VCC vs Sparta at Westvliet Round 5|22.05.21

VRA vs VCC at Westvliet Round 03|16.05.21

Punjab vs VOC at Zomercomplex Round 4|15.05.21

Round 5 Preview

Bertus de Jong & Rod Lyall 21/05/21


In what must surely be the busiest May for Dutch cricket in modern history, the Topklasse rolls out of last week’s double round and straight into another, domestic action pausing only for the trifling matter of two mid-week One Day Internationals against Scotland. With ten more matches scheduled across Saturday and Monday, eyes will turn nervously to forecasts and radars as the league resumes its battle with the unseasonably wet Spring weather.

BdJ: By a distance the most unfortunate team weather-wise has been last year’s table-toppers HCC, who find themselves lingering in the middle of the table despite being undefeated this season, having had three of their four matches washed out. They will hope for better luck when they travel to Craeyenhout to take on HBS, who will be at full strength for the first time this season as Tobias Visée and Ryan Klein return from international duty to join second overseas Tayo Walburgh. Walburgh gave a good account of himself on debut against ACC last week, hitting 88 off 110, albeit in a losing cause. Defeat against the unfancied Amsterdammers rather exposed HBS’ lack of penetration with the ball, something Klein’s return will remedy to an extent, though HCC boast greater batting depth than do ACC. Depth counts for less in abbreviated games however, while Walburgh and Visée look all the more dangerous if overs are lost. The rain has been HCC’s toughest opponent so far this season, and a shower or two could make HBS favourites again come Saturday.

RL: It took a solid partnership between Damian Crowley and Yash Patel to dig HCC out of trouble against Voorburg last Saturday (was it really only last Saturday?), but that demonstrates that there’s more to the Lions than a classy top three. Klein’s battle with Musa Ahmad, Staal and Gorlee will be well worth watching, and on the other side of the balance Visée, Walbrugh and Klein (who showed in Ireland that he can certainly bat a bit) may prove a handful for Reinier Bijloos, Ollie Klaus and the rest of an experienced HCC attack which has been comparatively untested this season, mostly because they’ve been cooling their heels and watching the rain. As m’learned colleague suggests, this looks a fairly even contest which could hinge on who gets the better of the weather conditions, assuming they relent sufficiently to allow a result at all.

BdJ: Also denied a game last round were HCC’s putative opponents Dosti-United, who head down to Thurlede to face Excelsior ‘20. Dosti are still waiting for their first win since 2019, though they gave a better account of themselves with the ball in the one game they’ve managed to play so far, making a decent fist of trying to defend a total of just 103 against Punjab. With Rahil Ahmed returning to the side Dosti captain Vinoo Tewarie can perhaps expect a little more support with the bat, but they remain a long shot to upset the defending champions on their own turf. Excelsior dropped their first points of the season against Punjab last week in a nominal home game that was relocated to the Zomercomplex owing to the weather, but are a different prospect at Thurlede where their disciplined bowling attack tends to strangle opposition batting. With Ingram and Stubbs in the middle order and Roel Verhagen now also finding some form, a winning score will be even harder to find for visitors to Thurlede.

RL: Dosti are even shorter of match practice than HCC, and the trip to Thurlede is indeed a daunting one, especially against an Excelsior side smarting from that defeat at the hands of Punjab. The old suspicions about the Schiedammers’ limitations when their overseas stars don’t come off with the bat will have been revived by that defeat, the contributions of Verhagen and Joost Kroesen notwithstanding, and with Tim Etman struggling to find form after his return from Australia the onus on Ingram and Stubbs is even greater. Whether Dosti have the bowling resources to contain those two is decidedly moot, although Asief Hoseinbaks and Waheed Masood did throw Punjab into a tizzy on their one outing so far. No much doubt about who start as favourites here!

