Scorecard | VRA vs Salland | 22.04.23

VRA I Vs Salland I
1-Innings Match Played At Amstelveen (VRA), 22-Apr-2023, Topklasse
No result
Round 1/1
Toss won by Salland I
Umpires DJ Kalloe – WPM van Liemt
Home Side VRA I
Salland I 1st Innings 89/7 (Overs 35)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
PP Ottachchige+ c L Scully b A Abid 0 3 0 0
V Ganesan   b A Dutt 46 96 0 0
FP Raxworthy   b A Abid 0 1 0 0
VS Lubbers* lbw b LA Turmaine 25 62 0 0
S Naqash   b V Singh 0 6 0 0
SV Elam Bharathi lbw b LA Turmaine 4 25 0 0
FC Bartholomew lbw b LA Turmaine 0 1 0 0
RA Lubbers not out   0 8 0 0
G van Molen not out   1 8 0 0
R Du Plessis dnb          
I Webber dnb          
extras   (b0 lb4 w9 nb0) 13      
TOTAL   7 wickets for 89      
FOW
1-0(PP Ottachchige) 2-0(FP Raxworthy) 3-69(VS Lubbers) 4-70(S Naqash) 5-88(SV Elam Bharathi) 6-88(V Ganesan) 7-88(FC Bartholomew)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
A Abid 4 1 11 2 1
T van Luin 4 0 16 0 5
A Dutt 7 1 8 1
E Visser 6 1 14 0 2
LA Turmaine 9 1 22 3
V Singh 5 0 14 1 1
VRA I 1st Innings
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
V Singh dnb          
SR Rasool dnb          
J Balbirnie dnb          
AT Nidamanuru dnb          
L Scully+ dnb          
T van Luin dnb          
A Dutt dnb          
J Smal dnb          
E Visser dnb          
LA Turmaine* dnb          
A Abid dnb          
extras   (b0 lb0 w0 nb0) 0      
TOTAL   0 wickets for 0      
FOW
 
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb

Scorecard | Punjab vs VOC | 22.04.23

Punjab I Vs VOC I
1-Innings Match Played At Zomercomplex, Rotterdam, 22-Apr-2023, Topklasse
No result
Round 1/1
Toss won by Punjab I
Umpires M Prabhudesai – J Westerberg
Home Side Punjab I
VOC I 1st Innings 177/1 (Overs 28.4)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
MP O’Dowd not out   91 85 10 4
Arnav Jain lbw b SM Zulfiqar 23 42 4 0
LP Berry not out   59 45 5 3
SA Edwards+ dnb          
TIM de Kok* dnb          
F Fourie dnb          
B Niaz dnb          
JD Schoonheim dnb          
Asief Hoseinbaks dnb          
MB Hoornweg dnb          
PJ Fletcher dnb          
extras   (b0 lb1 w3 nb0) 4      
TOTAL   1 wickets for 177      
FOW
1-81(Arnav Jain)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
S Tariq 10 2 31 0
SA Zulfiqar 3 0 31 0 1
M Shafiq 4 0 27 0
SM Zulfiqar 7 0 53 1 1
A Mahmood 4.4 0 34 0 1
Punjab I 1st Innings
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
RU Zulfiqar dnb          
SA Minhas dnb          
AA Zulfiqar+ dnb          
SM Zulfiqar dnb          
SA Zulfiqar dnb          
Y Usman dnb          
A Mahmood dnb          
M Riaz dnb          
Mubashar Hussain dnb          
S Tariq* dnb          
M Shafiq dnb          
extras   (b0 lb0 w0 nb0) 0      
TOTAL   0 wickets for 0      
FOW
 
