VOC shock Kampong, tightening the table at both ends

Rod Lyall 10/06/25

Ninth-placed VOC Rotterdam sprang the surprise of the season so far with a hard-fought three-wicket victory over leaders Kampong Utrecht at Hazelaarweg on Monday.

The win was spearheaded by 17-year-old Aaditt Jain, who grabbed three wickets inside the first nine overs to reduce Kampong to 38 for three.

A partial recovery by Lachlan Bangs and Lorenzo Ingram was halted by the spin of Siebe van Wingerden, who removed both, and it took a fighting 56 from Pierre Jacod to get the leaders up to a moderately respectable 188, Aaditt Jain returning to collect another and finish with four for 40.

VOC soon found themselves of 25 for two when they replied, but Scott Janett and Christiaan Oberholzer combined in a stand of 94 for the third wicket, turning the game back the Bloodhounds’ way.

Oberholzer’s dismissal for 33, followed by that of Scott Janett, who made a fine 85, gave Kampong some hope, and with four wickets falling for 18 runs it seemed that VOC might again implode.

But Aaditt Jain now joined elder brother Arnav at the crease, and in growing tension they knocked off the remaining runs to give their side victory with two deliveries to spare.

Meanwhile, at the Loopuyt Oval, second-placed Hermes-DVS were unable to capitalise on Kampong’s defeat, losing to HCC by three wickets in another tight, low-scoring encounter.

The Lions’ pace attack never allowed the Hermes innings to gain any momentum after Sebastiaan Braat had elected to bat, Hidde Overdijk taking four for 22 and Teun Leijer three for 16 as the home side were dismissed for 151 in 39.2 overs. Hermes opener Daniel Doyle-Calle top-scored with 31.

The Hermes attack, so often the key to their success this season, struck back early in the HCC response, and at 73 for five the chase appeared to be faltering.

But with runs at a premium Shashank Banerjee’s 30 before he was run out by a smart direct hit from Doyle proved instrumental in HCC’s win; only eight more were required when he departed, and Daniel Crowley (30 not out) and Overdijk saw their side home with nine overs left.

HCC’s victory brought them to within one point of Hermes and three of Kampong, and they were joined there by two more Monday winners: Voorburg and Punjab-Ghausia.

In the only game where overs were lost, a delayed start at Westvliet reducing each side to 47 overs, Voorburg imposed themselves on Sparta 1888 almost from the outset, a destructive ten-over spell from veteran medium-pacer Usman Malik yielding figures of four for 16 and reducing Sparta from 46 for one to 88 for six.

After some resistance from Manminder Singh and Umar Baker, Floris de Lange claimed three for 6 in nine deliveries, and Sparta were all out for 133.

Voorburg needed only 25.1 overs to secure an eight-wicket victory, Carl Mumba hitting a 29-ball 30 to get the innings moving and Cedric de Lange making 51, leaving Gavin Kaplan and Tom de Leede to finish the job.

On a day when bowlers were generally in charge, the highest scores came at the Zomercomplex, where Musa Ahmad’s unbeaten 114, including six fours and four sixes, was the spine of Punjab-Ghausia’s total of 259 for seven.

Musa shared a second-wicket stand of 76 with Shoaib Minhas (52), and then batted through to the end, a flurry of boundaries taking him to his third Topklasse centuries despite wickets falling at the other end.

A hard-hitting 18-ball 32 from Reece Mason gave HBS a brisk start, and when Tayo Walbrugh (46) and Lehan Botha (68) put on 106 for the third wicket in just 20 overs the Crows seemed on course for a notable victory.

But then Punjab’s spinners reasserted themselves, Musa removing Botha and Minhas Walbrugh to set in train an HBS collapse which ended with their being all out for 221, Saqib Zulfiqar celebrating his return to fitness with three for 46.

In a crucial battle on the fringes of the relegation zone, VRA Amsterdam got the better of Excelsior ‘20 at Thurlede, although the Schiedammers’ batters showed more fight than they had when the two sides met on the opening day of the season.

Again it was the bowlers who were largely on top, 42 from skipper Johan Smal and 53 from Jack Cassidy the most significant contributions to VRA’s somewhat under-par total of 197 all out.

Jason Ralston claimed three for 24 in nine overs, including the wicket of Cassidy, while Antum Naqvi took three for 30 and Niels Etman two for 36.

The Amsterdammers’ four-man seam attack then cut through the Excelsior top order, and at 54 for five there were echoes of that opening-day game, in which the side had been dismissed for 85.

Captain Roel Verhagen was still there, however, and he shared partnerships with Joost Kroesen, Etman and Ralston which took the total up to 150.

Once he found himself batting with last man Jens Blankestijn with 45 still required, Verhagen concluded that attack was his only option, hitting Sharad Hake for two sixes before the bowler had his revenge, trapping him in front to 80 to finish the innings on 175.

Hake finished with four for 37, while Ashir Abid, who had done much of the early damage, took three for37.

The win edged VRA a little further towards mid-table, but with VOC now level on points with Excelsior, it is only net run rate which prevents the Schiedammers from slipping down into one of the two automatic relegation spots.

Doyle hundred keeps Hermes in touch

Rod Lyall 08/06/25

On a day which began with a real prospect of another washout ground staff, officials and players triumphed over the elements at four of the five Topklasse grounds on Saturday, producing results which both took the leaders further away from the pack and made things a lot tighter at the bottom end of the table.

The chief beneficiaries of the day were Kampong Utrecht, whose thrilling five-wicket victory over third-placed Voorburg at Westvliet kept them clear at the top, still two points ahead of nearest rivals Hermes-DVS.

In a match reduced to 25 overs a side Kampong’s spinners were again in charge, collecting five wickets between them as Voorburg assembled 156 for seven, Cedric de Lange making 40 and stand-in captain Ryan Klein, returning from injury, 34.

The Utrecht side’s replied faltered somewhat at 49 for four, but then Lorenzo Ingram and Alex Roy put on 95 for the fifth wicket, and after Tom de Leede removed Roy for 27 in the penultimate over Ingram finished the job in style, hitting a six to reduce the tension and reach his half-century.