BdJ: Meanwhile Punjab Rotterdam will be making the trip up to Amsterdam, where VRA will be hoping to finally stage their first home game of the season. Despite coming back from a stumbling start to deliver a drubbing to Sparta last weekend, VRA have looked rather undercooked this season so far. Most concerning for the Amsterdammers is a misfiring top order, which on paper looks their chief strength. With Ben Cooper, Vikram Singh and Eric Szwarczynski all horribly out of form, VRA have depended on their middle and lower order for runs. Punjab have likewise looked vulnerable at times, most notably in their stuttering chase against Dosti, but have the depth of batting to carry a struggling bat or two. Punjab’s bowling has likewise looked more dependable, if not more penetrative than that of their hosts. VRA doubtless have the quality to see off Punjab at home, but on current form go into the game as clear underdogs.

RL: If the old truism that class is permanent while form is temporary has anything at all going for it, then sooner or later VRA will turn in the sort of batting performance we all know they are capable of. Whether it will be this week on the untested surface of the Amsterdamse Bos ground is another question, given that Suleiman Tariq, Sohail Bhatti, Sikander and Saqib Zulfiqar and Teja Nidamanuru bowled VOC out cheaply and were able to make Excelsior toil for runs last weekend. It’s a well-balanced attack, but whether its cutting edge is sharp enough to slice through VRA’s admittedly buttery top order remains to be seen. But Punjab’s batting – that aberration against VOC apart – is strong enough to chase most totals, and short of that serious VRA revival the Rotterdammers should take the points back south.

BdJ: Currently in pole position, VOC Rotterdam will be looking to widen the gap at the top when they take on ACC at home on Saturday. The Amsterdammers have again looked more competitive than many expected this year, taking back four points from Craeyenhout last week and at times looking on top of Excelsior. Sahil Kothari is in flying form with almost 200 runs under his belt from those two games, though Excelsior showed the ACC middle and lower order remains fragile. VOC’s own middle order likewise looked wobbly last week, unneeded against Sparta but with a string of sub-15 scores for bats 4 through 9 against Punjab. The Rotterdammers are adept at defending low totals at home however, with Hazelaarweg looking typically inhospitable to visiting bats this season.

RL: ACC are a classic example of a side which is greater than the sum of its parts, and they have demonstrated that they are capable of pouncing on any opponent who is operating at anything below their best. Kothari’s batting at the top of the order adds a whole other dimension, enhanced by skipper Anis Raza’s stepping into an opening role, while the return of Devanshu Arya unquestionably strengthens the ACC attack. But VOC do, of course, have crucial trump cards in O’Dowd, Edwards – top scorers in this week’s ODIs against Scotland – and Seelaar. Man for man they are, moreover, perhaps the strongest eleven in the competition, with Arnav Jain slotting in well as an allrounder and Siebe van Wingerden beginning to take plenty of wickets with his leg spin. They’ve earned their place at the top of the table, and it may not be too soon to start thinking about them regaining the title they won in 2018 after a 24-year dry spell.

BdJ: Saturday’s final match sees Voorburg take on Sparta 1888 at Westvliet, and with both Logan van Beek and Vivian Kingma in flying form both for VCC and in Orange, Sparta face a daunting challenge as they go looking for their first win of the season. The Cappellenaren are coming off the back of a miserable weekend, a promising start against VRA turning into a rout on Saturday before spending 50 fruitless overs chasing leather against VOC only to be skittled for 100. Max Hoornweg and Mudassar Bukhari remain a menace with the new ball and Garnett Tarr’s return has bolstered the batting on paper if not yet in practice, but taking on a Voorburg side with the wind at their back a win for Sparta would be the surprise of the season.

RL: There’s not a lot more to say, really. Sparta’s batting has let them down at every turn so far, and if the attack is the stronger element it, too, has come in for some awful punishment. Kingma and Van Beek are enough to worry any batting line-up, with Bas de Leede, Ali Ahmed Qasim, both Aryan Dutts (the seamer and the off spinner) and Philippe Boisevain in support. Sparta’s best hope is to capture early wickets, but with Sybrand Engelbrecht, Karl Nieuwoudt and Van Beek in the middle order, even that doesn’t guarantee success. Voorburg know they need to keep winning if they are to keep pace with VOC and end their own 19-year titleless drought, and this ought to be one of their more comfortable victories.


BdJ’s picks: HBS, Excelsior, Punjab, VOC, Voorburg.

RL’s picks: HCC, Excelsior, Punjab, VOC, Voorburg.

