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.

Preview Round 8

Rod Lyall & Bertus de Jong 30/05/2025


Barely time to catch our breath, and we’re thinking about the penultimate round of the first half of the competition. The last two rounds featured (or would have bar the rain) the bottom three slugging it out; Saturday sees the top four matched up in games which could have a big influence on the race to the title. A dry Friday gives us hope that normal service will now be restored.

RL: The first question is whether the VRA ground will have recovered from the week’s rain to allow play to start. The club’s new Australian groundsman Dan Baker has probably learned more in the past few days about the hydrology of the Amstel fenlands than he ever wanted to know, and it can be a nightmare preparing a pitch on one of the world’s lowest-lying first-class grounds. But both hosts VRA and (league- rather than water-) table-topping Kampong will be extremely keen to get a crack at the points here, the visitors to maintain their narrow advantage over Hermes, the hosts to get closer to the leaders. The gap is not yet big enough to get the peloton panicking, but they need to stop it growing any further. And what’s not to relish about Max O’Dowd, Lane Berry and Scott Edwards matched up against Vikram Singh, Johan Smal and Teja Nidamanuru, or indeed the spinners’ battle involving Shariz Ahmad and Leon Turmaine on the one hand, and Lorenzo Ingram and Pierre Jacod on the other?

BdJ: Well I can happily report that Amsterdam is currently experiencing near-perfect pitch-drying conditions, warm sun and above all a very stiff breeze hopefully doing the needful down at the Bos. VRA will hope there’s still something in the wicket for the bowlers tomorrow though, as they’ll be relying on their enviable pace attack – including the national team’s most recent recruit in Ben Fletcher as well as the season’s most successful seamer in Peter Ruffel – to check a belligerent Kampong batting card. Indeed the Kampong top order have been buccaneering in the extreme so far this season, regularly rollicking along at 8s and 9s regardless of the match situation. Their willingness to spend wickets in pursuit of net run rate advantage has paid remarkable dividends so far, indeed it’s the reason they’re currently top of the log, and it’s hard to imagine they’ll moderate their approach in deference to anyone. Whether VRA will be able to take advantage, one suspects, will come down to which side takes their chances when they come.


RL: Having surrendered their unbeaten record on Thursday, Hermes-DVS have a new challenge in the form of a visit to Westvliet to take on fourth-placed Voorburg. The Sky Blues will again be without Daniel Doyle-Calle, currently skippering Spain on their tour to Denmark. Yet while his aggression at the top of the order has been a significant factor in their success so far, it’s been the attack which has been their trump card. They cut through Punjab’s top order in defence of a modest total on Thursday, but couldn’t quite finish the job. They are likely to face similar problems facing Voorburg’s Michael Levitt, Cedric de Lange, Gavin Kaplan, Noah Croes and Henry Melville, and they will need to be at their best if they are to avoid a second successive defeat. Voorburg would move to within a point of their opponents if they beat them here, and all things considered, the Villagers will start as favourites.

BdJ: It’s fair to say that the international schedule hasn’t done Hermes any favours in regards this particular fixture, with Voorburg expected to field a full complement of Dutch internationals while Hermes will be without both their lead scorer and the competition’s joint-lead wicket-taker, with Doyle-Calle away with Spain and now Hikmatullah Jabarkhail called back to Belgium for the Mdina Cup. They do still have the other joint lead wicket taker to call on of course, Sahil Kothari in fine form since coming back over from ACC again. VCC, for their part, will likely be without sometime Zimbabwe international Carl Mumba, who’s understood to be nursing a niggle, but Vivian Kingma is back from injury and indeed looked raring to go ahead of the aborted match at the Bos yesterday, as was Flip Boissevain – the aspiring Kiwi legspinner still about for another week or two at least. All told what already looked a tough double-round for the former table-toppers doesn’t look like getting any easier.


RL: Fifth on the table by virtue of a positive net run rate, HBS will welcome VOC to Craeyenhout, keen to ensure that they don’t slip any further. It’s not yet five to twelve for the Bloodhounds, but the relegation clock is ticking, and every new defeat is a step closer to the sealing of their fate. They put up a dogged fight against HCC on Thursday, and they will need to be at least that determined if they are to get the better of the Crows on their own astroturf. HBS clearly have to make the most of the presence of Wesley Barresi and Kyle Klein before they head across the North Sea, Barresi’s form with the ball as well as the bat one of the encouraging features of their season so far. On the theme of bowling evergreens, Jelte Schoonheim kept his side in the game against HCC, but the future lies with youngsters like Roman Harhangi and Aaditt Jain, while VOC would like to see larger contributions with the bat from Scott Janett and Christiaan Oberholzer, Jason van der Meulen having been forced to largely do it on his own on Thursday.

BdJ: Barresi’s form with bat and ball may turn out to be something of a mixed blessing for HBS given that it’s brought him a national recall, and if the Crows are to be regularly without both Barresi and Klein their prospects suddenly look a bit dicey. At full strength though, they will certainly back themselves at home to a struggling VOC side, albeit one that’s shown a measure of both fight and promise through the season, at least in phases. With Monty Singh away on Danish duty they will likely need at least two of their three overseas to fire in the same game if they’re to bag a desperately-needed second win, and even then just getting off the bottom of the table won’t be enough this season. While the younger generation have done well with the ball for the Bloodhounds this season, for the time being it seems the runs will have to come from either the imports or the old guard, and returns from both have been patchy at best.