That meant that just two we required from the final over, and after Robert van der Harten levelled the scores with one delivery remaining, Ingram managed the winning run to end on 57 not out.

Chasing the highest total of the day, Sparta 1888’s 175 for eight in a 33-over game at the Loopuyt Oval, Hermes-DVS could thank opener Daniel Doyle-Calle for their seven-wicket win, his unbeaten 115 coming from 86 deliveries and including 13 fours and two sixes as Hermes won with 16 balls to spare.

Sparta’s innings was built around an 82-run stand for the fourth wicket between Kyle Klesse (39) and Juandre Scheepers (53), while for the home side Olivier Elenbaas, bowling for the first time this season, Sebastiaan Braat and Hikmatullah Jabarkhail picked up two wickets apiece.

Doyle then dominated the Hermes reply, with valuable support from Mussayab Jamil (24) and Elenbaas (17 not out), enabling his side to cruise to victory and reinforce Sparta’s position at the foot of the table.

That position was rendered even bleaker by events at the Hazelaarweg, where VOC Rotterdam eased their own situation slightly with a hard-fought 9-run win against VRA Amsterdam.

That outcome had seemed unlikely at the half-way mark, since VOC had failed to make use of their full 27 overs, dismissed for 123 with 11 balls remaining.

42 of those runs had come from Christiaan Oberholzer, with Ashir Abid (three for 20) the most effective of VRA’s bowlers and Topklasse debutant Viraj Thakur pciking up two for 16.

But that fairly modest target proved beyond VRA’s somewhat makeshift batting line-up, depleted by national team commitments, Sachin Peiris, called up to open in place of Vikram Singh, top-scoring with 30 and Ibaad Zaidi making 29.

Brothers Arnav and Aaditt Jain collected five wickets between them, Aaditt taking three for 27, and when Zaidi’s was the eighth wicket to fall, 28 were still needed with three overs remaining.

Aaditt and Jason van der Meulen managed to close things out, and with VRA’s final pair together the innings closed ten runs short of their target.

With VRA losing, Excelsior ‘20’s hopes of escaping the relegation zone were further improved by their own victory over HBS Craeyenhout at Thurlede.

This game was cut to 24 overs a side, and HBS, put in by Roel Verhagen, battled their way to 115 for nine, Verhagen himself equalling a club record with five catches and a stumping.

One of the catches, off Antum Naqvi, was of HBS skipper Tayo Walbrugh, who top-scored with 32, while Joost Kroesen added three more scalps to his tally for the season, at a cost of just 16 runs.

Verhagen then gave his side a solid start with 30, Naqvi made a 39-ball 48, and Brett Hampton completed the task with six overs in hand, facing just one ball after Naqvi’s departure and ending proceedings with a six.

The only match to fall victim to the weather was the mid-table clash between Punjab-Ghausia and HCC at the Zomercomplex, which was abandoned without a ball being bowled.

Their point apiece brought the two sides level with Voorburg, although with inferior net run rates, but at the competition’s halfway point the championship race is increasingly looking like a two-way battle between Kampong and Hermes.

Edwards century takes Kampong clear

Rod Lyall 01/06/25

Aided by a second defeat for rivals Hermes-DVS, Kampong Utrecht took another big step towards becoming the first side since 1939 to win the championship in their first season after promotion when they defeated VRA in the Amsterdamse Bos on Saturday.

Such an outcome seemed unlikely three overs into the match, when Ben Fletcher and Peter Ruffell had reduced Kampong to 10 for three with Max O’Dowd, Daniel van den Berg and Lane Berry all gone, but the Utrecht side were rescued by a 174-run stand for the fourth wicket between Scott Edwards and Lorenzo Ingram.

On a pitch which gave the bowlers plenty of help Edwards and Ingram refused to panic, holding firm for 38 overs and gradually accelerating the tempo until Ingram lashed out at Leon Turmaine and was caught in the deep for 76.

With the innings now into the final ten overs and Kampong chasing runs, Edwards proceed steadily to his century, from 129 balls, as wickets fell at the other end, but then he too perished, caught by Vikram Singh at long off from the next delivery he faced.

Ruffell and Fletcher were the beneficiaries of the quest for runs, Ruffell collecting five for 44 and his new-ball partner four for 47 as Kampong were all out for 239.

Just how crucial Edwards and Ingram’s partnership had been soon become evident when VRA replied, only Jack Cassidy looking at all at home in the conditions as the home side collapsed to 79 for six.

Ruffell managed some resistance in company with the tail, hitting a 27-ball 31, but with Adam Constant unable to bat after injuring himself in the field the innings closed on 127 for nine, skipper Alex Roy the pick of the bowlers with three for 23 and Lachlan Bangs finishing it off with two for 2 in six deliveries.

Hermes-DVS, meanwhile, were suffering an almost-equally decisive defeat at the hands of fourth-placed Voorburg at Westvliet, the home side’s total of 269 for eight built on half-centuries by Noah Croes and Henry Melville, reinforced by 33 from Carl Mumba and an unbeaten 37 from Udit Nashier.

Sebastiaan Braat had initially removed Gavin Kaplan and Cedric de Lange, and came back to collect two more and finish with four for 67, while Hikmatullah Jabarkhail again proved his value in the middle overs with three for 50, including both Croes and Melville.

Viv Kingma, returning from injury, and Tom de Leede then combined to reduce Hermes to 51 for six, and although Braat, Sahil Kothari and Ralph Elenbaas were able to achieve a partial recovery which limited the net run rate damage, Hermes were all out for 162.

The match at the Bermweg followed a similar pattern, Punjab-Ghausia posting 275 for nine, largely thanks to a 109-run partnership for the third wicket between Musa Ahmad and Mohsin Riaz, and then dismissing Sparta 1888 for 102.

Ahsan Malik again made early inroads, removing Jonathan Vandiar with the third delivery of the match and then adding the scalp of Shoaib Minhas, but Musa and Riaz turned the innings around, Riaz making 55 before he was trapped in front by Max Hoornweg.

Musa went on to 91, and with brothers Saqib and Sikander Zulfiqar contributing 38 and 22 and a 13-ball cameo of 21 from Khurram Shahzad, the defending champions reached the day’s highest total.

