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Preview Round Nothing

Bertus de Jong & Bertus de Jong 21/08/21


nb. the first half of this preview was written prior to the announcement of VOC’s withdrawal from the match in question.


Well the circumstances leading to this orphaned match are not uncontroversial, but the Commissie van Beroep have in their ineffable wisdom decreed that last weeks aborted game between HCC and VOC Rotterdam must be replayed before we can get to the business of the playoffs, so having scrapped our preview for those games we’re left with this final league phase encounter at de Diepput as the day’s only game.

BdJ: Realistically, given the forecast and the difficulty of getting de Diepput to dry out in reasonable time, the expected rain is likely to be the decisive factor tomorrow. A washout would give HCC the single point they’ve been after for the last couple of weeks to make the top four and leave VOC rueing missed opportunities. Should we get a game in however, the hosts are well placed to claim their playoffs spot by traditional means. VOC will of course be without Dirk van Baren, who despite an inconsistent summer has put in some crucial performances under pressure this season, and likely without skipper Pieter Seelaar, whose fitness stuggles have reportedly returned. Their absences leave the VOC batting card looking a little thin, though in a shortened game (which is likely the most we can hope for) they still have the top-order hitting power in Max O’Dowd and Scott Edwards to take advantage, while the returning Corey Rutgers has been in superlative form since shedding the responsibility of marshalling our neighbours to the South and VOC’s remaining middle order bats are arguably better suited to shorter contests. That said, HCC’s home advantage will likely prove a significant factor even in an abbreviated match. Their attack remains the league’s most balanced, and while the HCC batting lacks the hitting power of their opponents they make up for it in depth. The most probable outcome tomorrow remains a wash-out, which would see VOC eliminated and HCC claiming fourth place behind VRA by virtue of the latter’s total league phase win-count (or, equally likely, third place by virtue of the KNCB’s entirely arbitrary attitude toward the priority of tie-breakers). The Board’s limited understanding of the rules of their own competition likewise make it difficult to predict what an HCC victory would imply; according to the rules that have been in force all season they would finish in third place behind VCC – again on the basis of the latter’s superior win-count – but it’s equally possible they will be adjudged to have finished in second on the basis of a superior net run rate, head to head record against VCC, tasseomancy or the dictates of a monkey with a Ouija board. A convincing VOC win meanwhile would put them unambiguously in third ahead of VRA on most traditional metrics, while a close win ought to leave them in fourth but at this point who knows?

BdJ (2 hours later): VOC have just announced they’re not going to play the game that likely would have been washed out anyway, and are conceding the points to HCC. As a moral stand it is marginally less convincing than that of their intended opponents last week, but barring another bizarre and baseless decision from the game’s administrators it is likely to prove decisive. What this means is that we now have a weekend without any Topklasse cricket at all for absolutely no good reason, and HCC are through to the playoffs, in third position according to the actual rules but quite possibly in second place because “reasons”. So the farcical close to the league phase continues, having left us with four playoff contenders but relatively little idea of what order they might be in or why. Next weekend will see Punjab and VRA take on VCC or HCC in the preliminary final and de facto quarter final respectively, but the two will likely have to wait on a decision from the board as to which tiebreaker they intend to apply this week before finding out who their opponents will be. We’ll bring you news of that decision as soon as we get it. In the meantime we imagine that you, dear readers, like all of us at TK, will be on edge of your seats.


BdJ’s pick: Rain.

BdJ (2 hours later)’s pick: Nonsense.

Appeals Committee orders a replay

Rod Lyall 21/08/21

Of the two controversies which have afflicted the Topklasse over the past week, that relating to last Sunday’s abandoned match between HCC and VOC Rotterdam is clearly the more far-reaching and ultimately the more significant.

The other issue, over which of two conflicting rules about rankings on the league table should take precedence, and thus whether VOC or VRA Amsterdam should be the home side for their semi-final, is down to an unfortunate administrative error, and could perhaps best have been resolved by tossing a coin, or by playing the match at a neutral venue.

But the battle over the outcome of HCC’s walk-off at De Diepput after an allegedly racist remark made by VOC batter Dirk van Baren to HCC wicketkeeper Yash Patel, culminating in the KNCB Appeals Committee’s ruling on Friday that the match should be replayed, goes to fundamental issues which have plagued Dutch cricket for many years as well as giving rise to concerns about what may happen in the future.

Sunday’s match was inevitably highly charged: the sides went into it in third and fourth positions on the table, knowing that the winner would be guaranteed a place in the play-offs while the loser’s chances were dependent on results elsewhere.