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb

Scorecard | VCC vs HCC | 22.04.23

Voorburg I Vs HCC I
1-Innings Match Played At Westvliet, Voorburg, 22-Apr-2023, Topklasse
Voorburg I Win by 8 wkts (DLS)
Round 1/1
Toss won by Voorburg I
Umpires NR Bathi – J Hilhorst
Home Side Voorburg I
Comment Rain stopped play, HCC 107-6 (27 overs); match reduced to 22 overs, revised DLS target 98.
Points Awarded HCC I 0, Voorburg I 2
HCC I 1st Innings 107/6 Closed (Overs 27)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
MR Alphonse+ c M Levitt b VJ Kingma 6 11 1 0
AJ Staal c GK Nieuwoudt b R Klein 13 26 2 0
JD Vandiar c MN Ahmad b S Kamal 47 51 7 1
BHG Gorlee*   b GK Nieuwoudt 0 7 0 0
HC Overdijk c PRP Boissevain b R Klein 3 25 0 0
C Floyd   c&b S Ahmad 10 17 1 0
J Kooistra not out   6 18 0 0
D Crowley not out   7 8 1 0
J-WM Overdijk dnb          
JZ-X van Kessel dnb          
H Venter dnb          
extras   (b0 lb4 w10 nb1) 15      
TOTAL   6 wickets for 107      
FOW
1-9(MR Alphonse) 2-40(AJ Staal) 3-41(BHG Gorlee) 4-71(HC Overdijk) 5-89(C Floyd) 6-94(JD Vandiar)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
VJ Kingma 5 0 19 1 1 1
GK Nieuwoudt 7 0 23 1 7
R Klein 5 1 25 2
S Kamal 5 0 22 1 2
S Ahmad 4 0 13 1 1
PRP Boissevain 1 0 1 0
Voorburg I 1st Innings 98/2 (Overs 17.3)
Batter Fielder Bowler Runs Bls 4s 6s
M Levitt   b C Floyd 14 22 1 0
N Croes+ not out   31 40 5 0
MN Ahmad c MR Alphonse b H Venter 23 25 4 0
SA Engelbrecht* not out   17 18 2 0
N Kulkarni dnb          
GK Nieuwoudt dnb          
S Ahmad dnb          
S Kamal dnb          
PRP Boissevain dnb          
R Klein dnb          
VJ Kingma dnb          
extras   (b0 lb2 w11 nb0) 13      
TOTAL   2 wickets for 98      
FOW
1-30(M Levitt) 2-67(MN Ahmad)
Bowler Overs Maid Runs Wkts wd nb
HC Overdijk 3 0 17 0 8
D Crowley 5 0 21 0
C Floyd 4 0 23 1
H Venter 3.3 0 18 1 3
J-WM Overdijk 2 0 17 0

Voorburg the only winners on a wet opening day

Rod Lyall 23/04/2023

What started out as the Match of the Day turned out to be the match of the day, as the repeat of last year’s Grand Final between Voorburg and HCC at Westvliet was the only game to get a result, the other four rained off at various points during a miserable opening afternoon.

That Voorburg were able to claim the points was in part a tribute to the efforts of the ground staff and the quality of the covers, not to mention the persistence of the umpires and captains, but the Voorburgers had laid the foundations of their victory during the 27 overs which could be bowled before the rain arrived.

The bowlers never let up from the moment Ratha Alphonse edged Viv Kingma to Michael Levitt at second slip, and only Jonathan Vandiar looked really comfortable against the pace of Kingma and Ryan Klein, the seam of Karl Nieuwoudt and Sajjid Kamal, and the spin of Shariz Ahmad and Philippe Boissevain.

Vandiar’s uncharacteristically patient 47, though punctuated by moments of blazing aggression, enabled his side to 107 for six, but Voorburg were solidly on top, reflected in the fact that when, after an interruption of several hours, the game could resume, the home side were given a target of 98 from 22 overs.

That never seemed like to be a problem, and although HCC managed to pick up two wickets, Noah Croes and Sybrand Engelbrecht saw their side home with four and a half overs to spare.

Generally bowlers were on top on a damp and overcast day, but there was an exception at Het Zomercomplex where VOC Rotterdam, put in to bat by Punjab captain Sulaiman Tariq, raced to 177 for one in just 28.4 overs.

Max O’Dowd hammered an 84-ball 91 not out which included ten fours and four sixes, sharing first a stand of 81 with Arnav Jain and then adding another 94 from 76 deliveries with VOC’s new overseas player Lane Berry, who marked his Topklasse debut with an unbeaten, 45-ball 59.

The only captain who took the risk of batting first on winning the toss was Salland’s Victor Lubbers, who saw his side reduced to 89 for seven by VRA Amsterdam in Amstelveen by the time they were rescued by the weather.