Rounds 3 & 4 Preview

Rod Lyall & Bertus de Jong 12/05/2021


The programme is always a little crowded in May, but this year, in addition to the uncertainties arising from the pandemic, the Topklasse schedule has been complicated by the conjunction of Ascension Day (when there is normally a full round of matches) and the feast of Eid al-Fitr. As a result four of the five Round 3 games have been moved to Sunday, and will be preceded by four Round 4 games on Saturday. The Round 4 match between Dosti and HBS has been rescheduled to 30 May because the ground will be needed for football, only a religious matter in the loosest sense of the term.


Thursday: Round 3

RL: Unable to use their ground on Sunday (football again), HBS Craeyenhout have reconciled themselves to taking on ACC without their Netherlands A representatives, Tobias Visée and Ryan Klein. That evens up the odds considerably, but the Crows will still have their other overseas, Tayo Walburgh, making his Topklasse debut, and the rest of the side is strong enough to trouble an Amsterdam outfit which is still finding its feet. The inclusion of Shreyas Potdar reinforces their batting, but the visitors will need to be at their best if they are to take the points back north.

BdJ: Given the unrelentingly grim weather forecast for the weekend this is, by process of likely elimination, the match of the round. ACC of course remain in a lengthy “transitional phase” as they seek to rebuild following the great Zulfiqar Exodus of 2018-19, but showed a commendable amount of fight at times during their opening defeat to HCC. With the Visée and Klein watching the rain in Wicklow the Amsterdammers may sense an opportunity against an under-strength HBS. Klein was the pick of the bowlers for HBS in their nine wicket win over Sparta in the first round, and aside from Visée, Reece Mason and Navjit Singh are the only Crows to have spent any time in the middle thus far. HBS will hope Walburgh acclimatises swiftly to unfamiliar conditions given the length of the tail, while still more responsibility will fall on the shoulders of captain, opening bowler and (at least on Thursday) likely top-order bat Ferdi Vink. If ACC can find early wickets they have the discipline in the field to keep their hosts under pressure, but if HBS can string a couple of partnerships together they’ll quickly become favourites. ACC might hope for a better showing from last season’s stand-out all-rounder Sahil Kothari, and Charles McInerney if fully fit, but there’s been little to suggest them capable of chasing a serious total.


Saturday: Round 4

RL: The most mouth-watering prospect of the entire weekend is Voorburg’s visit to De Diepput to take on HCC. Having dropped points against Excelsior in their first match Voorburg need to win this to avoid falling two games behind the early leaders, and much will depend on whether Kingma and Van Beek are able to seize the initiative by grabbing early wickets against the home side’s menacing top order. On the other side of the coin, HCC’s attack hasn’t yet been tested, and the Villagers have the batting to make life difficult for them. But HCC have the momentum, and on De Diepput’s diminutive dimensions may have the firepower to see off Voorburg’s challenge.

BdJ: Van Beek and Kingma’s efforts with bat and ball, together with Phillipe Boissevain’s impressive spell of legspin, were among the few positives to be taken from the Dutch A side’s dismal showing against the Irish yesterday, and if the three can replicate that form at de Diepput HCC may find themselves in trouble. While HCC have not been put under real pressure in the field, neither has their batting faced an attack of the quality Voorburg can call upon. If conditions this weekend resemble those last week of course it’s unlikely Kingma or van Beek will be bowling at full pace, while Boissevain may struggle to get purchase on a wet ball. Staal and Ahmad at the top of the order have shown themselves more than capable of taking ruthless advantage of struggling bowlers, while the expected return of Hidde Overdijk strengthens both the HCC middle order and provides ten dangerous overs of seam bowling in most any conditions. With two of the four points on offer disapearing into the aether in the event of a washout, both sides will be hoping for better weather than last weekend of course. But the hosts might just prefer it not be too much better.


RL: Yet to settle into a groove, VRA Amsterdam face a potentially difficult trip to the Bermweg to face Sparta 1888. Their bowling suffered at HCC’s hands before the rain intervened last week, but the fallibility of Sparta’s batting has been all too evident in their two outings so far, and VRA’s young attack should find this a more encouraging prospect than taking on either VOC or HCC. It’s hard to believe, on the other hand, that VRA will perform as poorly with the bat as they did against VOC, although with Max Hoornweg, Mudassar Bukhari, Nasrat Ibrahimkhil, Joost Martijn Snoep and Manminder Singh among their bowlers Sparta have a pretty good record on their own track. And they really need to pick things up if they are to turn their season around.