RL: How long Excelsior will continue to enjoy the services of their fifth overseas player, Brett Hampton, is uncertain, but they need to build some momentum if they are to escape the dreaded eighth spot, and that path lies through HCC, their hosts at De Diepput on Saturday. Deepwell is traditionally one of the first venues to succumb to bad weather, but a couple of days without rain will hopefully have had their effect. A fine century apart, Antum Naqvi has yet to hit his stride with the bat, and the Schiedammers have not been able to fully capitalise on the good starts they have been given by Sam Rahaley and skipper Roel Verhagen. With Jason Ralston and Jens Blankestijn having collected just 14 wickets between them in the first six matches, the Michelle claimed by young Karson Edward against Sparta will have been especially welcome. Their hosts relied heavily on Oliver White and Josh Brown in their hard-fought victory over VOC on Thursday, and will be looking for a more collective effort on Saturday.

BdJ: Fair to say that both sides have looked rather less than the sum of their parts so far this season, with HCC’s blowing hot and cold with bat and ball so far, while most of the Excelsior side have put in at least one excellent individual performance at this point, they’ve tended to come in isolation, and consequently in a losing cause more often than not. HCC, for their part, will be encouraged to have picked up two more points yesterday even without runs from the mercurial Boris Gorlee, and a return to home matting may well augur a resumption in the flow of runs from his bat if the pattern holds. While there is of course a limit to how much confidence one can draw from a nervy victory against last-placed VOC, I’d be minded to go with home advantage here too.


RL: It was the discipline of Punjab-Ghausia’s bowling unit which was the foundation for their defeat of Hermes, economical spells from Suleiman Tariq and Khurram Shahzad paving the way for Burhan Niaz’s sharp assault, with Tehzeeb Haider proving himself a useful addition. But the batting remains more fitful than it was last year, with Mohsin Riaz distinctly its most consistent member. That will give Sparta 1888 some hope as they welcome the defending champions to the Bermweg, but form suggests that the outcome will be another in their sequence of gallant defeats. For Punjab, victory would reinforce their position in the mid-table, while another loss would leave their hosts dangerously isolated, along with VOC, at the foot of the table. Khalid Ahmadi’s hat-trick on Thursday came too late to make a real difference, but Juandre Scheepers’ rearguard action with the bat argues that if he, Kyle Klesse and Lukas Boorer make runs together, the Spartans could post a total which would test Punjab’s slightly fragile top order.

BdJ: It’s worth noting, of course, that both sides will be without the bowlers that bagged 4-fers yesterday, with Ahmadi and Niaz both on international duty with Belgium. Yet while neither side have really impressed with the ball thus far it’s probably fair to say the Punjab have deeper reserves to draw on, especially with Saqib Zulfiqar making a tentative return to bowling yesterday. As unconvincing as their title defence has been so far, the underlying quality in the under-performing Punjab top order is not to be underestimated, with each of the top six having multiple Topklasse hundreds to their name. The current Sparta top order, conversely, have not a one between them. One expects the Punjab batting to at least revert to something closer to their prolific mean at some point in the season, and though it may not necessarily be tomorrow, it’s difficult to see Sparta posting anything that would be beyond the title holders.


RL’s picks: Kampong, Voorburg, HBS, HCC, Punjab
BdJ’s picks: VRA, Voorburg, HBS, Excelsior, Punjab

Preview Round 7

Rod Lyall & Bertus de Jong 27/05/2025


Last Saturday’s wetwash has left things pretty much as they were, although some teams will doubtless be regretting a lost opportunity to steal a march on their nearest rivals. But it now appears that the rainy season has finally arrived in the Netherlands, and our Ascension Day previews are written in the full awareness that Thursday may turn into a Descension Day instead. Since there are enough imponderables already without taking the weather into consideration, what follows assumes that there’s a match-sized gap in the eastward-flowing bands of rain.


RL: Still unbeaten, leaders Hermes-DVS face a tricky trip to the ironically-named Zomercomplex to take on Punjab-Ghausia. These two sides have had contrasting campaigns so far: Hermes, short on big names, have gone on winning thanks to determined team efforts and a remarkably effective attack, while Punjab, with most of the team which carried all before it last season, have struggled. Injuries undoubtedly haven’t helped, and they will be overjoyed to have Saqib Zulfiqar back in the side, especially if he is now fully fit. But the absence of his brother Sikander from the attack has perhaps been an even greater loss of cutting edge, and Punjab will be hoping that bolstering the attack with Tehzeeb Haider will make a difference to their fortunes. Hermes, on the other hand, will know that the men in green are always a tough proposition at the Zomercomplex, and will be looking to their bowlers, who until now have equally been without Oliver Elenbaas but have prospered nevertheless, to contain a potentially devastating top order.

BdJ: An away trip to visit the defending champions will be a significant hurdle if Hermes are to continue their remarkable unbeaten run, even if Punjab have looked off the boil all season. Both the remaining Zulfiqars are expected to play on Thursday too, both having got game time during last week’s pro-series fixtures, though Sikander notably wasn’t bowling and didn’t look at his quickest between the wickets either. With the Belgian national team in action this weekend Punjab will likely also have to do without the services of Burhan Niaz for one if not both of their upcoming games, leaving their seam attack looking still thinner. Hermes’ losses to international duty will hit even harder, however. With Daniel Doyle-Calle captaining the Spanish 50-over side in Denmark and Hikmatullah Jabarkhail headed to the Mdina Cup with Belgium, the front-runners will be losing both their lead scorer and the league’s leading wicket-taker for their trips to the Zomercomplex and then Westvliet. If they can make it through the extended week-end with their lead intact they may seriously start thinking about silverware, but it’s fair to say the odds are against them.