To this Sparta had no answer, Sulaiman Tariq producing another of his metronomic spells to claim three for 33 and Saqib Zulfiqar taking three for 6 in 5.1 overs, and although Malik, again batting at three, showed great resilience until he was the last out for a dogged 45.

The side of that defeat saw Sparta slip to the foot of the table, since although VOC also lost, to HBS at Craeyenhout, they put up enough of a battle to edge ahead on net run rate.

With Tim de Kok opting to bat first, VOC owed their total of 179 to a solid 58 from opener Scott Janett, with lesser contributions from Christiaan Oberholzer and Jason van der Meulen, not to mention a valuable last-wicket stand of 27 between Jelte Schoonheim and Roman Harhangi.

That never seemed likely to be enough, however, and although Arnav Jain set the hosts back on their heels by removing both openers with just one run on the board, Tayo Walbrugh and Wesley Barresi effectively sealed the issue with a third-wicket stand of 130.

Barresi made 59, his fourth half-century in seven innings, while Walbrugh went on to an unbeaten 92, batting with Lehan Botha to see his side to a seven-wicket victory with more than 12 overs to spare.

Even more dramatic than Kampong’s recovery in the Amsterdamse Bos was the collapse of Excelsior ‘20 after a truly stunning opening by Sam Rahaley and Roel Verhagen, who took HCC’s attack apart in the first eight overs, only to see the rest of the side collapse from 80 without loss to 150 all out.

Rahaley was particularly destructive, smashing six sixes in his 32-ball 53, three of them off a single Clayton Floyd over, but once the openers had gone Hidde Overdijk produced another superb spell, claiming five for 18 in ten overs with five maidens, and HCC were back in command.

Floyd set up the reply with 33, and then Boris Gorlee and Oliver White put the issue beyond debate with a third-wicket stand of 91, Gorlee adding 51 to his impressive tally for the season and White seeing the Lions home with an unbeaten 40.

The day’s results sees VRA slip from third to seventh in an extremely congested mid-table, with just two points separating them from Voorburg, who have taken over the third spot; Kampong, though, now have clear water at the top, while Sparta and VOC slip further off the pace and Excelsior, in eighth, have a worrying three-point gap opening up between themselves and VRA.

Kampong edge past Hermes to top the table

Rod Lyall 30/05/25

There were small but significant shifts at both the top and bottom of the Topklasse table after Thursday’s rain-affected Ascension Day round, tremors rather than earthquakes, but enough to cause alarm in at least some clubhouses two matches short of the halfway point.

Not the least meaningful outcome was in the Amsterdamse Bos, where not a ball was bowled, the effects of the morning’s rain leaving the pitch unplayable, frustrating VRA and Voorburg, and forcing them to settle for a point apiece.

This opened up a three-point gap between them and the two leaders, although the damage was curtailed to some extent by the news from Rotterdam’s Zomercomplex, where Hermes-DVS suffered their first defeat of the season, at the hands of defending champions Punjab-Ghausia.

Put in to bat in a match reduced to 40 overs a side and with opener Daniel Doyle-Calle on international duty with Spain, Hermes found runs elusive against a parsimonious Punjab attack, before Burhan Niaz grabbed four quick wickets at a cost of 38 runs to reduce them to 61 for four.

That brought together veteran Nick Statham and the club’s new recruit Mussayab Jamil, who proceeded to add 93 for the fifth wicket in just over 16 overs, Jamil’s 52 his second half-century in the top flight and Statham’s unbeaten 67 his 70th in 477 innings, seven of those converted into centuries.

Hermes closed on 184 for seven, and with half Punjab’s batters out and 101 still needed, the leaders seemed to have given themselves a chance of retaining their unbeaten record.

The defending champions, however, were rescued by Mohsin Riaz and Niaz, who put on 72 for the sixth wicket before Niaz was run out for 41.

Riaz continued in company with Fawad Shinwari, making 63 not out and steering the side to a four-wicket victory with 14 deliveries remaining.

Hermes’ place at the top of the table was taken, albeit only on net run rate, by Kampong, who eked out a three-wicket victory over HBS Craeyenhout in a match reduced to 45 overs.

On a day when most skippers chose to bowl, Tayo Walbrugh took the bold step of electing to bat, and it seemed to be paying off when his side had reached 161 for three with eight overs remaining, Walbrugh himself having contributed 40 of them before he was trapped in front by Pierre Jacod.

But then Akhil Gopinath bowled Lehan Botha, leaving Wesley Barresi to work with the lower middle order, and Lorenzo Ingram took over, removing first Barresi for 45 and then three more to finish with four for 38.

The last six HBS wickets fell for just 14 runs, and with the side all out for 197 the bowlers were left with the extremely difficult task of removing Kampong’s powerful top order.

This they did reasonably effectively, and when the home side were on 87 for five, with O’Dowd, Van den Berg, Berry, Ingram and Bangs all back in the dug-out, the Crows were in with a real chance.

This brought Jacod in to join Scott Edwards, and this pair swung the match back Kampong’s way with a 94-run stand for the sixth wicket, and although Julien de Mey had Edwards caught behind for 49, soon trapping Alex Roy leg-before as well, Jacod saw the side home, finishing with an unbeaten 67.

Barresi’s three for 28 were the best figures for HBS, 13 of the 17 wickets to fall in the match captured by the spinners.

Fielding no fewer than five overseas players, another escalation in the Topklasse Arms Race, Excelsior ‘20 proved too strong for Sparta 1888 at Thurlede, winning their 43-over match by 53 runs, but the Spartans lived up to their name by battling hard against the odds.

It took a 49-ball knock of 67, including five sixes, from New Zealander Brett Hampton to get Excelsior up to the day’s highest total of 234, but it was a Dutch-produced youngster, Karson Edward, who administered the final blows, taking three wickets in five balls to end Sparta’s chase on 181, finishing with five for 11.

Earlier, Raynard van Tonder had anchored the first part of the Excelsior innings with a steady 54, while Khalid Ahmadi delivered the season’s third hat-trick, removing Niels Etman, Jason Ralston and Edward with successive deliveries to finish with four for 29.