The atmosphere was not helped by an incident in the fifth over when HCC were convinced that Van Baren had been caught but the umpires, after consulting, ruled that he was not out, but it exploded a dozen overs later, when an exchange of words between Patel and Van Baren led to the former walking off, followed by his teammates.

Twenty-five minutes later, after negotiations which also involved KNCB Match Referee Rob Kemming, HCC confirmed that they were not prepared to continue, and the match was abandoned.

Law 16.3 is quite unambiguous on the point: ‘a match shall be lost by a side which in the opinion of the umpires refuses to play. If so, the umpires shall award the match to the other side.’

This is essentially confirmed by the KNCB’s own Playing Conditions, merely adding a procedure whereby the Match Referee is the one who awards the match, but another key document, the Competitiereglement [Competition Rules], takes a more nuanced position.

Under article 8 of this document the KNCB Board may, ‘where neither team should be deemed to have lost the match’, order a replay, while ‘in exceptional cases’ it may decide not to impose any further penalty on a team which is deemed to have lost.

A note lays down that the normal tariff of penalties for a team which refuses to play shall be, for a first offence, a reduction of two points and a fine of €100.

In this case the Board accepted the Match Referee’s decision to award the match to VOC, but chose not to impose any further sanction, either in the form of a points penalty or a fine; this has now been overturned by the Appeals Committee after HCC appealed, ordering that the match be replayed.

There is no dispute that an abusive remark with racial overtones was made by Van Baren to Patel, and that is a matter which will be properly pursued through the KNCB’s disciplinary procedures.

But does it follow from this that HCC were justified in refusing to play, as the Appeals Committee’s decision appears to suggest?

That they should have walked off in solidarity with Patel is understandable, but to continue the protest even when it was explained to them that they risked forfeiting the match took the dispute to an entirely different level.

There have been instances in international cricket – the West Indies at Christchurch in 1980, India at Melbourne in 1981 – when a captain has come close to refusing to play, but only once, in the infamous Oval Test of 2006 between England and Pakistan, has the situation been allowed to deteriorate to the point at which the match was forfeited, an outcome which continued to reverberate, to nobody’s credit, for almost three years.

The strongest position HCC could have adopted, in my view, would have been to make the protest and then return to finish the game, ideally with assurances that the disciplinary matter would be pursued to the fullest possible extent.

Instead, they chose to take the moral high ground, drawing the greatest possible attention to what they described in the announcement of their appeal as a ‘unique incident’.

Unfortunately, though, the incident, though undoubtedly unsavoury, is far from unique; rather, it is the tip of an iceberg of racial prejudice and misunderstanding which runs deep in Dutch cricket, and which has done so for many years.

Nor should that be surprising: cricket reflects the societies in which it is played, and racism, and specifically anti-immigrant feeling, is a feature, and indeed an increasingly evident feature with the rise of anti-immigrant parties, of Dutch society, as it is in many other Western societies.

This is a subject which deserves much more careful attention than it can be given here, and it is one to which we shall return.

But no-one who has had anything to do with Dutch cricket in recent decades can put their hand on their heart and say that they have never heard racist comments, on or off the field, and many would, if they were honest, admit that they had themselves made for such remarks.

As for the order that the match be replayed, although it appears that VOC had no objection to such an outcome, there is a real danger that it will open the way for sides in a losing situation to manipulate the circumstances in such a way that the match has to be abandoned, especially in the many games in which there are no official umpires.

If it is not to prove a sledger’s charter then the playing conditions need to be toughened in order to ensure that there is no repetition of Sunday’s unhappy events, at the same time reinforcing the message that there will be zero tolerance of racism in Dutch cricket, and indeed of any other violation of Law 42.