RL: Leading the chase, Kampong Utrecht will welcome HBS Craeyenhout to Maarschalkerweerd for what will be another crucial match for both teams. Just one match behind the leaders, Alex Roy’s men (a) need to prevent the gap from getting any bigger, and (b) will be keen to capitalise fully on the availability of their internationals while they have them. The Crows are likely less affected by the latter, although Kyle Klein is a key member of their line-up, but for them the former is even more significant, since they are already four points off the pace and another defeat would leave them fighting for the best possible place mid-table. Significant as O’Dowd and Edwards are for Kampong, the club made the most of their winter, and Lane Berry, Lorenzo Ingram and Lachlan Bangs, alongside Damien van den Berg, give the Utrecht side a top six as menacing as any in the competition. HBS, it’s true, are very good at making the most of what they have, and no team which includes Klein, Tayo Walbrugh, Wes Barresi and Lehan Botha can be written off. Kampong will need to be at their very best to make sure of the points.

BdJ: Given the availability issues that Kampong are likely to encounter deeper into the season, they can ill afford to drop points when they are at full strength, much less at home. HBS have always been stronger on their own (lack of) turf, and have yet to pick up a win on a natural wicket this season. The Crows have struggled to shake a reputation as mat-specialists in a competition where grass wickets are becoming the norm, and indeed have only won four matches on turf in the past three years. That said, three years and a day ago they did take two points home from Maarschalkerweerd, albeit against a very different Kampong side. The current HBS squad is less a product of Craeyenhout than previous seasons too, and one which on paper might be expected to travel better. All told an upset is not out of the question, though if it does happen one imagines Kyle Klein will have a key role in it.


RL: Currently third and fourth on net run rate, VRA and Voorburg will lock horns in the Amsterdamse Bos in what is undoubtedly one of the day’s four-pointers. Again, one tends to think first of the big names – Singh, Smal, Nidamanuru and Shariz for the home side, Levitt, Kaplan, Croes and perhaps Boissevain for the visitors – but games like this are often swung by the contributions of their team-mates, and Voorburg will be boosted by the performances so far of Cedric de Lange and, more recently, Patient Charumbira. The occasion will also be enlivened by the return to the Bos of Udit Nashier, yet to fit fully into his new outfit but capable of making a significant impression. For VRA, the new-ball attack of Ben Fletcher and Peter Ruffel is likely to be a key factor, although the spin of Shariz and Leon Turmaine can’t be discounted either. The winner here will stay in the hunt for the championship, while life will become much, much harder for whoever drops the points.

BdJ: It’s not been a great season so far for recent champions, and neither VRA (whose memories of 50-over silverware are admittedly somewhat distant now) nor 2023 winners Voorburg have looked their best this season. Voorburg’s enviable batting line-up has been let down somewhat by a bowling unit unsettled by availability and injury issues, and those issues are likely to continue. If they can squeeze another weekend out of Boissevain before he has to go back to New Zealand to make his days as a local there it would certainly be a boon, but one suspects the timer’s already buzzing on that front too. VRA’s bench strength has served them somewhat better, with the likes of Turmaine, Hake or Abhinay stepping up admirably when called up from the seconds, while the front-line seam attack of Fletcher, Ruffel and Abid has been consistently effective. The battle at the top of VCC’s innings where that trio are pitted against the competitions’ most productive opening pair may well prove decisive.


RL: Perhaps even more important for both teams, the meeting between Excelsior ‘20 and Sparta 1888 at Thurlede brings together two sides desperate to move clear of the depths of the relegation zone. Sparta’s keenness to get a crack at VOC last Saturday was very obvious, and no-one perhaps had more reason to be disappointed by the arrival of the rain. At least on paper, Excelsior are a much more serious proposition, with Raynard van Tonder and Antum Naqvi capable of scoring freely against any attack. The local players, too, have chipped in usefully at times, and one has a sense that if they put it all together they could ease clear of the danger zone. Sparta, by contrast, have become skilled at making the most of relatively limited resources, and in Ahsan Malik they still have a pace bowler with match-winning capabilities. The batting has so far been over-dependent on Kyle Klesse, but Juandre Scheepers proved last year that he, too, is able to play important innings, and if ever there was a must-win fixture, this is it.

BdJ: Excelsior had assembled a remarkable roster for the washed-out Schiedam Derby last week, with not only van Tonder and Naqvi lining up but Brett Hampton also ready to take the field in the game that never came, they’re unlikely to look as strong again however. Hampton will presumably be back at Hampshire come Thursday, and there’s questions hanging while the continued availability of Naqvi and van Tonder for the full season is also in doubt. Anything but two points at home to popular relegation-picks Sparta on Thursday would likely see the 2019 Champions supplant Sparta as bookie’s co-favourites to go down along with the hapless VOC. Indeed it would be bitterly ironic if the Schiedammers were to slip out of the Topklasse just as the likes of Stan van Troost and Joost Kroesen were beginning to look at home there. Sparta may claim to be sanguine about their own risk of relegation, but they’ve shown no signs of rolling over this season, and it’s telling that they were one of the two sides to wait the longest last week before giving up on getting a game in…


RL: No less threatened with a spell in the Hoofdklasse, bottom side VOC will entertain HCC, currently sixth on the table and themselves not entirely clear of relegation anxieties. There’s no two ways about it: in terms of firepower with both bat and ball, the Lions have a distinct advantage over the Bloodhounds, although the latter did spring a surprise when their bowlers were too sharp for an out-of-sorts Punjab on 10 May. There’s plenty of talent, if rather less experience, in VOC’s attack, but they are clearly suffering from the largely-unremarked departure of Asief Hoseinbaks, their leading wicket-taker last season but now back at Hoofdklasse club Dosti. Their visitors’ batting has blown a little hot and cold so far, as their position on the table attests, but Roman Harhangi and the brothers Jain, as well as overseas Scott Janett and Christiaan Oberholzer, will need to be at their most effective if they are to keep HCC’s batting to within bounds that their own somewhat shonky batters will be able to match.