BdJ: VRA are indeed off to another of their now customary slow starts this season, their lack of seam options twice exposed in the opening rounds. This was of course an anticipated problem, though they will hope both Abid and Gunning fire with the new ball on Saturday they have the batting line-up to paper over almost any shortcomings with the ball. Their failure with the bat at Hazelaarweg consequently looks all the more alarming, though conditions were as tough as they’d ever likely face and they were without Eric Szwarczynski, Marcus Andrew and Jack Balbirnie in that opening game. Their opponents have likewise had an abject start to the season, going down by nine wickets to HBS and looking on course for another heavy defeat against Excelsior when the rain intervened. Only the evergreen Mudassar Bukhari has yet crossed thirty with the bat for Sparta, who will likely need some or all of trio of Belgian bats Raza, Latif and Butt to fire if they are to bag their first points of the season.


RL: Punjab Rotterdam’s top order, without Steph Myburgh, looked surprisingly brittle against Dosti last Sunday, and they will be keen to restore normal service when they play host to VOC Rotterdam this week. The return of Pierce Fletcher has sharpened VOC’s new-ball attack, but they will need to be at their most disciplined against a Punjab top order which is capable of flaying any opposition, especially at the Zomercomplex. Punjab’s frustration at not getting a start last Saturday was all too evident, and now that they have a first win under their belts they will be determined to see off the challenge offered by Max O’Dowd, Scott Edwards and Pieter Seelaar. Whether their bowlers are up to that challenge may well be issue that settles the outcome.

BdJ: Last year’s runners-up indeed looked rusty when they finally got their first game at Drieburg last weekend, though the bowling was sufficient to roll over an under-strength (and already flimsy) Dosti batting line-up to set up a nigh-unmissable target of 101, Vinoo Tewarie’s captain’s knock showed what a bit of application and well-timed acceleration could do to a Punjab attack that still looks more serviceable than menacing. Their showing with the bat, Saqib Zulfiqar aside, looked little more convincing in the slow and stumbling chase, though it’s worth noting that they were indeed missing Myburgh and despite the early clatter of wickets there was still batting to come when they crossed the line, not least in the form of overseas all-rounder Teja Nidamanuru. That batting depth probably gives them the edge against a dangerous but top-heavy VOC line-up, though even with points in the bag it’s hard to argue they carry much momentum into the game, and a showing like that against Dosti is unlikely to be as profitable against VOC.


RL: Already established as part of a somewhat crowded field of title contenders, Excelsior ’20 Schiedam travel to Het Loopveld to meet ACC. It was Lorenzo Ingram’s turn last week to step into the spotlight, and the presence of both him and Tristan Stubbs in the Schiedammers’ line-up is enough to give them a huge advantage against an ACC outfit which has elected not to go with an overseas player this season. ACC’s youngsters are capable of giving a good account of themselves, but the absence of some more experienced protection can leave them dreadfully exposed, and the side has not yet really recovered from the personnel losses it suffered last year. It’s hard to see anything but a convincing away win here.

BdJ: Little argument here, even without skipper Tom Heggelman (sidelined by a hamstring injury) Excelsior looked on course for a comfortable win last week before they too were frustrated by the unseasonably wet weather that has plagued the season so far, and despite admirable discipline in the field and competitive spirit ACC likely lack the bowling firepower to trouble a solid Excelsior line-up made menacing by the inclusion of Stubbs and Ingram. The Excelsior bowling attack may lack for penetration, and indeed they’ve taken only 12 wickets in two matches, but is too well-drilled and dependable to be called a real weakness.