Scorecard | Dosti vs Sparta | 15.08.21

Dosti United I Vs Sparta I
1-Innings Match Played At Sportpark Drieburg, 15-Aug-2021, Topklasse
Dosti United I Win by 31 runs*
Round 18
Toss won by Dosti United I
Umpires PJ Jansen – DJ Kalloe
Home Side Dosti United I
Points Awarded Dosti United I 4, Sparta I 0
Dosti United I 1st Innings 164/10 All Out (Overs 37.5)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
RI Ahmed+ c M Bukhari b MB Hoornweg 22 19 5 0
M Hans c M Bukhari b PB Balwantsingh 1 8 0 0
Arief Hoseinbaks run out CP Ambrose   7 32 1 0
Asief Hoseinbaks lbw b JM Snoep 10 15 0 1
JRM Wegecsanyi lbw b T Hoornweg 0 4 0 0
W Masood   b JM Snoep 35 34 3 2
S Shazai   b T Hoornweg 8 22 1 0
S Bhoelan c L Snoep b JM Snoep 9 54 1 0
AV Atwarie   b T Hoornweg 0 1 0 0
S Mahendram c G Tarr b M Bukhari 21 22 2 0
A Nawaz not out   9 12 1 0
extras   (b8 lb6 w27 nb1) 42      
TOTAL   10 wickets for 164      
FOW
1-12(M Hans) 2-29(RI Ahmed) 3-54(Arief Hoseinbaks) 4-61(Asief Hoseinbaks) 5-63(JRM Wegecsanyi) 6-103(S Shazai) 7-108(W Masood) 8-108(AV Atwarie) 9-149(S Mahendram) 10-164(S Bhoelan)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
MB Hoornweg 9 1 40 1 3
PB Balwantsingh 5 1 20 1 2
JM Snoep 9.5 1 51 3 4
T Hoornweg 6 0 17 3 8
M Bukhari 8 0 22 1 1 1
Sparta I 1st Innings 133/9 All Out (Overs 26.5)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
MB Hoornweg c RI Ahmed b S Mahendram 13 24 3 0
CP Ambrose lbw b Asief Hoseinbaks 1 4 0 0
G Tarr+   b Asief Hoseinbaks 30 35 3 1
M Bukhari*   b W Masood 5 6 1 0
D Umar c S Shazai b Asief Hoseinbaks 25 21 3 1
PB Balwantsingh c S Shazai b M Hans 1 10 0 0
AO Smelt   b M Hans 1 7 0 0
JM Snoep not out   24 26 3 0
T Hoornweg   b Asief Hoseinbaks 1 2 0 0
L Snoep   b W Masood 4 26 0 0
Manminder Singh Absent          
extras   (b10 lb1 w17 nb0) 28      
TOTAL   9 wickets for 133      
FOW
1-5(CP Ambrose) 2-35(MB Hoornweg) 3-46(M Bukhari) 4-66(G Tarr) 5-86(PB Balwantsingh) 6-90(D Umar) 7-95(AO Smelt) 8-98(T Hoornweg) 9-133(L Snoep)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
Asief Hoseinbaks 10 2 29 4
W Masood 6.5 0 23 2 1
S Mahendram 2 0 22 1 4
A Nawaz 2 0 17 0 1
M Hans 6 0 31 2 6


*provisional sorecard, details may change

Scorecard | HCC vs VOC | 15.08.21

HCC I Vs VOC I
1-Innings Match Played At De Diepput, Den Haag, 15-Aug-2021, Topklasse
VOC I Win (HCC I forfeit)*
Round 18
Toss won by VOC I
Umpires RJ Akram – Z Hussain
Home Side HCC I
Points Awarded VOC I 4, HCC I 0
VOC I 1st Innings 45/1 (Overs 16.3)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
MP O’Dowd   c&b HC Overdijk 10 23 1 0
ZDA van Baren not out   22 53 2 0
SA Edwards+ not out   7 23 1 0
TIM de Kok dnb          
PM Seelaar* dnb          
CL Rutgers dnb          
MA Durrani dnb          
JD Schoonheim dnb          
RR Upadhyaya dnb          
PJ Fletcher dnb          
SB van Wingerden dnb          
extras   (b0 lb2 w4 nb0) 6      
TOTAL   1 wickets for 45      
FOW
1-24(MP O’Dowd)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
HC Overdijk 6 1 17 1 3
RR Bijloos 5.3 0 14 0
H Venter 5 1 12 0 1
HCC I 1st Innings
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
MN Ahmad dnb          
DG Crowley dnb          
BHG Gorlee* dnb          
AJ Staal dnb          
HC Overdijk dnb          
C Floyd dnb          
YJ Patel+ dnb          
DJ Hennop dnb          
H Venter dnb          
OO Klaus dnb          
RR Bijloos dnb          
extras   (b0 lb0 w0 nb0) 0      
TOTAL   0 wickets for 0      
FOW
 