Promoted to three, Ahsan Malik contributed 33 to Sparta’s reply, but the best partnership of the innings was 65 for the fifth wicket between Lukas Boorer (32) and Juandre Scheepers, who remained not out on 54.

Sparta remain narrowly ahead of current wooden-spooners VOC Rotterdam, who also fought hard all the way but eventually lost to HCC by 24 runs in the only game where overs were not deducted.

HCC’s innings sputtered along to 211 all out, mostly thanks to a solid 60 from Oliver White and a valuable 29 from Hidde Overdijk, while for VOC Jelte Schoonheim claimed three for 43, including a fine reactive return catch to remove Mark Wolfe (24).

Bowling honours, though, went to Aaditt Jain, who after claiming the early wicket of Clayton Floyd came back to pick up three more, finishing with four for 44; his brother Arnav finished wicketless, but his ten overs conceded only 18 runs, a nagging stint which maintained the pressure on the Lions’ batters.

That VOC came so close to their target was due to an aggressive 71 in 60 deliveries from Jason van der Meulen, who shared half-century partnerships with Christiaan Oberholzer (21) and Tim de Kok (26), but HCC’s overseas pair of White and Josh Brown kepttaking wickets, finishing with four for 27 and three for 31 respectively, and keeper Wolfe helped out with two catches and two smart stumpings.

Rain the only winner on a bleak Saturday

Rod Lyall25/05/25

The band of rain which swept across the Netherlands on Saturday washed away the season’s perfect record of uninterrupted cricket, with only 7.1 overs possible in one match and the other four abandoned without a ball being bowled.

They got a start in the Amsterdamse Bos, where Tayo Walbrugh lost the toss and HBS were invited to bat by Teja Nidamanuru.

Tobias Visée played one of his microcameos, punching the second ball he received from Peter Ruffell strongly to the point boundary and then playing an awkward, unbalanced defensive stroke to the next, inside-edging through to keeper Jack Cassidy.

Lucas del Bianco and Walbrugh were still at the crease, the total on 39, when the arrival of the rain drove the players from the field, although the HBS captain had perhaps been a little fortunate to survive a tight run-out decision, a direct hit from midwicket coinciding with his desperate dive at the non-striker’s end.

The captains optimistically tossed at the Bermweg, where Tim de Kok called correctly and elected to field, but the only action thereafter was Sparta playing sweeping accumulated water from the covers, and the game was eventually abandoned.

By that time the other three had already been called off, all ten teams taking a point from their frustrating day.

Hermes stay unbeaten as Kampong maintain their challenge

Rod Lyall 18/05/25

Hermes’ hopes of securing their first Dutch men’s championship since 1946 survived a couple of major scares against VOC Rotterdam at the Hazelaarweg on Saturday, but in the end they successfully defended a meagre total of 140 and won by 49 runs.

The Sky Blues’ unbeaten record appeared to be in serious jeopardy when, after they had elected to bat first, brothers Arnav and Aaditt Jain and Roman Harhangi had reduced them to 45 for four in the space of a dozen overs.

Veteran Nick Statham and Olivier Elenbaas doubled the score before Statham fell to Jason van der Meulen for 26, and then Elenbaas shared another useful stand with Sahil Kothari which took the total to 134 before Arnav Jain returned to removed him for 34.

His departure signalled a rapid end to the Hermes innings, Jain picking up two more wickets to finish with four for 22 as the leaders were all out in 42.3 overs.

Scott Janett and Pieter Recordon launched the VOC reply with an opening stand of 35, but once Aryan Dutt, back from international duty, had removed Recordon, left-arm spinner Kothari took over, and the home side slumped to 53 for seven in just seven more overs.

Skipper Tim de Kok put up some resistance with an 11-ball cameo of 21, but Kothari was irresistable, finishing with career-best figures of six for 23 as VOC were all out for 91.

Heading the pursuing pack, Kampong Utrecht were much less troubled in defeating Sparta 1888 by seven wickets, needing less than 20 overs to chase down the Spartans’ 187 for nine.

Like Hermes, Sparta suffered a top-order collapse, Kertan Nana and Shashank Kumar picking up two wickets apiece to leave the visitors on 27 for four inside the first eight overs, and it took a dogged knock of 74 from Kyle Klesse and a spirited last-wicket stand of 34 between Tim Ferguson and Joost-Martijn Snoep to get them to a total their bowlers had an outside chance of defending.

That hope was quickly snuffed out, however, as Damien van den Berg and Max O’Dowd raced to 83 in ten and a half overs before O’Dowd fell to Snoep for a 33-ball 38.

Van den Berg maintained the momentum with Lane Berry, making 52 from 40 deliveries, but it was Lachlan Bangs’ unbeaten 59 from 24 balls, with two fours and six sixes, which sped Kampong to their overwhelming victory, giving them a clear net run rate advantage over their rivals which may come in handy later in the season.

In the Amsterdamse Bos, meanwhile, VRA were finding that a total of 181 all out was more than enough to secure a win over mid-table rivals HCC.

Here it was the bowlers who were largely in control, Hidde Overdijk’s four for 44 instrumental in keeping VRA’s innings within bounds.

Returning internationals Vikram Singh and Teja Nidamanuru gave their side a promising start with 39 and 33 respectively, but once they had both gone the innings declined from 87 for three to 136 for seven, Oliver White and Josh Brown both collecting wickets to put the home side on the back foot.

The tail was able to get them up to 181, and after the new-ball pairing of Ben Fletcher and Peter Ruffell had removed HCC’s openers off-spinner Leon Turmaine took the crucial wickets of Boris Gorlee, White and Yash Patel to leave the Lions reeling on 36 for five.

There was effectively no way back from there, and although Brown made 35 and Mark Wolfe contributed an unbeaten 15, HCC were dismissed for 113, Turmaine finishing with four for 25.

Voorburg’s title challenge suffered another blow at Craeyenhout, where HBS posted 275 for seven and went on to win by 87 runs.

Wesley Barresi top-scored for the Crows with 71, but it was a fine all-round performance from returning international Kyle Klein which sealed his side’s victory.

First, he made an invaluable 53, coming in at 127 for four and departing at 244 for six, sharing vital stands with Barresi and then with Navjit Singh, who made an unbeaten, 29-ball 34 to see his side to their challenging total.