BdJ: There’s little question that VOC are outmatched on paper in this encounter, and will be hoping to catch HCC on an off-day, but when those have come for Lions this season they really have been very off indeed, and even this depleted Bloodhounds squad still have the quality to take advantage. That said, while VOC are not the only club affected by Dosti getting the old gang back together this season, I’d have to agree the impact of the loss of Hoseinbaks has received too little attention from the Topklasse commentariat (which I guess is mostly just us really, so our bad there). This week they’ll also have to do without Monty Singh, who’s on duty with Denmark for the first of several engagements, leaving the batting still more dependent on new overseas Scott Jannet, unless someone else in the top order happens upon some kind of form. Playing as they have been VOC will be underdogs if HCC manage more than 150 runs, which they’ve done on three out of five attempts this season.


RL’s picks: Punjab, Kampong, Voorburg, Excelsior, HCC
BdJ’s picks: Punjab, Kampong, VRA, Excelsior, HCC

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.

Preview Round 6

Bertus de Jong & Rod Lyall 22/05/2025


Well the first burst of the international summer is behind us, and so we’re all free to concentrate on the serious business of club cricket as the Topklasse approaches the end of the first third. The table remains in a somewhat amorphous state at this early stage, with Hermes making the early running but every club having put points on the board. All to play for still then as we head into round six.


BdJ: The match of the round is without a doubt the Schiedam Derby, where a real reversal of recent years sees Hermes DVS flying high unbeaten at the top of the table as they welcome old rivals Excelsior ‘20 to the Loopuyt Oval. Encouragingly for the frontrunners, they fought their way to a win against VOC last week despite a rare failure from Daniel Doyle-Calle, discipline with the ball and especially the spinning triple threat of Dutt, Kothari and Jabarkhail underpinning their success so far. Excelsior’s failure in the face of Punjab’s slow-bowling last week bodes ill for them in that respect, Raynard van Tonder’s efforts in vain at Thurlede on Saturday as they slumped to a 32-run defeat. That said, they still boast a stronger line-up than VOC, and one suspects Hermes will need more runs than they have managed thus far to extend their remarkable winning streak.

RL: The old adage that the best teams have the knack of winning even when they’re not playing at their best certainly applies to Hermes, who demonstrated against VOC that they have acquired Excelsior’s old ability to defend low totals. Even without the incisiveness of Olivier Elenbaas, the Sky Blues’ attack has had an outstanding start to the season – insiders tell us that if they win again on Saturday it will be the second time in their history that they’ve won their first six games of a campaign – and in a competition rich in imported batting they will present a real challenge to Excelsior’s distinguished but so far inconsistent top order. The visitors’ bowling, by contrast, has lacked the sharpness it had last year, although Joost Kroesen’s re-emergence as a wicket-taking leg-spinner has been a feature of the last two rounds. A fine century against Voorburg apart, we have yet to see the best of Antum Naqvi with either bat or ball, but he, too, could prove a trump card on the Loopuyt Oval wicket. Form clearly points to a home win, but if Excelsior get their act together they could yet spring a surprise.


BdJ: Hermes’ nearest rivals Kampong CC face a tricky trip to De Diepput to face the mercurial HCC on Saturday. Kampong have looked imperious at home so far, but will be playing on artificial for the first time this season against a side that’s already knocked over the much-fancied Voorburg when the latter visited in round three. HCC’s home record has otherwise been spotty, but with Gorlee averaging over 100 in his last three outings on artificial wickets it’s hard to judge what a safe score may be at HCC. Kampong have yet to defend a sub-300 total this season, though it’s worth noting they’ve only had to try once, either passing 300 or looking like they could have done comfortably in their other four outings so far.

RL: Boris Gorlee’s form with the bat has been one of the feature’s of HCC’s start to the season, but another has been a rejuvenated Hidde Overdijk, who has looked a much hungrier pace bowler this year. With a dozen wickets in five games he’s up near the top of the bowling averages, although he and the rest of the Lions’ bowling unit will need to be at their best against Kampong’s explosive top order. The presence of Lane Berry at three gives openers Damien van den Berg and Max O’Dowd licence to go for their shots in the powerplay, and Lachlan Bangs has shown that he can build powerfully on a good start – not to mention the lurking menace of Scott Edwards. De Diepput’s short square boundaries are an open invitation for aggressive batting, and if the rain holds off and Deepwell doesn’t live up to its ominous name, the home side’s fielders could spend a lot of time and energy retrieving the ball. But equally, HCC are not without batters capable of exploiting the peculiarities of their home ground, not least opener Tonny Staal, who has hinted in previous games that he may not be far away from one of those match-turning innings. If the Lions lack Kampong’s fire-power overall, they are formidable opponents in a scrap, and they will be keen to put last week’s collapse, their second of the campaign, firmly behind them.