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb

*result to be confirmed

Scorecard | Excelsior vs VRA | 15.08.21

Excelsior 20 I Vs VRA I
1-Innings Match Played At Thurlede, Schiedam, 15-Aug-2021, Topklasse
VRA I Win by 70 runs
Round 18
Toss won by VRA I
Umpires N Bathi – M Prabhudesai
Scorers EM Heggelman – M Slagter
Home Side Excelsior 20 I
Points Awarded VRA I 4, Excelsior 20 I 0
VRA I 1st Innings 176/7 Closed (Overs 50)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
V Singh c J Kroesen b TJ Heggelman 0 3 0 0
L Scully c LT Ingram b LP van Troost 4 12 0 0
BN Cooper   b UF Baker 33 31 4 0
ES Szwarczynski   b LP van Troost 2 13 0 0
PW Borren* c KHJ Roelfsema b UF Baker 16 26 1 1
J Balbirnie lbw b UF Baker 45 104 3 0
MB Lees+ c LP van Troost b R van Bochove 6 31 1 0
LA Turmaine not out   41 66 1 0
U Nashier not out   13 14 0 0
QWM Gunning dnb          
A Abid dnb          
extras   (b2 lb4 w10 nb0) 16      
TOTAL   7 wickets for 176      
FOW
1-0(V Singh) 2-16(L Scully) 3-34(ES Szwarczynski) 4-42(BN Cooper) 5-64(PW Borren) 6-72(MB Lees) 7-150(J Balbirnie)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
TJ Heggelman 9 0 42 1
LP van Troost 10 1 37 2 1
UF Baker 9 2 34 3 2
LT Ingram 10 3 18 0
R van Bochove 5 0 11 1
JJ van Troost 5 0 20 0
AD Woutersen 2 0 8 0 2
Excelsior 20 I 1st Innings 106/10 All Out (Overs 36.1)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
TC Etman lbw b QWM Gunning 0 1 0 0
TJ Heggelman* c L Scully b LA Turmaine 30 52 1 0
LT Ingram c QWM Gunning b A Abid 15 15 1 0
J Kroesen+ c L Scully b QWM Gunning 7 29 0 0
JJ van Troost run out A Abid   9 21 0 0
UF Baker c BN Cooper b A Abid 6 12 0 0
AD Woutersen c PW Borren b V Singh 1 6 0 0
LP van Troost c L Scully b PW Borren 24 40 2 0
R van Bochove c V Singh b LA Turmaine 5 26 0 0
GG Kroesen   b PW Borren 3 11 0 0
KHJ Roelfsema not out   0 4 0 0
extras   (b3 lb2 w1 nb0) 6      
TOTAL   10 wickets for 106      
FOW
1-0(TC Etman) 2-17(LT Ingram) 3-38(J Kroesen) 4-48(JJ van Troost) 5-60(UF Baker) 6-69(AD Woutersen) 7-71(TJ Heggelman) 8-85(R van Bochove) 9-105(GG Kroesen) 10-106(LP van Troost)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
QWM Gunning 8 1 20 2 1
J Balbirnie 2 0 10 0
A Abid 9 1 25 2
U Nashier 1 0 4 0
LA Turmaine 8 1 16 2
V Singh 7 2 21 1
PW Borren 1.1 0 5 2

Scorecard | HBS vs VCC | 15.08.21

HBS I Vs Voorburg I
1-Innings Match Played At Craeyenhout, Den Haag, 15-Aug-2021, Topklasse
HBS I Win by 28 runs
Round 18
Toss won by HBS I
Umpires AND van den Dries – PGHA van Giezen
Home Side HBS I
Points Awarded HBS I 4, Voorburg I 0
HBS I 1st Innings 130/10 All Out (Overs 48)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
JI de Mey lbw b LV van Beek 0 1 0 0
RP Mason   b LV van Beek 5 8 0 0
T Walbrugh c R van der Giessen b BFW de Leede 26 43 5 0
Navjit Singh c SA Engelbrecht b BFW de Leede 12 31 2 0
MM Scholte+ c M Hingorani b PRP Boissevain 9 34 1 0
R Klein lbw b ST Mulder 12 21 2 0
SP Geenevasen c VJ Kingma b ST Mulder 16 33 3 0
FJ Vink*   b BFW de Leede 19 45 2 0
BFL Boddendijk c SA Engelbrecht b A Dutt 3 23 0 0
SP Vink not out   8 21 1 0
YSK Visée   b VJ Kingma 6 29 1 0
extras   (b0 lb6 w7 nb1) 14      
TOTAL   10 wickets for 130      
FOW
1-0(JI de Mey) 2-11(RP Mason) 3-44(T Walbrugh) 4-49(Navjit Singh) 5-61(MM Scholte) 6-79(R Klein) 7-96(SP Geenevasen) 8-111(FJ Vink) 9-115(BFL Boddendijk) 10-130(YSK Visée)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
LV van Beek 7 0 20 2 1
VJ Kingma 9 2 29 1 1 1
BFW de Leede 10 3 21 3
A Dutt 10 2 17 1 2
PRP Boissevain 6 3 22 1
ST Mulder 6 0 15 2 3
Voorburg I 1st Innings 102/10 All Out (Overs 41)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
A Dutt c MM Scholte b R Klein 0 3 0 0
M Hingorani+ c FJ Vink b JI de Mey 30 57 3 0
BFW de Leede* c T Walbrugh b JI de Mey 16 31 3 0
SA Engelbrecht c T Walbrugh b SP Vink 17 29 3 0
LV van Beek c R Klein b SP Vink 3 13 0 0
TN de Grooth run out   2 6 0 0
R van der Giessen c BFL Boddendijk b SP Vink 10 36 1 0
FJ de Lange lbw b SP Geenevasen 3 30 0 0
PRP Boissevain lbw b SP Geenevasen 3 10 0 0
VJ Kingma   b R Klein 9 20 1 0
ST Mulder not out   0 11 0 0
extras   (b0 lb0 w9 nb0) 9      
TOTAL   10 wickets for 102      
FOW
1-0(A Dutt) 2-41(BFW de Leede) 3-67(M Hingorani) 4-67(SA Engelbrecht) 5-70(TN de Grooth) 6-79(LV van Beek) 7-85(R van der Giessen) 8-91(PRP Boissevain) 9-92(FJ de Lange) 10-102(VJ Kingma)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
R Klein 10 3 17 2
FJ Vink 4 0 21 0 2
JI de Mey 10 1 25 2
SP Geenevasen 8 0 27 2 2
SP Vink 9 3 12 3 4

