled clash washed out we’ve yet to see a result between the pair.
RL: With two of the top six to fall by the wayside over the next four weeks, this is not only one of the weekend’s more significant matches; it could be one of the most important of the second phase. Both sides need to make up ground on the four teams above them, and points here and on Sunday would represent an excellent start. The obvious difference between them is VRA’s array of spinners: Shariz Ahmad is again among the leading wicket-takers, with Clayton Floyd and Nashier chipping in and Leon Turmaine more recently making a welcome return to the colours. Against that, the pace attack has been less effective than might have been expected, and that is where Hermes come into their own, with the brothers Elenbaas, Braat and Niels Woermeijer consistently among the wickets, joined now by young Sam van Giezen, another who will have enjoyed his run out with the U19s in Denmark. International Aryan Dutt, on the other hand, has had surprisingly little impact since his return from the T20 World Cup, and he may not be available to them for much of the rest of the campaign.
BdJ: Over at Westvliet defending champions Voorburg will take on HBS Craeyenhout, with both sides looking to shore up their position while still at something like full strength. Both clubs are set to lose several players either to the South African pre-season or the Dutch national side later in the summer, and for Voorburg especially this fixture looks must-win if they’re to hold on to a top four spot. Their young understudies at least have had plenty of match-practice, with Cedric de Lange, Tom de Leede and Alejo Nota all returning from under-19s duty, as are HBS’ Elmar Boendermaker and Joris van Oosterom. How those youngsters step up for the remainder of the season will likely determine both teams’ fortunes for 2024, as well as giving a decent idea of how they’ll shape up further down the line.
RL: HBS have a slightly more comfortable cushion than Voorburg as they seek to defend their place in the top four, but there’s only one win in it, and five matches to play. In between the overseas players and Dutch internationals on the one hand and the crop of youngsters on the other, both sides have key players with rather more experience: for HBS that means spinner Julian de Mey, seamers Henrico Venter and Benno Boddendijk, and – should they again be called up – Ferdi and Stephan Vink. Voorburg, by the same token, have potential match-winners in Mees van Vliet and Michael Molenaar as well as Nehaan Gigani and Nirav Kulkarni. The national squad for the upcoming Canada-USA series will obviously have a huge impact for both sides: will brothers Ryan and Kyle Klein, with the former now seemingly approaching full fitness, both be included? Will Noah Croes replace Sybrand Engelbrecht in the top order? And will there be a place for Wesley Barresi? These are all questions will inevitably influence the course of the Topklasse campaign, and in this four-pointer both sides will want to make full use of their stars while they have them.
BdJ: Frontrunners Punjab-Ghausia kick off their phase 2 campaign with a trip to de Diepput to take on HCC, with a win all but guaranteeing a spot in the knock-outs. The Lions have had something of a stop-start season so far, and not only because of the weather, with the traditional HCC three-stroke engine of Staal, Gorlee and Overdijk stuttering all summer. Contributions form the likes of Yash Patel, Daniel Crowley and especially Teun Leijer have taken up the slack at times, but even on home turf they’ll start as underdogs against a Punjab side on a five-match winning streak that included a comprehensive drubbing of HCC in their first phase encounter.
RL: After their traditional slow start, not helped by the weather and conditions at De Diepput, HCC are beginning to hit their straps, and if I were a betting man I might make a small investment on their reaching their third grand final in a row. It’s taken a while for their overseas contingent to slot into the side, but with that now beginning to happen the pace of Adam Leonard and the spin of Jed Wiggins, backed up by Crowley and the rapidly-emerging Leijer, is looking like one of the better-balanced attacks in the competition. It hasn’t helped the cause that Overdijk has only played five games so far, since he is a crucial factor with both bat and ball. They will need to be at their absolute best against a Punjab outfit who, if not invulnerable (see below), have looked consistently strong in all departments. And once again, the return of Jonathan Vandiar to his former stamping-ground may prove ominous for the Lions.
BdJ: Come Sunday Punjab facing VRA, the only top-six side to get the better of them in phase one. That match was a close-fought and rain-abbreviated encounter at the Bos, and conditions are likely to be wildly different at the smaller and hopefully sunnier Zomercomplex. Where Punjab have yet to lose a match all season. While VRA have a couple of bats at the top that are more than capable of taking advantage of the ground’s diminutive dimensions, containing a deep and dangerous Punjab batting line-up may prove beyond them.
RL: Their rather bizarre panic attack in the Bos apart, Punjab’s batters have looked composed and utterly confident all season, and it will take a massive effort by the Amsterdammers’ bowling unit to contain them. Vikram Singh’s side will perhaps be hoping that Shariz and Floyd have established a psychological advantage after that trauma, but the Zomercomplex is a very different proposition from the Bos, and Musa Ahmad, Shoaib Minhas, Vandiar and the remaining brothers Zulfiqar are all capable of taking full advantage. That applies equally, however, to Singh himself and to other members of his rather-less-dependable batting line-up; the question is how effectively they will be able to deal with the spin of Ahmad Shafiq and Saqib Zulfiqar, as well as the seam bowling of Sajjad Kamal, Sikander Zulfiqar and the nagging, always-frustrating accuracy of Suleiman Tariq. A win for VRA would massively increase their chances of reaching the semi-finals, but it would also come as something of a surprise.