Voorburg were in with a real chance as Gavin Kaplan (62) and Noah Croes (66) were adding 85 for the fourth wicket, but once Benno Boddendijk had removed Kaplan, Klein, who had earlier dismissed fellow-international Michael Levitt, returned to remove first Croes and then, two balls later, Philippe Boissevain, and HBS were on the path to victory.

He finished with three for 23, and with Jayden Rossouw collecting three for 39 the Voorburg innings ended on 188.

The key relegation battle at Thurlede followed a superficially similar course, Punjab-Ghausia reaching 276 for seven and then dismissing home side Excelsior ‘20 for 244 to move a little closer to the middle of the table.

The pattern of the Punjab innings, though, was somewhat different: Jonathan Vandiar and Shoaib Minhas shared an opening stand of 110 before Jason Ralston bowled Vandiar for 58, and then leg-spinner Joost Kroesen removed Minhas for 93, adding the scalps of Musa Ahmad and Burhan Niaz as Punjab subsided from 172 for one to 208 for four.

Kroesen finished with three for 43, but Khurram Shahzad hit a brisk 26 not out to get his side up to the highest total of the day.

Sam Rahaley (60) and Roel Verhagen (65) responded with a first-wicket partnership of 108 when Excelsior replied, but although Raynard van Tonder made 72, sharing a stand of 56 for the fifth wicket with Luuk Kroesen, once the latter had gone he was unable to find sufficient support, and the innings ended 32 runs short.

Minhas was again Punjab’s main wicket-taker with three for 40.

The defeat leaves Excelsior level on points with Sparta and VOC at the foot of the table, while Punjab have improved their chances of staying clear of the dreaded eighth spot and an end-of-season play-off to avoid relegation.

Hermes, still unbeaten, go top

Rod Lyall 11/05/25

In a remarkable day’s cricket on Saturday, Hermes-DVS Schiedam cruised to victory over Kampong Utrecht, becoming the only unbeaten side in the Topklasse, while three of the bottom four beat higher-ranked opponents to sharpen the battle to avoid relegation.

The round was all the more historic because for the first time in the 135 years of the Dutch competition, two hat-tricks were recorded in the top flight on the same day.

After they won the toss at the Loopuyt Oval and elected to bat, Kampong’s innings was held together by Australian overseas Lane Berry, whose 97-ball 119, with 12 fours and three sixes, saw them to 224 for seven before the last four wickets fell for the addition of just two runs.

Berry and Lorenzo Ingram both fell to Sahil Kothari, who claimed two for 21 in his eight overs, while Hikmatullah Jabarkhail cleaned up the tail to finish with three for 30.

Ash Ostling and Daniel Doyle-Calle gave Hermes a great start with an opening stand of 125 in just 18 overs, and after Doyle fell for 72, caught by Pierre Jacod off the bowling of Alex Roy, Ostling continued in company with Asad Zulfiqar, ensuring a nine-wicket victory with ten and a half overs to spare. Ostling ended on 92 and Zulfiqar on 44.

If the top-of-the-table clash turned out to be a comfortable win, the four remaining matches were to varying degrees more hard-fought.

The most surprising was at the Zomercomplex, where VOC Rotterdam were seemingly down and out at the halfway point, having been dismissed for 164 by cross-town rivals Punjab-Ghausia in another disappointing effort with the bat.

That they reached that total was largely due to Christiaan Oberholzer, who came in at 2 for two in the third over and batted through to the end, making a dogged 85.

Of the rest of the side, Scott Janett and Siebe van Wingerden both contributed 22, but no-one else reached double figures, while for Punjab Mubashar Hussain celebrated his return to the first team with three for 24 and Musa Ahmad claimed three for 20.

Then, after Van Wingerden had removed both openers, Jelte Schoonheim ripped through Punjab’s middle order, removing Mohsin Riaz, Burhan Niaz and Sikander Zulfiqar to perform the first Toplasse hat-trick for three years and leave the defending champions reeling on 30 for six.

Muhammad Asif Gondal, also in the side for the first time this season, and Fawad Shinwari turned the ship around with a seventh-wicket partnership of 74, but when Aaditt Jain returned to remove Gondal for 34 it was left to Shinwari to try to assemble the remaining 61 runs in company with the tail.

He and Aaliyan Mahmood added another 28, but then Oberholzer trapped Shinwari in front for 52, and when Roman Harhangi began the final over eight were still required the last pair together.

They managed two of them, but then Mahmood attempted a leg-side scoop and stand-in keeper Tim de Kok, dropping back, took the catch which gave VOC their first victory of the season, by just five runs.

They remain at the foot of the table, however, since Sparta 1888, also winless after three games, beat VRA Amsterdam in an equally tense encounter at the Bermweg.

157 out of VRA’s total of 204 came from a single partnership, that for the third wicket between Patrick Gouge (69) and Johan Smal (86), after Ahsan Malik had reduced the Amsterdammers to 4 for two, and after Juandre Scheepers dismissed Smal and Malik removed Gouge in the next over the innings again fell away, only Adam Constant (18) able to reach double figures.

Malik’s three for 36 was matched by Scheepers’ four for 33, while Joost-Martijn Snoep maintained the pressure in the middle overs, his ten overs conceding only 23.

Sparta battled to achieve what was a fairly challenging target in the Bermweg conditions, but Kyle Klesse’s unbeaten 75 saw them home by four wickets with ten deliveries to spare, Khalid Ahmadi chipping in with a 27-ball 38 which got his side back in touch with the required rate and took them to within five runs of victory.

The tightening in the middle of the table was furthered by the victory of HBS Craeyenhout over <b.HCC at De Diepput, which was transformed by a 177-run stand for the fourth wicket between Tayo Walbrugh and Lehan Botha, and more particularly by the latter’s devastating 90-ball knock of 119, which included eight fours and as many sixes.

At 56 for three after 20 overs HBS were toiling somewhat, but then Botha unleashed a formidable attack, reaching 50 from 49 deliveries and needing only another 29 balls to go to three figures,

Walbrugh was more restrained at the other end, but he batted to the end for an unbeaten 93, sharing a stand of 57 with Navjit Singh (27) along the way and enabling his side to reach 285 for seven, the day’s highest total.