Scorecard | ACC vs Punjab | 15.08.21

ACC I Vs Punjab I
1-Innings Match Played At Het Loopveld West, 15-Aug-2021, Topklasse
Punjab I Win by 30 runs
Round 18
Toss won by Punjab I
Umpires J Hilhorst – N Uduwage
Home Side ACC I
Points Awarded Punjab I 4, ACC I 0
Punjab I 1st Innings 214/5 Closed (Overs 50)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
SJ Myburgh c S Hannema b S Kothari 42 52 4 2
RU Zulfiqar c KHA Krishna b S Kothari 13 33 1 0
AA Zulfiqar+   b MA Raza 20 76 1 0
AT Nidamanuru c S Potdar b S Kothari 0 3 0 0
SM Zulfiqar not out   53 82 4 0
SA Zulfiqar   b Z Master 7 14 0 0
Y Usman not out   48 42 2 3
I Ul Haq dnb          
S Tariq* dnb          
S Bhatti dnb          
Mubashar Hussain dnb          
extras   (b2 lb6 w21 nb2) 31      
TOTAL   5 wickets for 214      
FOW
1-47(RU Zulfiqar) 2-74(SJ Myburgh) 3-74(AT Nidamanuru) 4-136(AA Zulfiqar) 5-145(SA Zulfiqar)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
RA Kumar 7 0 57 0 6
M van Vliet 6 1 23 0 4 1
S Kothari 10 0 38 3 1
CM Knoll 7 2 20 0
A Zaidi 5 2 15 0 1 1
MA Raza 10 1 31 1 2
Z Master 5 0 22 1 1
ACC I 1st Innings 184/10 All Out (Overs 48.2)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
S Potdar   b S Bhatti 37 80 4 0
KHA Krishna c SA Zulfiqar b AT Nidamanuru 12 27 1 0
S Kothari c AA Zulfiqar b AT Nidamanuru 2 6 0 0
A Zaidi c SJ Myburgh b SA Zulfiqar 26 63 0 0
CM Knoll run out RU Zulfiqar   15 19 2 0
MA Raza* st AA Zulfiqar b S Tariq 44 48 4 0
S Hannema+ c I Ul Haq b SA Zulfiqar 5 9 0 0
RA Kumar c Mubashar Hussain b S Tariq 25 30 2 0
R Alves run out SM Zulfiqar   2 3 0 0
M van Vliet not out   1 3 0 0
Z Master c AA Zulfiqar b S Bhatti 1 3 0 0
extras   (b0 lb2 w11 nb1) 14      
TOTAL   10 wickets for 184      
FOW
1-23(KHA Krishna) 2-34(S Kothari) 3-73(S Potdar) 4-97(CM Knoll) 5-109(A Zaidi) 6-119(S Hannema) 7-178(MA Raza) 8-181(RA Kumar) 9-182(R Alves) 10-184(Z Master)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
S Tariq 8 1 23 2 1
AT Nidamanuru 8 2 15 2
Mubashar Hussain 6 0 26 0 6
S Bhatti 8.2 0 28 2 3 1
I Ul Haq 6 0 25 0
SA Zulfiqar 7 1 33 2 1
SM Zulfiqar 5 0 32 0

Excelsior ’20 vs VRA at Thurlede Round 18|15.08.2021

VRA make the play-offs as HCC walk off against VOC

Rod Lyall 16/08/21

Among the many scenarios leading into Sunday’s final round of Topklasse league matches, no-one could have predicted the regrettable scenes at De Diepput, where HCC walked off amidst allegations of a racial slur, apparently forfeiting the match to VOC Rotterdam and thus surrendering their chance of reaching the top four.