BdJ: Third-placed VRA meanwhile enjoy a second consecutive home game after a long long absence from the Bos, welcoming HBS Craeyenhout to Amselveen on Saturday. The Fluffers will do well to be wary of the Crows, who also knocked over Voorburg last week. The return of Navjit Singh, as well as the (still mostly just lurking) menace of Toby Visée at the top of the order, and especially Kyle Klein back from national duty has added some substance to a side that had previously looked all-too dependent on Tayo Walbrugh and Wes Barresi for runs. Conversely a four-wicket haul for Leon Turmaine on return from the Twos last week is illustrative of the depth of the bench at the Bos. And while VRA looked a bit wobbly with the bat on an admittedly tricky track against HCC, they’ve not really looked like dropping a game at home yet. For HBS this will be only their second game on grass this season, and they didn’t look at all convincing against Hermes. Kyle Klein at least has had had plenty of success on turf wickets this season though, and one suspects he’ll be key if the Crows are to throw off their reputation as mat specialists and stake a claim to a place in a league where artificial surfaces are becoming the exception rather than the rule.

RL: If this year’s competition isn’t going to turn rapidly into a two-horse race, it’s teams like VRA and HBS who hold the key: both are currently four points behind the leaders, and even with only a third of the season gone a six-point deficit would be a lot to make up. So this is another four-pointer, with the winners still in a position to take advantage of any slip by the top two and the losers slipping back into the mid-table churn. Both sides have plenty of class in both batting and bowling: with Vikram Singh, Johan Smal, Teja Nidamanuru and Shariz Ahmad in their top six, VRA are equipped to post big totals, and they need to do so when they have the services of their internationals. If Visée’s brief cameo last week was more than a one-off, HBS are scarcely less well off, while the pace units of Ben Fletcher, Peter Ruffell and Ashir Abid on the one hand and Klein, Lehan Botha and Benno Boddendijk on the other will fully test top orders which yet to produce a really dominating performance. A lot may depend on how the pitch plays: if it’s similar to last week’s, it may be the bowlers who hold most of the cards.


BdJ: Few would have predicted that the first meeting between the 2024 and 2023 Champions this season would be a mid-table clash, but so it will be when Punjab-Ghausia head to Westvliet to take on Voorburg on Saturday. Punjab’s woes this season can be attributed at least in part to the fitness struggles of their remaining Zulfiqar twins, the bowling especially having lacked for penetration so far. The slow bowling was enough to choke out Excelsior last week, with Musa Ahmad and Shoaib Minhas functioning almost as bowling all rounders this season, but even against a Voorburg batting card that’s looked less than the sum of its parts at times it’s difficult to see them taking ten wickets on Saturday. Voorburg’s own bowling is not what it was either of course, with Viv Kingma likely sidelined for a fortnight at least while leggie Peter Hatzalogou got a call from the Multan Sultans last week. While Patient Charumbira has proved a smart acquisition for the Villagers, the rest of the front-line attack (bar the prodigal Flip Boissevain) are all averaging over 30 with the ball this season. On paper then, expect a run-fest. Which of the two sides will be able to turn their season around from here though is tougher to call.

RL: Already two points further back, Voorburg and Punjab’s immediate concern will be to get themselves firmly established in the mid-table’s upper reaches, well away from this season’s expanded relegation zone. That both have the resources to do so comfortably is beyond question – Voorburg are, after all, By Appointment Suppliers of Players to the National Squad as well as having one of the competition’s most prolific and reliable batters in Gavin Kaplan. And in Jonathan Vandiar, Shoaib Minhas and Mohsin Riaz Punjab have three players who last year were instrumental in propelling them to the club’s first national title. As m’colleague observes, however, neither side’s bowling, in conditions which have largely favoured the batters, has been equally effective; injuries and national team demands have played their part in this, no doubt, but both will be looking for more cutting edge from here on in. The same factors have deprived both captains of a settled eleven, but these are clubs with proud recent records, and too much quality to be struggling for long.


BdJ: At the bottom end of the table, Sparta 1888 versus VOC Rotterdam looks pretty do-or-die, with the loser surely favourites for relegation even at this early stage. Both clubs are coming off heavy losses again, admittedly against the two leading sides in the competition, though of the two defeats VOC’s failure to capitalise on bowling out Hermes for just 140 must have stung rather more. Sparta’s attack got taken to pieces by the Kampong top order last week, but the same is true of most of the teams that have come up against the newly-promoted title contenders. While nobody’s beaten Hermes yet this season, VOC were arguably in a better position to do so than anyone has been, before collapsing in a heap in the face of the sky blue spinners. While it’s fair to say that Sparta have been repeatedly bested and at times clearly outclassed this season, they have rarely rolled over in the way the Bloodhounds have.

RL: VOC have shown signs in their last two games of more spirit than they mustered at the start of the season, albeit in flashes rather than across a whole game. Roman Harhangi has bowled some fine spells, and has deserved greater reward than the six wickets he’s picked up so far. Brothers Arnav and Aaditt Jain and Siebe van Wingerden, the latter getting a prolonged run in the first team, also form part of a promising bowling unit, but they need more support from a batting unit which has too often tended to be more a procession than a line-up. In Kyle Klesse Sparta have a batter who has proved to be encouragingly difficult to dislodge, but he’s spent too much time standing alone against a surge of wickets at the other end. With only three half-century partnerships in five matches Sparta could do with a lot more stickability at the crease, but then, VOC have managed no more, and they owe much to transient Danish international Monty Singh. In current form, both clubs can anticipate Hoofdklasse cricket next season, but a few victories could change all that, and barring a tie or lots of rain one of them will leave the Bermweg having doubled their haul of points.