Sunday: Round 3

RL: After facing VOC on Saturday Punjab Rotterdam will take on an equally daunting task on Sunday, when they visit to Thurlede to play Excelsior. The Schiedam side, led by Joost Kroesen in the absence of Tom Heggelman, was unfortunate to miss out on the points after taking control against Sparta, and this could well be an outstanding encounter between two of the league’s strongest sides. Excelsior have trump cards in Ingram and Stubbs, but if Punjab can find a way to neutralise their menace the combination of four Zulfiqars, Myburgh, Teja Nidamanuru and the emerging Hussain brothers should be enough to take them home.

BdJ: Excelsior’s trusted tactic of containment has generally served them well at Thurlede, as was the case against VCC in their season opener, and given how Punjab struggled to score at Drieburg on Sunday suggests it could well pay off again. There is one major caveat there however, and that is of course Stephan Myburgh. In their last encounter at Schiedam back in 2018 Myburgh demonstrated that he still knew how to score at his old home ground, making a run-a-ball 48 before his dismissal saw the game turn decisively in the hosts favour. It was a similar story at the Zomercomplex last season, with the run rate plummeting after Myburgh’s dismissal. With Stubbs and Ingram in the Excelsior middle order the hosts have a greater capacity for acceleration than in seasons past, and if they can bag Myburgh early (a big if of course, but hardly unheard of) the title holders will have the game in their hands.


RL: VOC Rotterdam definitely caught the rough end of the DLS calculation against Voorburg on Saturday, and they need to get their campaign back on track by making sure of the points at home against a Sparta 1888 outfit which has been unimpressive so far, especially with the bat. But Mudassar Bukhari gave a reminder against Excelsior, if any were needed, that he can still be a decisive factor, and with more support from the top order – and perhaps the advent of Garnett Tarr – Sparta could be capable of causing an upset or two. VOC, on the other hand, have a well-balanced side with a trio of international stars, and seem likely to have too much firepower for the men from Capelle.

BdJ: As usual VOC seem to be the only team in the competition who have any real idea how to bat at their home ground of Hazelaarweg, even the most experienced of VRA’s enviable batting order looking all at sea in round one. Though their vulnerability away from home was made plain last week, the Rotterdammers’ attack looking a little toothless in more batting-friendly conditions, they have consistently proven a handful at home and Sparta’s batting has inspired little confidence thus far. One cause for concern, however, remains the form of Netherlands opener Max O’Dowd. Bowled for a duck by Ashir Abid in round one, O’Dowd was then skittled by what turned out to be a front foot no ball from Vivian Kingma in round two, and could make only two runs before chipping a return catch to the same bowler. Effectively out three times for two runs this season, O’Dowd might have appreciated the chance to find some form in Ireland this week before the serious business of the Topklasse resumes.


RL: After three away games, or more accurately two and a bit, VRA Amsterdam will be on their own turf for the first time this season, taking on in Voorburg another side who play their home games on grass. The Villagers showed last week that, as we all suspected, their timid performance against Excelsior was well short of their true potential, and with Bas de Leede, Sybrand Engelbrecht and Logan van Beek in good form with the bat and an almost all-international attack, they are as powerful a side as any in the competition. VRA, on the other hand, are something of an enigma: in one sense a work in progress, they have the quality and experience of Peter Borren, Eric Szwarczynski and Ben Cooper, and the contest between the home side’s top order and Voorburg’s bowlers should be one for the connoisseur.

BdJ: If VRA are looking forward to their first outing in front of a home absence-of-crowd this season, one suspects Voorburg’s pace attack will likewise relish the prospect of pulling the spikes on again. Both sides are unarguably at their best on a good grass wicket, though whether the weather will permit the preparation of anything particularly batting-friendly (or indeed any play at all) is of course an open question. Though both sides boast array of former, current and likely future Dutch internationals, it is Voorburg that will be fielding more men of this particular moment. Van Beek, Boissevain and Kingma all looked in fine form across the waters in Wicklow, and while Bas de Leede had [what one hopes for his sake was] a forgettable outing yesterday, that failure looks like an aberration in the context of his current form. Conversely Vikram Singh has looked bereft of both of form and confidence at the crease, and while Cooper had a fine tour to Nepal he’s not had much time in the middle since. With the rest of VRA’s young line-up still finding their feet at senior level, VRA look more dependent on veterans Szwarczynski and Borren than they would like.
N.B. It has since been announced that VRA vs VCC will be played at Westvliet