16 and a half overs of the VOC innings had been bowled when the match came to a premature end, but the incident may have had its origins in the fifth over, when a lifting delivery from Hidde Overdijk caught the shoulder of Dirk van Baren’s bat and flew into the gully.

The home side were convinced they had their man but Van Baren stood his ground, and after a consultation between the umpires he was given not out.

There was some compensation for Overdijk a few minutes later when Max O’Dowd, trying to work him to leg, got a leading edge and speared an easy return catch.

Van Baren continued in company with Scott Edwards, but when he edged a boundary off Reinier Bijloos to move to 22 and to take the VOC total to 45 for one, words were exchanged between keeper Yash Patel and Van Baren which ignited the blaze, causing the umpires to intervene in an attempt to cool tempers.

Patel, however, remained apparently furious, and after a conversation with two of his teammates he took off his gloves and left the field, followed by the rest of the players and the officials.

After almost 25 minutes the umpires returned to remove the stumps, and word came through that HCC, in support of Patel’s stand over what they said was a racist comment, had refused to continue.

Under the Topklasse playing conditions it would appear that VOC should be awarded the points, while HCC could also be liable for a two-point penalty; the KNCB Board, however, will need to see the umpires’ report before taking any action.

This result would in any case see HCC drop out of the top four, but the final standings were also dependent on events elsewhere, and especially at Thurlede, where VRA Amsterdam, level on points with VOC before the final round, were playing Excelsior ‘20.

Fielding a makeshift side which saw former national captain Luuk van Troost, who had played his last Topklasse match in 2015, and Adam Woutersen come out of retirement, Excelsior were nevertheless in charge for the early exchanges, reducing VRA to 72 for six before Jack Balbirnie (45) and Leon Turmaine (41 not out) turned things around with a seventh-wicket stand which more than doubled the total.

Umar Baker eventually dismissed Balbirnie to finish with three for 34, but VRA had given themselves a chance with a total of 176 for seven, much better than had appeared likely early on.

Skipper Tom Heggelman, opening the innings for Excelsior, saw Tim Etman trapped in front by Quirijn Gunning off the first ball of the reply, but he batted doggedly on as wickets fell around him.

The total was only 71 when he was the seventh to go, having made 30, and it was left to Luuk van Troost, who had earlier claimed two for 37 in VRA’s innings, to see the score past the hundred, making 24 in a total of 106 before he was the last man out.

His wicket fell to VRA skipper Peter Borren, playing his 300th top flight match for VRA, who has led his side back from an apparently hopeless position to third place in the table, nudging just ahead of VOC on net run rate and securing a home semi-final next week.

Already sure of topping the table, Punjab Rotterdam completed their league programme with a surprisingly hard-fought victory over ACC at Het Loopveld.

That Punjab posted the highest total of the day with 214 for five was due in part to Steph Myburgh’s 42, but even more to an unbroken sixth-wicket stand which featured contrasting innings from Saqib Zulfiqar and Yasir Usman.

Coming in at 74 for three, Zulfiqar anchored the rest of the innings with an 82-ball 53 not out, while Usman needed only 42 deliveries for his unbeaten 48, hitting two fours and three sixes and just missing out on what would have been a notable half-century.

ACC had their customary difficulties with the scoring rate when they replied against the steady Punjab attack, but Shreyas Potdar’s 37 and Ammar Zaidi’s 26 gave them a platform from which Anis Raza (44) and Aryan Kumar (25) were able to give their side an outside chance of victory.

Both were removed, however, by Suleiman Tariq, and ACC were finally dismissed for 184, 30 runs short, with ten deliveries remaining.

Punjab’s semi-final opponents will be Voorburg, who remained in second place despite losing to HBS Craeyenhout by 28 runs.

Voorburg appeared to be in complete control when they dismissed their opponents for 130, Bas de Leede taking three for 21, but they then collapsed in their turn, losing their last eight wickets for 35 runs as they slumped to 102 all out.