Ashir Abid started the rot by removing Piyaranga Ottachchige and Finn Raxworthy with consecutive balls in the first over, and although German international captain Venkat Ganesan and Lubbers himself put up some resistance, adding 69 for the third wicket, new VRA skipper Leon Turmaine’s three for 22 winkled out the middle order, Aryan Dutt finally dismissing Ganesan for a dogged 46.

On the other side of Amstelveen HBS Craeyenhout also struggled with the bat, reaching 148 for six against ACC at Het Loopveld before the rain intervened.

Tayo Walbrugh was trapped in front by Joseph Reddy in the second over, and despite a solid 60 from Swapnil Pote on his Topklasse debut with wickets falling regularly at the other end the HBS innings never really got going.

Off-spinner Mahesh Hans claimed three for 28 on his first outing with his new club, and with 44 overs bowled before the rain arrived ACC were clearly in the box seat when the game was called off.

The match at the Bermweg was a little more evenly poised, with home side Sparta 1888 on 143 for five against Excelsior ’20 Schiedam  in the 35th over after a brief resumption between intervals of rain.

Niels Etman and Michael Hart had reduced them to 13 for three, but Mudassar Bukhari and Will Clark turned things round with a fourth-wicket partnership of 97, and there was time for Clark to reach a maiden Topklasse half-century and for Bukhari to pass fifty for the 37th time before it was decided to call it a day.

So eight of the clubs will need to try again on 7 May, the first of the three dates allocated for replaying rained-off matches in the first phase of the competition.

Round 1 preview

Rod Lyall & Bertus de Jong 20/04/23


The winter tombola always means that the first round of matches is enigmatic even by the standards of the Topklasse, and the reversion to ten teams together with the arrival of a score of new or returning players and the usual clutch of transfers ensures that picking winners is pretty much an exercise in sticking a pin in a telephone directory (yes, I know, nobody remembers telephone directories). Add to all that the fact the opening fixtures all have plenty of intrinsic spice, and it’s more fun contemplating the encounters in prospect than it is trying to judge who might come out on top.


RJL: No question what the opening round’s Match of the Day is: the luck of the draw has ordained that last year’s grand finalists will kick off proceedings, and that they will do so at the scene of HCC’s triumph. Some of the cast of that event will be missing, most notably departed Voorburg captain Bas de Leede, but there will equally be some significant arrivals. HCC will welcome back Jonathan Vandiar, while the home side will counter with Michael Levitt and a brace of pacemen in Ryan Klein and Mees van Vliet. With places in the squad for the World Cup qualifier in Zimbabwe up for grabs there will be players on both sides especially keen to strut their stuff and a series of fascinating match-ups in both innings should make for an enthralling game. It would, however, not be unreasonable to expect Voorburg’s more seasoned attack to give their side the advantage this time.

BdJ: The same fixture as last year’s final, but a stretch to call it a rematch given the personnel changes on both sides over the winter. VCC’s acquisitions of van Vliet and Klein go some way toward covering the seam exodus, but more responsibility will rest on the shoulders of Viv Kingma to lead the attack. Newcomer Michael Levitt’s form, hitting back-to-back tons in pre-season, suggests he has acclimatised to Dutch conditions faster than some past VCC signings, while the brothers Ahmad return with a good deal more international experience under their belts. All told a tough game first up for an HCC side in a rebuild phase, though if Vandiar can match his form from last season it may be game on.


RJL: Opening day also features the first Rotterdam derby of the season, with Punjab playing host to VOC at Het Zomercomplex. Minus Vandiar, Nidamanuru and Salarazai, Punjab may find the going tough, and the contribution of the four Zulfiqar brothers seems likely to be even more important for the side’s prospects this season. Early breakthroughs against a VOC batting line-up which includes not only O’Dowd and Edwards but also the new overseas Lane Berry will be crucial to Punjab’s chances, with the evergreen Sohail Bhatti and Sulaiman Tariq backed up by the seam of Sikander Zulfiqar and his leg-spinning triplet brother Saqib. Berry’s arrival should add substance to a line-up which often looked brittle once the two internationals had departed, although non-one should underestimate the contributions of Jelte Schoonheim with both bat and ball.