RL: Three outstanding individual performances, by Vinoo Tewarie with the bat and Asief Hoseinbaks and Waheed Masood with the ball, enabled Dosti Amsterdam to give Punjab a scare last Sunday, but the whole team will need to step up if they are to offer a serious challenge to visitors HCC. The Lions have been in dominating mood with the bat so far, and their attack is good enough to trouble most opposing line-ups. Tewarie had little enough support against Punjab, while his bowlers will need to be at their absolute best if they are to contain Musa Ahmad, Tonny Staal and Boris Gorlee. Anything other than an away win here would amount to one of the upsets of the season.

BdJ: Fair to say that Dosti have struggled to even scrape a team together so far this season, making their showing in the field against Punjab (though admittedly not with the bat) all the more commendable. With Rahil Ahmed expected to return this week and Anees Davids potentially back at some point this season, Dosti have the makings of a competitive side if they can get them all on the field at the same time. The addition of Ahmed, who hasn’t played any competitive cricket since 2019, does not in itself give Dosti anything that looks like a proper batting line-up, but had Tewarie received any support at all on Sunday they might have had four points in the bag already. All that said, HCC won the league last season and Dosti didn’t win a game. I’m not about to talk myself into another wild punt of a prediction here.


Rod Lyall’s tips: Round 3: HBS; Punjab, VOC, Voorburg, HCC | Round 4: HCC, VRA, Punjab, Excelsior.
Bertus de Jong’s tips:
Round 3: HBS, Excelsior, Voorburg, HCC, VOC | Round 4: Voorburg, Punjab, VRA, Excelsior


Only Voorburg and Punjab (eventually) beat the rain

There were two winners in Saturday’s second round of Topklasse matches: Voorburg, who beat VOC Rotterdam by 42 runs at Westvliet, and the weather, which ensured that there was no result anywhere else.

The weather, it should be noted, had some assistance in two of the games from the umpires, who let the players stay out in steady rain for some time before taking them off.

If this was an attempt to avoid abandoned matches it proved counterproductive, for in one case conditions had by this time deteriorated so far that no further play was possible, and in the other, after a long wait, only twelve deliveries could be bowled before the umpires decided that conditions were unplayable and called it a day.

It is surely not a coincidence that the one fixture concluded was the only one played on turf, since the effect of the rain on an uncovered mat and run-ups was only too predictable. It’s quite possible, given the weather on Saturday, that none of these games could have been saved, but earlier covering could have made a difference.

At Westvliet, the home side, after being put in to bat, recovered from the early loss of Aryan Dutt and had reached 80 for two in 15 overs by the time the weather intervened, skipper Bas de Leede making 42 not out at a run a ball and receiving good support from Mohit Hingorani and Sybrand Engelbrecht.

When play resumed 29 overs had been deducted, so Voorburg had just six overs to pile on the runs.

They did so to good effect despite De Leede’s dismissal off the first delivery after the restart, Engelbrecht and Logan van Beek leading the way as they added 43 for the loss of five wickets in a hectic finale, and the DLS calculation rewarded the side’s earlier enterprise, setting VOC the tough target of 154 in 21 overs.

As long as Scott Edwards was at the crease they were in the hunt, but once he was fifth out in the 17th over with the total on 100, having made a gallant 45-ball 55, the task proved too great and the last wicket fell in the final over with the score on 111.

Philippe Boissevain, who had effectively settled things by removing Edwards, went on to finish with five for 12 from 20 deliveries.

HCC’s start against VRA Amsterdam at De Diepput was even more promising, as Musa Ahmad and Tonny Staal put on 64 in under 11 overs before the umpires decided the rain was too heavy and took the players off.
Staal in particular took off where he had left off against ACC last week, savaging young Abid Ali and making 40 from 39 deliveries with two fours and two sixes.

But the Deep Well lived up to its name, and no further play was possible.

32.1 overs had been bowled at the Bermweg before the interruption, and home side Sparta 1888 were in serious trouble against Excelsior ‘20, Mudassar Bukhari and Manminder Singh having managed to get them to 86 for six after the first six wickets had fallen for just 66.