Stephan Vink took three for 12 in nine overs for HBS, with two wickets apiece for Ryan Klein, Julian de Mey and Sander Geenevasen.

At Sportpark Drieburg, Dosti Amsterdam ended their long losing run with a 31-run victory over ten-man Sparta 1888.

Waheed Masood top-cored in a Dosti total of 164, Martijn Snoep taking four for 51 for Sparta, but Asief Hoseinbaks’ four for 29, including the vital wicket of Garnett Tarr, turned the match decisively the home side’s way.

Round 18 Preview

Rod Lyall & Bertus de Jong 12/08/21


For some at least, the final set of round-robin matches has morphed into the first of the play-offs, with – at the time of writing – two places in the top four up for grabs. Within that elite circle, too, second spot with its double chance of a berth in the final is yet to be finally decided, so three of this week’s matches have the greatest possible significance for the championship. The scriptwriters of the KNCB must be pretty happy with their work.

RL: Still with a chance of claiming second if they win and Voorburg lose, HCC, currently third, are at home to VOC Rotterdam, clinging on to fourth on net run rate. These sides’ previous encounter, at the Hazelaarweg on 12 June, was a ding-dong battle in which HCC recovered from a Pierce Fletcher-induced 11 for four to reach 237 for eight, only to see the game taken away from them by Max O’Dowd and Pieter Seelaar. The Lions fought back through Clayton Floyd’s late five-for, but he’s likely to be missing this week after sustaining a hand injury against Punjab last Sunday. That has a big impact on the balance of the attack, but HCC’s four seamers remain a potent force, albeit one which will need to cope with the threat represented by O’Dowd and Scott Edwards. On the other side of the balance sheet, the visitors’ bowling unit will be fully tested by their hosts’ talented, if somewhat hit-or-miss, batting line-up. And they’ll go into this game knowing that in one of the many scenarios, they’ll be doing it all again in next week’s semi-final.

BdJ: One of two games of the round, this. Likely a must-win for VOC, and potentially also for HCC, depending on results elsewhere. Had it rained a little harder or longer last week HCC might have already secured their spot in the playoffs, ironically by means of a washout much like those that plagued their early season. Fair to say the weather has been relentlessly unkind to last year’s table-toppers on way or another, and notwithstanding any potential contest of Sunday’s result, it currently looks like they’ll have to get it done themselves. They have the pace attack to do so, with VOC still vulnerable to an early decapitation strike, but the loss of league lead wicket-taker Clayton Floyd means they may struggle to contain the VOC top order if they can’t find wickets early. Conversely, Seelaar’s return strengthens VOC both in the middle order and the middle overs. Though home advantage at least makes HCC marginal favourites on paper, they will have to overcome the frustrations of the past week and a fired-up full strength VOC to cement their progression to the playoffs.

RL: Denied their last chance of reaching the play-offs by the freakish weather last Sunday, Excelsior ‘20 can play the role of spoilers this week by beating VRA Amsterdam at Thurlede. The Amsterdammers’ sequence of five wins on the trot has carried them from a fairly distant seventh to the brink of the top four, and they will know that victory here will carry them over the loser of HCC-VOC and into the play-offs. The return of Ben Cooper has come in the nick of time for them, while Excelsior have clearly been weakened by the departure of Tristan Stubbs. On the other hand, the Schiedammers always look a better side with Tom Heggelman in it, and it was striking to see him coming in at four against VOC last week. If VRA can put out their strongest eleven – which is far from being a given – they must start as favourites even at Thurlede, and with a crack at the championship on the line, it’s a fair bet that there will be a three-line whip in operation in the Amsterdamse Bos.

BdJ: Hard to say whether a three line whip will mean much to VRA’s herd of cats, even those of them still physically capable of taking the field. That said, VRA will likely be fielding something not all too far off a first-choice side come Sunday, and anyway have not seemed unduly reliant on any one or two players in the way that Excelsior’s fortunes have depended on Ingram and Stubbs, bar arguably skipper Peter Borren’s leadership. Ingram of course remains capable of winning games almost single handed and his team mates generally offer better support at home than they do away. Heading to Thurlede needing a win is not a situation any team wants to find themselves in, but VRA would have taken it five weeks ago and will be making the trip with momentum on their side.