Having chased down 327 last Monday HCC began confidently enough, Tonny Staal and Boris Gorlee putting on 100 for the second wicket in just twelve overs, but once Staal fell for 37 and Benno Boddendijk removed Gorlee for 79, the innings lost some of its momentum.

At 209 for five they were still in with a chance, but then Wesley Barresi came back to claim three wickets with his off-breaks, ending with four for 56, and the final wicket fell at 233, giving HBS a 52-run victory.

At Westvliet, Voorburg were seemingly cruising to the win as they chased Excelsior ‘20’s 255 all out, but then leg-spinner Joost Kroesen took a hand, trapping centurion Gavin Kaplan, Nirav Kulkarni and Tom de Leede LBW with successive deliveries to post the day’s second hat-trick.

An opening stand of 168 between Cedric de Lange (68) and Kaplan had set up a Voorburg win, and when Kaplan reached his first hundred of the season and his fifth for the club it appeared to be as good as over.

Kroesen’s triple coup, however, which became four when he bowled the veteran Usman Malik, gave Voorburg a few nervous moments before Udit Nashier and Patrick Charumbira knocked off the remaining runs with two and a half overs to spare.

Kroesen, who only bowled a total of 11 overs in the past two seasons, finished with four for 41, but his intervention came too late to save his side.

Earlier, Antum Naqvi had hit his maiden Topklasse century, his 121 the key to Excelsior’s competitive total, assisted by Jason Ralston in a crucial ninth-wicket partnership of 59; Mees van Vliet (three for 49) and Charumbira (three for 35) had done much of the damage for Voorburg.

And then there were two . . .

Rod Lyall 06/05/2025

It was by any standards a remarkable day’s cricket on Monday, as more than 2500 runs were scored across the five Liberation Day matches, with no fewer than 17 partnerships of 50 or more, three of them extending into three figures.

The bowlers, correspondingly, collectively had a day to forget: they went for over five an over, each wicket costing them an average of almost 34 runs.

The most remarkable runfest came at De Diepput, where HCC saw Voorburg run up 327 for seven, their second triple-century total in succession but, undaunted, chased that massive target down with 15 deliveries to spare.

The match featured two splendid centuries by Dutch-produced batters: Cedric de Lange, opening in the absence of Michael Levitt on national team duty, batted almost throughout the Voorburg innings to post a 122-ball 104, but he was more than matched by HCC captain Boris Gorlee, who followed up his 102 against Sparta on Saturday with an even more decisive 122.

He, too, batted almost to the end, falling to his old clubmate Patrick Charumbira when only two more runs were required for victory.

Supporting roles in Voorburg’s innings were played by three of the side’s four overseas, with Peter Hatzoglou hammering a 38-ball 59, Gavin Kaplan making 46 and Henry Melville 42, while Josh Brown took advantage of his opponents’ quest for quick runs at the death to finish with four for 76.

Tom de Leede removed both openers when HCC replied, Tonny Staal having smacked a 28-ball 46 to get them going, but then Gorlee took over, sharing a 95-run stand for the fourth wicket with Oliver White (39), and then an equally valuable partnership of 89 with Hidde Overdijk (38).

Yash Patel joined him for what was almost the winning stand, and there was time for him to reach his half-century before HCC completed the win.

Kampong matched Voorburg’s effort by running up 320 for six against Punjab-Ghausia at Maarschalkerweerd, but they were able to retain their unbeaten record as they dismissed the defending champions for 243 and won by 77 runs.

Missing Max O’Dowd and Scott Edwards, the Utrecht side relied heavily on the mid-order engine-room of Lane Berry (53), Lachlan Bangs (85) and Lorenzo Ingram (68), although it was the locally-produced pair of Pierre Jacod and skipper Alex Roy who propelled the total past 300 with an unbroken stand of 56 in the final overs.

Roy then led the way in reducing Punjab to 62 for four, and even a blistering century from Jonathan Vandiar, whose 109 came from 93 balls and included no fewer than nine sixes, wasn’t enough to keep his side in the hunt.

It was Vandiar’s twelfth century and his fifth for Punjab, and while he and Sikander Zulfiqar were sharing a 128-run stand for the fifth wicket the champions were in with a chance, but once Ratha Alphonse had stumped Zulfiqar off Ingram’s bowling for 57 the writing was on the wall, and Roy picked up two more wickets to finish with five for 56, his second five-wicket haul in the top flight.

Kampong now share the lead with Hermes-DVS, who ended VRA Amsterdam’s unbeaten run at the Loopuyt Oval in the only game of the day in which the bowlers had the upper hand.

The Amsterdammers might have felt they had done well at the innings break, restricting Hermes to 219 for eight; Ben Fletcher, Peter Ruffell, Leon Turmaine and Darsh Abhinay all claimed two wickets, while Daniel Doyle-Calle was again the stand-out batter with a 75-ball 74.

Some of the limelight inevitably fell on Hermes veteran Nick Statham, who became only the second player in the 134-year history of the Dutch competition to play 500 matches in the top flight.

That resilience would have been welcome among the VRA batters, but without Vikram Singh, Teja Nidamanuru and Shariz Ahmad the reply quickly fell apart, Ralph Elenbaas grabbing three early wickets and the rest of the bowlers working their way through the middle and lower order.

Opener Jack Cassidy made 27 and Abhinay showed some resistance before he was last out, but the side could only manage 116 as Hermes posted a 103-run victory.

At the other end of the table Excelsior ‘20 registered their first win of the season, their total of 320 for four proving enough to overcome VOC Rotterdam at the Hazelaarweg.

Batting with a hand injury he had sustained on Saturday, Raynard van Tonder was unfortunate to miss out on a maiden Topklasse century when he was bowled by Jelte Schoonheim for 97, but there was no such disappointment for Stan van Troost, whose 91-ball 107 not out was his first venture into three figures in the top flight.

He shared an unbroken stand of 120 with Sam Rahaley (43 not out) as Excelsior piled on the agony for VOC in the closing overs.

69 for three at one stage, the Bloodhounds put up a spirited battle, Monty Singh (87) and Arnav Jain (47) adding 129 for the fourth wicket, but the run rate was too great in the end, Antum Naqvi picking up three for 40 as VOC closed on 254 for nine.