Lorenzo Ingram had a sensational return to the Topklasse after missing last week’s game, bowling Ali Raza and Sherry Butt with his first two deliveries and then adding the scalp of Mamoon Latif to finish with three for 11.

Eventually, the umpires decided, the ground had recovered sufficiently for play to resume with Excelsior’s reply comprising 20 overs, and as Voorburg had been rewarded by DLS for their batting performance, so Sparta suffered for theirs: Excelsior’s target was a mere 72.

But although Max Hoornweg removed Tim Etman in his first over Nasrat Ibrahimkhil had not completed his before the umpires concluded that the pitch was too wet after all, and the match was abandoned with Excelsior still needing 62 runs.

Further north in Amstelveen, where the game began at the originally-scheduled time of midday, only five overs of Dosti United’s innings against ACC were possible, enough for opener Joe Wegecsanyi to make his Topklasse debut and for Dosti to reach 13 for one, but at Rotterdam’s Zomercomplex there was no play at all between Punjab Rotterdam and HBS Craeyenhout, the umpires calling the game off after a protracted wait for conditions to improve.

At Sportpark Drieburg on Sunday, in the rescheduled Round 1 game between Dosti Amsterdam and Punjab Rotterdam, Punjab survived a serious scare before securing a five-wicket victory over a determined home side.

Dosti had struggled with the bat, collapsing to 24 for five after winning the toss, but a fine captain’s innings from Vinoo Tewarie, who made 60 not out from 94 deliveries, enabled them to reach 103. Teja Nidamanuru took three for 10 and Suleiman Tariq and Mubashar Hussain a brace of wickets apiece.

The game having been reduced to 45 overs a side after a break for rain midway through the Dosti innings, the target was only 101, but Punjab were soon in trouble against Asief Hoseinbaks and Waheed Masood, who took four wickets between them for just 18 runs.

Bowling unchanged for his nine overs, Hoseinbaks claimed three for 19, but Saqib Zulfiqar, supported by his triplet brothers Sikander and Asad, saw his team home with an 81-ball 48 not out.

Scorecard | VCC vs VOC | 08.05.21

Voorburg I Vs VOC I
1-Innings Match Played At Westvliet, Voorburg, 08-May-2021, Topklasse
Voorburg I Win by 42 runs (DLS)
Round 2
Toss won by VOC I
Umpires PGHA van Giezen – ML Hancock
Scorers CC Schinkel – CCH Kaulingfreks
Home Side Voorburg I
Comment Rain stopped play, Voorburg 80-2 (15 overs). Match reduced to 21 overs. DLS target 154.
Points Awarded Voorburg I 4, VOC I 0
Voorburg I 1st Innings 123/7 Closed (Overs 21)
Batsman Fieldsman Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
A Dutt lbw b BW Hanif 1 5 0 0
M Hingorani+ lbw b ZDA van Baren 14 20 2 0
BFW de Leede* c SA Edwards b JD Schoonheim 42 43 5 1
SA Engelbrecht c A Jain b BW Hanif 21 28 3 0
LV van Beek b MP O’Dowd 19 14 0 1
PRP Boissevain c MP O’Dowd b SB van Wingerden 3 5 0 0
VJ Kingma c TIM de Kok b MP O’Dowd 0 2 0 0
TN de Grooth not out 9 9 0 0
FJ de Lange not out 0 0 0 0
R Pieterse dnb
AA Qasim dnb
extras (b0 lb4 w10 nb0) 14
TOTAL 7 wickets for 123
FOW
1-2(A Dutt) 2-47(M Hingorani) 3-80(BFW de Leede) 4-98(SA Engelbrecht) 5-106(PRP Boissevain) 6-114(LV van Beek) 7-115(VJ Kingma)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
PJ Fletcher 4 0 14 0
BW Hanif 3 0 31 2 9
ZDA van Baren 5 1 18 1
A Jain 4 0 20 0
JD Schoonheim 1 0 11 1
MP O’Dowd 2 0 8 2
SB van Wingerden 2 0 17 1 1
VOC I 1st Innings 111/10 All Out (Overs 20.2)
Batsman Fieldsman Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
MP O’Dowd c&b VJ Kingma 2 6 0 0
SA Edwards+ c R Pieterse b PRP Boissevain 55 45 5 0
TIM de Kok c SA Engelbrecht b AA Qasim 16 20 2 0
PM Seelaar* c SA Engelbrecht b A Dutt 7 6 1 0
ZDA van Baren lbw b A Dutt 6 6 1 0
A Jain c VJ Kingma b PRP Boissevain 15 24 0 0
JD Schoonheim b LV van Beek 3 4 0 0
MA Durrani b PRP Boissevain 1 2 0 0
PJ Fletcher c FJ de Lange b PRP Boissevain 1 2 0 0
BW Hanif not out 1 4 0 0
SB van Wingerden st M Hingorani b PRP Boissevain 2 4 0 0
extras (b0 lb0 w1 nb1) 2
TOTAL 10 wickets for 111
FOW
1-6(MP O’Dowd) 2-44(TIM de Kok) 3-67(PM Seelaar) 4-67(ZDA van Baren) 5-100(SA Edwards) 6-104(JD Schoonheim) 7-105(MA Durrani) 8-108(A Jain) 9-108(PJ Fletcher) 10-111(SB van Wingerden)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
LV van Beek 5 0 20 1 1
VJ Kingma 3 0 29 1 1
BFW de Leede 3 0 16 0
AA Qasim 3 0 17 1
A Dutt 3 0 17 2
PRP Boissevain 3.2 0 12 5