RL: HBS Craeyenhout could still squeeze into fourth spot, but they would need both VOC and VRA to lose, as well as pulling off a home win against a resurgent Voorburg. They will have been buoyed by Wesley Barresi’s 81 against VRA last Sunday, but Tayo Walbrugh has not been the force he was since he tested positive for Covid, and the Crows will be hoping that he chooses this moment to reassert himself. Voorburg’s total demolition of Dosti doesn’t in itself prove very much, but Logan van Beek and Viv Kingma looked pretty sharp with the new ball, and with Bas de Leede and Stef Mulder to follow, not to mention Aryan Dutt’s options of seam and spin, they can be relied upon to give the HBS top order a hard time. Ryan Klein certainly has the capability to respond in kind, and if the rest of the Crows’ seam attack is a little less menacing, the spinners have the potential to cause some problems for a Voorburg line-up which has been steady rather than all-powerful. This one is, as the psephologists say, too close to call.

BdJ: With, Visée, Walbrugh and now an in-form Barresi in the line-up the HBS top order looks almost as intimidating as that of 2018/19, though the VCC arguably boast the attack best-suited to neutralising that threat. On the other side of the equation, neither HBS’ bowling nor VCC’s batting has looked particularly threatening this season, the Crows over-reliant on Ryan Klein for wickets while the VCC top order has been more obdurate than explosive thus far. Should HBS bat first the match might well be decided early one way or the other, and either way one suspects that’ll be the innings that draws the most eyeballs. If HBS’ batting against VCC’s attack is a box-office match-up, the converse promises to be more block-fest than blockbuster.

RL: Assured of top spot going into the play-offs, Punjab Rotterdam travel to Amstelveen to take on ACC. For those members of the side named Zulfiqar it’s a return to their roots, since Het Loopveld is where they learned their cricket and where, at the age of fifteen, triplets Sikander, Saqib and Asad made their Topklasse debut. A great deal has happened since then, and ACC have had a tough season while the Zulfiqars’ adopted club is riding high. But Anis Raza’s men will have been encouraged by the way they earned their win against Sparta last Sunday, and they have shown in the past that they can make ‘t Loopveld a testing place to visit. Punjab’s top order, on the other hand, have demonstrated often enough that when fours are at a premium there’s always the aerial route, and with Steph Myburgh in vintage form and an attack which is adept at making opponents work hard for every run, they will be keen to go into the play-offs in winning mood.

BdJ: Though for Punjab this fixture is arguably little more than a warm-up for the playoffs, one suspects they will relish a trip to het Loopveld as a chance to build momentum going into the season’s decisive phase. While other sides have struggled to pace their innings in the face of ACC’s nagging attack and sluggish outfield, the Zulfiqars naturally all know how to score on their old ground and neither Myburgh nor Nidamanuru need necessarily be troubled by the length of the grass. Punjab’s attack is also well suited to take advatage of conditions, while ACC themselves have a habit of going into their shell in the face of disciplined bowling, especially if they lose a few early. That said, are not above losing concentration and rapid wickets in the face of weaker sides, as they showed against Dosti early in the season. While it’s hard to see ACC winning this one might just imagine Punjab contriving to lose.

RL: The season ends for Dosti Amsterdam and Sparta 1888 – though probably not soon enough for either – with a foot-of-the-table encounter at Sportpark Drieburg. When these sides met at the Bermweg back in June it turned out to be a real nail-biter, with Dosti failing by just three runs to chase down Sparta’s total of 217. Sparta have won only once since, while their hosts on Sunday have extended their losing run to 25 matches, or 28 if No Results are included. A win for either here would clearly be a morale-booster, and especially for a Dosti side which has battled gamely on occasions, even when manifestly out-classed. Sparta have more potential match-winners, not least Ali Raza who played his one substantial innings of the season last week, but if Dosti can muster a final team effort they could just pull off that elusive win.

BdJ: Though in the absence of any threat of relegation there will be little but pride on the line at Drieburg, one suspects Sparta will be keen to avoid a place in the history books as the club that broke Dosti’s record winless streak by becoming the first team to lose to the former Topklasse champions in over two years. Yet for Dosti one suspects signing off with a win may go some way toward holding the side together over the winter, given the toll two winless season must take even on Dosti’s seemingly inexaustible morale. On paper there’s every chance of the points-drought at Drieburg ending on Sunday. Mahesh Hans, Vinoo Tewarie and Rahil Ahmed have all put up solid scores on occasion through the season, and Sparta’s attack looking somewhat pedestrian, especially in the absence of Mudassar t-Bukhari. Bar Asief Hoseinbaks, though, the hosts lack reliable wicket-takers and have struggled to find 50 overs of even adequate Topklasse-level bowling. Removing Garnett Tarr in reasonably quick time looks like a necessary (if not necessarily sufficient) condition for a Dosti victory, an outcome which for once looks merely improbable rather than implausible.


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