BdJ’s picks: Excelsior, Kampong, VRA, Punjab, Sparta
RL’s picks: Hermes, Kampong, VRA, Voorburg, Sparta.

Preview Round 5

Rod Lyall & Bertus de Jong 15/05/2025


If last week’s matches proved anything, it’s that predicting outcomes in the Topklasse is a mug’s game. But it also confirmed, in large part, that so far this season it’s much more fun being a batter than a bowler: with 11 centuries in the first 20 matches, compared with eleven in the whole of last season, and 13 totals in excess of 250, conditions have certainly favoured batting. With the good weather expected to extend into the weekend, that at least is a trend which might be expected to continue.

RL: Having broken their duck with a remarkable victory over Punjab, VOC Rotterdam now have to take on the current leaders, Hermes-DVS Schiedam. They will at least be at home at the Hazelaarweg, but that won’t be much of a bonus unless they can sort out the ills which continue to afflict their batting. Christiaan Oberholzer stood virtually alone against Punjab, and it was the bowlers, led by young Siebe van Wingerden and the rather less young Jelte Schoonheim, who manufactured the Bloodhounds’ surprise victory. Hermes, it is true, have some batting worries of their own, but with Ash Ostling and Daniel Doyle-Calle in supreme form at the top of the order and Asad Zulfiqar contributing his first significant knock in the win against Kampong they have so far been able to rely on a solid start. The Sky Blues’ bowling has so far been their trump card, though, and VOC will need more than another virtuoso effort from Oberholzer if they are to double their points haul here.

BdJ: The only side to have taken ten wickets in each of their matches thus far, Hermes indeed owe their place at the top of the table primarily to their attack. Coming up against a VOC batting card that has looked inconsistent at best, one might predict with reasonable confidence that that streak is likely to survive another week. The Bloodhounds have shown increasing fight over the short season so far though, culminating in a surprise win over the defending champions, achieved without their lead scorer Monty Singh. The bowling remains a concern however, and while Hermes do have a longish tail if one can get through to it, their top order has not shown itself anywhere like as prone to collapse as Punjab’s did last week.


RL: Sparta 1888 similarly took their first points at home to VRA last Saturday, but they now face a difficult journey to meet second-placed Kampong Utrecht, who will presumably be back to full strength into the bargain. With 119 out of a total of 226 Lane Berry was another overseas batter who could have done with more support last week, and Kampong’s bowlers soon found that they were defending a sub-par score in the conditions at the Loopuyt Oval. For Sparta, though, 200 and a bit has so far been the limit of their batters’ success, and that is unlikely to be enough against a Kampong line-up which has twice passed 300. Sparta’s attack, on the other hand, has been pretty effective, and it will need to be to contain Kampong at Maarschalkerweerd. Alex Roy’s side remain serious title contenders, but they cannot afford to yield any more ground to Hermes, and will be determined to bounce back with a win.

BdJ: The pressure will be on Kampong to get full value out of their stacked batting line-up on the occasions that they can field it, and anything less than two points at home to Sparta will be a blow to their ambition to take the title on their first season back. Edwards and O’Dowd have both been in fine touch for the Dutch and will have had plenty of time in the middle at Utrecht, though after a week of ODIs a somewhat tired square may play into the hands of the Spartans and their wiley, pace-off approach with the ball. Two-hundred-and-some may prove a more challenging total than in past rounds, though Kampong would remain favourites to chase anything below 250-odd, and the more likely side to set something substantially higher.


RL: Another side who claimed the points against more fancied opposition last week, HBS likewise are rewarded with a tough assignment, a Voorburg outfit which will be welcoming back most of its international contingent. The Craeyenhout attack, though, will be strengthened by the return of Kyle Klein, while the batting received a big boost against HCC from Lehan Botha’s remarkable display of aggression. One of the more intriguing features of the campaign so far has been the success of Wesley Barresi as a new-ball-sharing off-spinner, with seven wickets for 99 in the two matches since Tayo Walbrugh started using him in that role. Whether he will continue in it with Klein back in the side may be moot, but the encounter between the Crows’ bowlers and Voorburg’s powerful batting line-up should be one of the most interesting aspects of the round.

BdJ: A big caveat there is that Voorburg’s returning international contingent won’t be quite what it was on departure, with Viv Kingma picking up a hamstring injury and Bas de Leede likely heading back to Durham. Yet despite the unheralded success of the Crows’ attack so far this season, they’ll have their work cut out containing Voorburg’s intimidating batting card. Conversely, HBS have looked worryingly dependent on Barresi and Walbrugh for runs thus far, and if they’re going to take the points on Saturday they’ll likely have to win them with the ball.


RL: The meeting of VRA Amsterdam and HCC in the Bos will definitely count as a four-pointer: defeats for both sides last week see them level on points mid-table, a win on Saturday keeping them in touch with the three leaders, another loss bringing them unpleasantly close to relegation territory. With Boris Gorlee in outstanding form with the bat, 303 runs having come in his last three innings, the Lions looked as if they were recovering well from an opening-day loss until they fell away against HBS, while VRA suffered as much as anybody from the absence of their internationals in the past two rounds. So everything points to a real tussle here, and Johan Smal and Patrick Gouge, whose effort with the bat against Sparta proved to be in vain, will welcome much greater support from a VRA line-up which at full strength looks to be as formidable as any in the competition against an HCC bowling unit which has conceded over 600 runs in its last two outings.