Also winless after two rounds, HBS and Sparta 1888 duked it out at Craeyenhout, and it was the home side who eventually came out on top, Wesley Barresi’s 85 the key to their four-wicket victory.

Barresi had had an influential role with the ball as well, taking the new ball with fellow-spinner Jayden Rossouw and claiming three for 40; spinners bowled 34 of the 48 overs in Sparta’s innings, Tayo Walbrugh’s tactics paying off as the Capelle side were dismissed for 210.

Opener Jochem Steenbergen made 39 and Lukas Boorer top-scored with 51, but HBS maintained the pressure well to restrict their opponents to a relatively modest total.

The Crows were in early trouble at 57 for three, but Barresi steadied the ship in partnership first with Reece Mason and then with Sellin de Beer, and only five more runs were required when the former international was bowled by Juandre Scheepers.

VRA demolish Punjab to go top

Rod Lyall 04/05/2025

The rematch of last year’s grand final turned out to be an anti-climax on Saturday, as VRA Amsterdam turned the tables on hosts and defending champions Punjab-Ghausia at the Zomercomplex, dismissing them for 111 and racing to an eight-wicket victory.

The win propelled the 2025 runners-up to the top of the table on net run rate, but with three other sides also claiming a second victory there is plenty of competition for a clear lead in the race to the title.

It was VRA’s new pace-bowling overseas player Peter Ruffell who started the rout, removing the dangerous Shoaib Minhas in the third over of the game after Teja Nidamanuru had won the toss and put the home side in, and who then, when Punjab had negotiated their way to a precarious 107 for five, dismissed last week’s centurion, Mohsin Riaz for 35, starting a collapse which saw the last five wickets fall for the addition of just four runs.

Samir Butt (24) had given Riaz some support, but with Ruffell claiming three more wickets to finish with five for 19 and Vikram Singh chipping in with two for 3 from eight deliveries, the innings quickly subsided.

So quickly, in fact, that there was time for VRA to reach 49 for one by the scheduled lunch break, despite Sajjad Kamal removing Singh in the second over of the reply, and with Jack Cassidy and Johan Smal putting on 81 for the second wicket in 16 overs, the Amsterdammers needed only 19.5 overs to complete the win.

Smal eventually fell to Suleiman Tariq for 42, but Cassidy stayed to the end with 45 not out, Nidamanuru finishing it off with a boundary.

Promoted side Kampong Utrecht’s top five gave them a great start, taking them to 236 for three with 14 overs remaining against Excelsior ‘20 at Thurlede, but then a flurry of wickets in pursuit of a massive total saw them dismissed for 308 with eight deliveries remaining.

Max O’Dowd kicked off with a 25-ball 30 which included seven boundaries, his fellow-opener Damien van den Berg contributed an even brisker 26-ball 42, and then Lane Berry made a run-a-ball 38 before Scott Edwards and Lorenzo Ingram, the latter taking on his former team-mates, put on 86 for the fourth wicket.

Edwards eventually went for 59, having brought up his 3000th Topklasse run in the process, but Ingram posted 76 before falling in the quest for quick runs, the Excelsior new-ball pairing of Jason Ralston and Jens Blankestijn finishing with three for 45 and three for 68 respectively.

After last week’s capitulation against VRA the home supporters may have feared for the worst, but Excelsior put up a much better fight this time, Luuk Kroesen and Roel Verhagen posting a half-century opening stand and Stan van Troost then making a career-best 94, from 96 deliveries, as he anchored the rest of the reply.

The home side struggled to keep up with the required rate, however, and it was Kampong’s spinners who capitalised, Pierre Jacod claiming four for 62 and Ingram three for 40 as the innings ended on 267 for nine, Van Troost falling to Jacod just before the end.

Kampong’s total was surpassed by Voorburg at Westvliet, where the top order also produced an outstanding effort to see them to 328 for eight against VOC Rotterdam.

New signing Peter Hatzoglou got them off to a rollicking start with a 12-ball 23, Michael Levitt made 42 before he was brilliantly run out by Tim de Kok, and then Cedric de Lange’s 56 and Gavin Kaplan’s 70 took them to 239 for four in the 42nd over.

Kaplan’s departure was the cue for Bas de Leede, clearly relishing his brief return to the Topklasse, to inflict further punishment on the VOC attack, hitting six fours and three sixes in his 51-ball 83, taking his side past the 300-mark.

Scott Janett (83 from 94 deliveries) and Indian-born Danish international Taranjit Singh Bharaj (55 from 62) shared a solid third-wicket partnership of 129 for the visitors after Viv Kingma had grabbed two wickets in four balls, but Hatzoglou removed them both as he took six for 35, and then Cedric de Lange, one of four keepers in the Voorburg side, picked up the final two wickets for 5 runs with his off-breaks as VOC were all out for 197.

Hermes-DVS were the fourth side to make it two wins out of two, getting the better of HBS Craeyenhout in the most hard-fought match of the day.

Put in to bat at the Loopuyt Oval, Hermes owed their total of 195 for eight very largely to Spanish international Daniel Doyle-Calle, who came in at 48 for two and batted through to the end, finishing with an unbeaten, 93-ball 89.

He received a measure of support from Sebastiaan Braat and Sahil Kothari, but with Kyle Klein and Jayden Rossouw picking up three wickets apiece, for 26 and 45 respectively, and Julien de Mey contributing a wicketless but economical spell, Hermes finished well short of an imposing total.

It proved to be enough, however, for although HBS reached 91 for two in reply, Braat (four for 41) and Hikmatullah Jabarkhail (four for 35) ran through the middle and lower order, only Wesley Barresi standing firm with a dogged 57 not out.

39 were still needed from 44 deliveries when Jabarkhail removed Rossouw and brought last man Benno Boddendijk to the crease, and although he and Barresi added 25 of them, Braat finally had Boddendijk caught by Ralph Elenbaas and Hermes won by 13 runs.

At Sportpark Bermweg HCC bounced back from last week’s collapse against Hermes, and at one point seemed likely to join Voorburg and Kampong in the 300-plus club as they pummelled the Sparta 1888 attack.