Scorecard | ACC vs Dosti | 08.05.21

ACC I Vs Dosti United I
1-Innings Match Played At Het Loopveld West, 08-May-2021, Topklasse
No result
Round 2
Toss won by Dosti United I
Umpires RJ Akram – E Ruchtie
Home Side ACC I
Points Awarded Dosti United I 1, ACC I 1
Dosti United I 1st Innings 13/1 (Overs 5)
Batsman Fieldsman Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
JRM Wegecsanyi not out 5 18 1 0
W Masood run out AE Alangara Napoleon/S Hannema 0 4 0 0
VAB Tewarie* not out 4 8 1 0
A Nawaz dnb
S Naseri dnb
M Hans dnb
S Mahendran dnb
J Kumar dnb
Asief Hoseinbaks dnb
Arief Hoseinbaks dnb
A Sardha dnb
extras (b0 lb0 w4 nb0) 4
TOTAL 1 wickets for 13
FOW
1-0(W Masood)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
MA Raza 2 1 1 0
M van Vliet 2 1 5 0 1
AE Alangara Napoleon 1 0 7 0
ACC I 1st Innings
Batsman Fieldsman Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
RK Ramesh Babu dnb
CEM McInerney dnb
S Potdar dnb
KHA Krishna dnb
S Kothari dnb
RA Kumar dnb
MA Raza* dnb
S Hannema+ dnb
A Zaidi dnb
AE Alangara Napoleon dnb
M van Vliet dnb
extras (b0 lb0 w0 nb0) 0
TOTAL 0 wickets for 0
FOW
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb

Ascension Day round rescheduled

TKcricket 05/05/21


In deference to the coinciding of Ascension day and the festival of Eid al-Fitr, together with the Netherlands A tour to Ireland depriving several clubs of key players, the KNCB have decided to postpone Round 3 of the Topklasse.

Originally scheduled for Thursday May 13th, The round will instead be played the following Sunday – May 16th, TKcricket has discovered. If clubs prefer, however, they may be permitted to play their fixtures on the Thursday by mutual agreement, suggest sources in a position to know.

Sources also suggest that owing to the relative smooth running of Covid protocols, specifically the speed with which pre-match testing has been accomplished, matches from Round 3 onward will again commence at the traditional start time of 11am rather than noon, allowing for the extra hour without loss of overs in case of interruptions.

It is also understood that Dosti Amsterdam’s Round 4 home match against HBS, originally scheduled for Sunday the 16th due to Dosti’s ground not being available on the Saturday, will instead be played at Craeyenhout the day before to allow for the postponed Round 3 to be played in its entirety on Sunday. The HBS-Dosti return match scheduled for Sunday July 11th will instead be played at Drieburg, likely that same weekend.