BdJ: The outcome at the Bos on Saturday does look like it will be the difference between a stutter and a stumble for the two sides. HCC have the benefit of a settled side unperturbed by the national selectors and the leading run-scorer in the league, even if the rest of the batting order’s returns have been comparatively modest. VRA’s three international have spent much of the ODI series on the sidelines for one reason or another, and though we understand Teja Nidamanuru is expected to be fully fit for Saturday, none of the three have had much game time of late. That said the HCC attack has failed to contain lesser batting sides than what VRA will be fielding on Saturday, and the hosts will feel that if they can neutralise Gorlee the two points will be there for the taking.


RL: Sharing an unenviable position among the bottom four, Excelsior ‘20 and Punjab-Ghausia will be in even greater need of a victory when they meet at Thurlede. The comparative failure of Punjab’s top order, which has been reduced to 60 for four, 67 for four, 62 for four and 30 for six in its four innings so far, is one of the Topklasse’s great enigmas this season, although the injury to Saqib Zulfiqar has undoubtedly not helped a side which otherwise had a pretty settled look. Some bowling unit, one feels, is going to suffer mightily when Punjab hit their straps, and Excelsior’s, so often its great strength, has proved comparatively toothless so far. One notable exception to that was the under-used leg-spinner Joost Kroesen, who almost brought his side back into the game when they appeared to be down and out against Voorburg. But last season’s spearhead, Jason Ralston, has just five wickets from his first four games, and Excelsior will need his cutting edge to be at its sharpest if they are to put Punjab under pressure again.

BdJ: As much as the travails of the top four, Punjab’s title defense has been hamstrung by the Zulfiqar-shaped hole in the bowling attack. One indeed suspects that the likes of Minhas, Riaz and Musa Ahmad will not remain runless for long, but the lack of penetration in the bowling attack is a real concern, and indeed Ahmad’s formerly part-time spin has been the chief source of wickets for the side this season. Coming up against Raynard van Tonder, Antum Naqvi and an in-form Stan van Troost, there’s a danger Punjab’s attenuated attack could be exposed in a big way.


RL’s picks: Hermes, Kampong, Voorburg, VRA, Punjab

BdJ’s picks: Hermes, Kampong, Voorburg, VRA, Excelsior

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.

Preview Round 4

Bertus de Jong & Rod Lyall 09/05/25


Just two weeks in and yet it already feels like the Dutch cricket season is in full swing, the international summer underway at VRA and the Topklasse entering round four, the table taking on a not entirely unexpected shape despite a few early surprises.

BdJ: At the top end of the table the two unbeaten sides, Hermes DVS and Kampong are set for a showdown at the Loopuyt Oval, with the clear pole position at stake. Thus far Hermes have been finding ways to win off the back of scores around the 200-mark, but that’s unlikely to be enough against a Kampong side that’s racked up two 300+ scores and a chase of 92 in ten overs already. Even with Edwards and O’Dowd still on international duty, Kampong’s new overseas trio of Lane Berry, Lachlan Bangs and Lorenzo Ingram have been delivering runs in abundance for their new side, while Daniel Doyle-Calle is the only Hermes bat to have passed 100 runs already, despite only playing two games. He’ll be hoping for a little more support from the rest of the line-up, and despite three impressive showings from the Hermes attack you’d have to say they start as underdogs at home.

RL: Hermes’ bowlers have done the job for them so far, but this will undoubtedly be the stiffest test they have faced. With nine wickets at an average of 8.00, new boy Hikmatullah Jabarkhail has been their trump card so far, and even without the injured Olivier Elenbaas the pace attack has been consistently effective as well. But whether they have the collective fire-power to contain Kampong’s batting is doubtful, although they will establish themselves as serious title contenders if they succeed. On the other side of the equation, Pierre Jacod shares the top of the wicket-taking table with Jabarkhail, and the achievements of the batters has perhaps obscured just how well the Kampong bowlers have been doing. The newly-promoted side doesn’t have an obvious weakness, even when it’s two internationals short, and it does seem likely that they will be on their own at the top of the tree by Saturday evening.


BdJ: Third-placed VRA, currently hosting the ongoing CWC League 2 ODI series at Amstelveen, are consequently on the road again come Saturday facing a tricky trip to Bermweg to take on the Sparta 1888, the latter still looking for their first win but having shown some fight in at least two of their three defeats. The Spartans managed to find early wickets against both Voorburg and HBS, even if the sub-250 totals they were defending proved inadequate in the end. VRA’s batting looks somewhat brittle in the absence of internationals Singh, Nidamanuru and Ahmad, who will all be on duty with the Dutch on Saturday, collapsing to 116 all out in pursuit of a similar sort of total against Hermes on Monday. They’ll look to deputy skipper Johan Smal to rally the somewhat ad-hoc squad assembled in the internationals’ absence, and to anchor a batting line-up that does not lack for depth on paper, but failed to deliver on Monday.