Supported by 47 from Shirsak Banerjee, skipper Boris Gorlee led the way with a 105-ball 102 which included 11 fours and two sixes, but once Ahsan Malik returned to the attack to remove him the innings fell away, closing on 278 for nine.

But Sparta could not carry that fightback into their reply: Hidde Overdijk ripped the top off the innings with three for 7 in five overs, reducing the Spartans to 15 for four, and although Juandre Scheepers and Lukas Boorer put up some resistance, the home side were dismissed for 103, giving HCC a thumping 175-run victory.

Kampong come back in style

Rod Lyall 28/04/2025

Kampong Utrecht stormed back into the Topklasse in their opening game on Sunday, dismissing VOC Rotterdam for just 86 and then requiring only ten and a half overs to knock off the runs to complete a nine-wicket victory.

Put in to bat, VOC’s innings never really got out of first gear, only 27 runs coming from the opening powerplay for the loss of two wickets as seamers Shashank Kumar, Kirtan Nana and Alex Roy maintained the pressure on a helpful Maarschalkerweerd surface.

In retrospect Pieter Recordon’s patient 18 – the top score and one of only three in double figures –  looks like a much better innings than it did at the time, but once Pierre Jacod trapped him in front the spinners took over, and the remaining seven wickets fell for 41 runs in the space of 16 and a half overs.

Jacod finished with four for 24, and new signing Lorenzo Ingram collected three for 12 as the Bloodhounds’ innings crumbled.

The home side’s batters then set about maximising their net run rate advantage, Damien van den Berg and Max O’Dowd taking 28 off the first four overs before Roman Harhangi removed Van den Berg for 17.

But that brought Lane Berry to the crease, and he unleashed a savage attack, smashing four fours and three sixes in a 22-ball onslaught which earned him 41 runs, while O’Dowd finished with an unbeaten 24 at the other end.

Defending champions Punjab-Ghausia Rotterdam, on the other hand, were made to battle almost all the way against a defiant HBS Craeyenhout before a 171-run partnership for the fifth wicket between Mohsin Riaz and skipper Sikander Zulfiqar decisively took the game away from the Crows.

Although HBS captain Tayo Walbrugh contributed 56, his side were in trouble at 129 for six against Punjab’s spinners, but Kyle Klein (58) and Elmar Boendermaker (59) turned the innings round with a seventh-wicket stand of 89, and the home side managed to reach a competitive 238 for eight.

It looked like it might be enough when pacemen Lehan Botha and Klein reduced the champions to 60  for four, especially since Saqib Zulfiqar had pulled a hamstring and was unlikely to bat, but Riaz and Sikander steadied the ship and gradually took control.

Riaz’s 111, made from 85 deliveries with 15 fours and three sixes, was his fourth Topklasse century, while Sikander Zulfiqar remained 71 not out, hitting eight fours, the last of them the winning boundary, and facing 96 balls.

There was a similar story at Sportpark Bermweg, where Voorburg’s hearts fluttered briefly as their batters set out in chase of Sparta 1888’s total of 210.

Former international Ahsan Malik grabbed two early wickets, as he has done so often, but at 31 for two returning overseas Gavin Kaplan was joined by Bas de Leede, turning out for his old club under a dispensation which allows a player to appear in the Dutch competition as well as one abroad when he returns to the club which raised him.

The pair put on 124 for the third wicket, De Leede making 57 of them in a knock which bodes well for the upcoming League 2 series against Canada and the UAE, and then Kaplan and skipper Noah Croes saw the 2023 champions home, Kaplan finishing it with back-to-back boundaries to end on 85 not out.

Earlier, Sparta had battled hard to set a defendable total, Kyle Klesse top-scoring with 41 before he was most unfortunately run out by a direct hit from Bas de Leede’s younger brother Tom after a misunderstanding with fellow-overseas  Lucas Boorer.

Not for the first time, Umar Baker contributed valuable runs as he batted with the tail, the last two Sparta wickets adding 42, while Udit Nashier was the most successful of the Voorburg bowlers, claiming three for 40 in his first outing with his new club.

His former outfit, VRA Amsterdam, enjoyed their day in the Amsterdamse Bos, posting the highest total of the round with a solid 253 for six, and then dismissing Excelsior ’20 Schiedam for 85 to win by 168 runs and take second place on the table.

Excelsior’s attack was able to make little impression on VRA’s strong top order, opener Vikram Singh making 46, Johan Smal 64 and Teja Nidamanuru 48.

Then the new-ball pairing of Ben Fletcher and Peter Ruffell removed the openers before Shariz Ahmad ran through the rest of the batting, claiming five for 27; it was his sixth five-wicket haul in the Topklasse and leaves him one short of 100 wickets.

He received good support from dubutant Darsh Abhinay, who took two for 10 in three overs, including that of Raynard van Tonder, whose 43 showed that he will be a key player for Excelsior this season but who will clearly need to find some teammates to stay in the middle with him.

There was a similar batting collapse at De Diepput, where HCC fell apart against Excelsior’s Schiedam rivals Hermes-DVS and succumbed by 93 runs.

Hermes got off to an outstanding start after Boris Gorlee won the toss and put them in, Aryan Dutt and Ashley Ostling compiling an opening stand of 103 before Oliver White had Ostling caught at slip by Tonny Staal for 39.

That was the cue for a dramatic collapse, two more wickets falling for the addition of just one run, and the rest of the batting able to add only 88 as the Lions fought back well.

Dutt went on to make 79, his highest in the Topklasse, and Sahil Kothari contributed a dogged 30, but with Hidde Overdijk taking three for 34 and White, Daniel Crowley and Henrico Venter picking up two apiece, the innings closed on 192.

That proved to be plenty, and after Ralph Elenbaas had removed White Roy Numair took three quick wickets for 23, including an outstanding return catch to remove Staal, before Hikmatullah Jabarkhail, on his Topklasse debut, claimed three more at a cost of 21, and HCC were in desperate trouble on 59 for seven.

Yash Patel and Mark Wolfe put up some resistance, but Sahil Kothari finished things off, taking three for 4 from 25 deliveries, and HCC were all out for 99.