BdJ: Meanwhile Hermes will head back to Westvliet to take on Voorburg, where the Sky Blues scored a surprise away victory in their Round 4 replay three weeks ago, with VCC bowled out for under 150 for the first time in three years. While that scorecard is unlikely to see a repeat, it does speak to the defending champions’ top order troubles. With Gavin Kaplan returning to South Africa and Michael Levitt in a rut of form VCC have too often had to look to skipper Noah Croes and newly-minted batting all-rounder Ryan Klein to dig them out of trouble. Given that they may well be without all four for much of the rest of the season a title-defence looks an increasingly remote prospect, and Hermes may well smell blood in the water.
RL: Maintaining the steely determination with which Hermes forced their way into the top six may prove to be something of a challenge, and beating the defending champions on their own turf twice in a row would indeed be no mean achievement. But a double victory this weekend would create a momentum which could carry the newly-promoted Sky Blues all the way, and they have, at the very least, the core of a very good side. Voorburg, of course, remain much the stronger outfit on paper, and there’s no doubt that Levitt with the bat and Viv Kingma with the ball are both due. Ryan Klein’s long-delayed return as a frontline bowler will make a difference, but this has the makings of a fascinating encounter.
BdJ: The final top-six fixture sees HBS welcome HCC to Craeyenhout for the Hague derby, a match that may prove decisive for which team makes the top two, crucial to which even stays in the top four or – equally possibly – entirely irrelevant in retrospect. Both clubs take bragging rights very seriously however, so expect a fiercely-fought contest either way. The phase one fixture between the two was washed out and HCC had already maxed-out their replays by then of course (because at De Diepput summer is something that happens to other people), so this will be the first fifty-over match between the two this season, though HBS will doubtless be quick to remind their rivals of the two T20 thrashings they handed them back in May.
RL: Yet another game where the efforts of the respective overseas contingents may be decisive on the day, and this certainly has the hallmarks of a four-pointer. One has sometimes had the feeling this season that there were two games taking place simultaneously: one between the six or seven overseas players on both sides, and another between the locally-based team members. In this case, with former internationals Gorlee, Staal and Overdijk, HCC probably have the marginally better credentials in the latter category, and with Daniel Crowley in good form with the ball they have the potential to upset HBS here. On the other hand, one should never underestimate a team which includes Wesley Barresi, whose 8672 top-flight runs at 35.98 put him in the absolute elite of Dutch batters, and he may play a significant role before this season is over.
BdJ: Back to the bottom pool, the stakes in Sunday’s games with inevitably be contingent on Saturday’s results of course, but either way ACC will still need all the points they can get when they take on Excelsior at Thurlede. Conversely, Excelsior could be in a position to secure their survival by Sunday, giving their long-suffering home fans something to cheer for at least. A low-pressure de-facto post-season might be just the ticket for the Schiedammers, who again have looked reliant on their overseas to deliver them points and must be starting to worry about their prospects in an eventual post-Ingram era. It’s not inconceivable that this match could be a second step in an ACC comeback effort of course, Excelsior’s batting has been inconsistent and only Ralston and Ingram have had a solid season with the ball, but the hosts will likely feel two phase one wash-outs against ACC are a big part of why they’ve ended up in the bottom four at all and will be looking to make a point now that they finally get to play them.
RL: As m’colleague suggests, by the end of Sunday we will have a much clearer idea of whether the hints of ACC’s improved form in their final two first-phase games were the faint light of a candle flickering in the wind, or a beginnings of a flame which could lead them out of the relegation spot. But Jason Ralston is without doubt a serious threat to the Amsterdammers’ fragile top order, and it remains a moot point whether they have the resources to post a total which could be beyond the reach of Excelsior’s batting. We would, of course, like the relegation issue to remain open for a while longer, but dispassionate reflection indicates that it will be all over by Sunday evening.
BdJ: By process of elimination that leaves VOC vs Sparta as the weekend’s final relegation pool match, the context of which will be very much set by Saturday’s results. If they take no points from either game, Sparta could find themselves at risk of slipping behind ACC, while back-to-back wins could see them climb ahead of VOC. For the Bloodhounds certain safety may be in reach this weekend, but worst-case they could find themselves just a couple of points from the danger zone themselves. Whether the prospect of becoming embroiled in that process of elimination is enough to concentrate minds at Hazelaarweg remains to be seen of course.
RL: What we said earlier about looking forward applies equally here, although Sparta’s willingness to experiment may depend upon whether they have managed to widen further their advantage over ACC, and may be limited, too, by their comparative lack of up-and-coming home-grown talent. Their second and third teams languish in the lower reaches of the Tweede Klasse (i.e. fifth division), and there’s a big, big gap to their U15 side. So for the present, they seem likely to remain dependent on old routiniers like Martijn Snoep, spinners Umar Baker and Manminder Singh, and the always-dangerous Khalid Ahmadi, plus the current batch of overseas players, not forgetting the promising (but still work-in-progress) Prithvi Balwantsingh. That combination is certainly capable of stretching VOC to the limit, but that would involve their workmanlike attack getting the better of the Rotterdammers’ formidable top order.
BdJ’s picks: Saturday: Sparta, Excelsior, VRA, HBS, Punjab;
Sunday: Punjab, Hermes, HCC, Excelsior, Sparta.
RL’s picks: Saturday: Sparta, Excelsior, VRA, Voorburg, Punjab;
Sunday: Punjab, Voorburg, HBS, Excelsior, VOC.