RL: We’re at the point already where the top of the mid-table threatens to detach itself from the bottom, and all the remaining games on Saturday pit teams from third to sixth against those whose main priority is to steer well clear of the perilous eighth place and the automatic relegation spots below it. Conversely, dropping points at this stage would put a big dent in their opponents’ goal of keeping pace with the leaders. So there will be a great deal to play for at the Bermweg, and Joost-Martijn Snoep will be hoping that he and his new-ball partner Ahsan Malik can put VRA’s top order under pressure. He will also, no doubt, be looking to Lukas Boorer and Kyle Klesse to deliver with the bat, but the visitors’ seam unit of Ben Fletcher, Peter Ruffell and Ashir Abid is one part of their set-up which is not affected by the national team’s commitments, and it, along with the batting of Smal, could be the key to the side’s hopes of staying in the hunt for the title they just missed out on last year.


BdJ: In fourth place, the much-fancied Voorburg welcome the less heralded Excelsior ‘20 to Westvliet, and while even just a week ago it would hard to imagine dubbing this a tough game to call, the form of Excelsior’s batting line-up combined with HCC dismantling the Voorburg attack on Monday has put a rather different shine on things. With young Stan van Troost having amassed 200 runs in his last 2 innings and new overseas Raynard van Tonder also averaging over 50, the Schiedammers’ batting suddenly looks like a strength rather than a liability. Last season’s lead wicket-taking Jason Ralston hasn’t quite found his rhythm yet, but if he and newcomer Antum Naqvi hit their stride one might imagine Excelsior challenging the top of the table. VCC also have two bats in the current top five though, with Gavin Kaplan continuing where he left off last season and young Cedric de Lange also stiking his maiden Topklasse ton last week. It was in the bowling department where Voorburg looked to be most lacking, missing their spearhead in Viv Kingma owing to Dutch duties. They will look to Mees van Vliet and Tom de Leede to shoulder more responsibility, and of course that the wrist spin of Hatzoglou and de Lange finds more purchase back on home turf.

RL: Hatzoglou going wicketless last seek after he had mesmerised VOC the week before was possibly a decisive factor in HCC’s victory, and Kaplan will be hoping that he can tame an Excelsior batting line-up which, as m’colleague observes, has the potential to steer the side well away from the danger area, and conceivably into a place among the leaders. Van Tonder’s near-century last Saturday was a courageous effort, and with allrounder Naqvi yet to show what he can do with the bat, the Schiedammers have the equipment to make opposing bowlers suffer. Voorburg, of course, have plenty of batting of their own, even without Michael Levitt, Bas de Leede and Noah Croes, and with Carl Mumba slotting into the middle order alongside Henry Melville they will represent a considerable threat to an Excelsior attack which is not yet firing on all cylinders.


BdJ: Meanwhile De Diepput will be gearing up for the Hague derby as HCC take on old rivals HBS Craeyenhout. Having just flogged VCC for 328 runs with time to spare on the same ground last week, the HCC bats will already be casting a predatory eye over a Kyle Klein-less HBS attack. HCC skipper Boris Gorlee currently leads the season run aggregates, but after a shambolic season opener practically the whole top order got runs under their belt last weekend. HBS meanwhile have needed former skipper Wes Barresi to try to hold the batting together, with mixed results. He dragged them to their first win of the season over Sparta last week, but the Crows will want more from the top of the order on Saturday

RL: Untroubled by the Dutch selectors and clearly starting to bring it all together with Gorlee leading from the front, HCC showed great resilience in chasing down a 300-plus target last Saturday, and they will be supremely confident against an HBS side whose season so far has gone in fits and starts. Talismanic captain Tayo Walbrugh has got starts without yet playing a really decisive innings, while with two runs from three knocks Lehan Botha has had a nightmare start to his campaign. Walbrugh’s decision to rely so heavily on spin paid off against Sparta, and it will be interesting to see whether he adopts the same policy, especially the tactic of opening with Barresi as well as Jayden Rossouw, against the Lions’ much more menacing line-up on a ground which offers plenty of rewards for hard hitters.


BdJ: Finally 2024 champions Punjab-Ghausia will be looking to get their title defence back on track when they welcome the winless, hapless VOC Rotterdam to the Zomercomplex, and could hardly ask for a less taxing assignment. While Punjab suffered two defeats in three days, the batting collapsing against VRA and then the bowling dismantled by Kampong, their opponents have not looked close to getting a win all season. While the VOC batting efforts have improved somewhat from the opening 86 all out, Danish international Monty Singh the stand-out, the Bloodhounds’ bowling attack has now twice given up 320+ scores, collectively averaging 57 with the ball and giving up some 6.7 runs per over. While neither side has had the start to the season that they’d have hoped for, Punjab do look the likelier of the two to turn things around.

RL: The statistics for VOC do indeed look bleak, but they are a fair reflection of their performances on the park so far. Punjab have the great advantage of being a settled team with an outstanding record, while the Bloodhounds have yet to cohere around their three new overseas, of whom the confusingly-named Singh a.k.a. TS Bharaj has been the most convincing; if VOC are to get away from the bottom of the table they will need Scott Janett and Christiaan Oberholzer to play much more significant roles than they have been able to do in the first three games. Their opponents have potential match-winners with both bat and ball, Mohsin Riaz, Saqib and Sikander Zulfiqar, Musa Ahmad and Shoaib Minhas all proven forces, with the evergreen Suleiman Tariq always guaranteed to wheel away to great effect in the opening powerplay. It would take a dramatic reversal of form here for VOC to leave the Zomercomplex with the points.


BdJ’s picks: Kampong, VRA, Voorburg, HCC, Punjab

RL’s picks: Kampong, VRA, Voorburg, HCC, Punjab.

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.