BdJ: The importance of the Zulfiqar triplets to the Punjab line-up was rather underlined in pre-season, the Rotterdammers sliding to a 38-run loss to an understrength VRA side while the trio were away in Iberia with the A-side before handing out a 129-run drubbing to Excelsior on their return. This without even the services of prodigal pair Shoaib Minhas and Khurram Shahzad, who rejoin Punjab this season. Nonetheless the loss of Salarazai, who’s understood to have followed new-ball partner Ashiqullah Said to Belgium, leaves Punjab without their two most effective quicks from last season. VOC’s top order may already be eyeing up the short boundaries at the Zomercomplex, though even with the advent of Berry, O’Dowd and Edwards may have to be mindful of the long tail behind them. They will also be starting the season comparatively cold, VOC not featuring in any formal pre-season matches, while Punjab’s hitters already have their engines running.


RJL: Neither Capelle a/d Ijssel nor Schiedam would be happy to be seen as part of Rotterdam, but Excelsior ‘20’s visit to the Bermweg to take on Sparta 1888 also has something of the flavour of a local rivalry, spiced up this time by the transfer of Joost Kroesen to the Capelle club. Reinforced by the return of Garnett Tarr and the arrival of New Zealanders Clark and Ferguson as well as Kroesen, Sparta will be looking to improve on the surprising fourth spot they achieved in the 2020 half-season, and two points here are vital if they are to challenge for the top six. Excelsior, on the other hand, will be hoping that Michael Hart slots quickly into their top order, and that Lorenzo Ingram eases past the 38 runs he needs to pass 5000 in the Topklasse and goes on to add plenty more. The Schiedammers have a well-balanced attack, but Sparta are an unknown quantity at this point, and this could be one of the day’s more intriguing encounters.

BdJ: Tarr’s return alongside the two young Kiwi prospects certainly lends the Spartan batting a rather more intimidating look than last season, though settling into Dutch conditions is often a trial for newcomers and it’s rare for antipodean arrivals to replicate home form at once. Clarke and Ferguson both have plenty of the latter however, and judging by how Excelsior’s balanced attack went against Punjab last week this may prove a comparatively gentle introduction. Conversely Excelsior’s Michael Hart has had a rough welcome in preseason, clubbed for 75 off his 8 overs at the Zomercomplex and going little better with the bat. The Schiedammers will be hoping their new pro finds his feet quickly, especially with the ball, after last week’s alarming showing. That said it should be noted new ball pair Niels Etman and Rens van Troost were absent that day, and their return may lend the Excelsior attack a little more penetration.


RJL: The return of South African international Heino Kuhn to Het Loopveld is one of the bigger stories of the pre-season, and if anyone can generate energy at ACC you’d think it would be him. They start their campaign against a somewhat depleted HBS, who will be relying on their new captain Wesley Barresi to lead from the front. There’s been something of an exodus from Craeyenhout, the seam attack particularly depleted, and Kyle Klein and Benno Boddendijk will find themselves called upon to deliver against an ACC top order which has been reinforced not only by the advent of Kuhn but also with the transfer of Rahil Ahmed from Dosti. But the Amsterdammers are also missing their leading wicket-taker from last season, Mees van Vliet having moved to Voorburg, and it may be the spin trio of Mahesh Hans (another acquisition from Dosti), Anis Raza and young Zinesh Master which gives them their best chance of bowling out opposing sides.

BdJ:It was indeed ACC’s slow section that caused the most trouble for VRA in their warm-up last week, and though their batting looked extremely fragile as they were rolled for 100 exactly, that was without Kuhn and the returning Thomas Hobson in the line-up. All told ACC look a somewhat stronger side this season despite the departure of van Vliet, while HBS will be fielding a comparatively more callow outfit. Nonetheless they still boast last season’s top-scorer Tayo Walbrugh at the top of the order, who struck two centuries against ACC last season. Whether ACC have the bowling to get past him and Barresi (who also averaged almost 100 against them last season) will likely prove the key question on Saturday.


RJL: One of the questions we all have is how VRA Amsterdam will cope with the departure of Peter Borren, while a more immediate one on Saturday will be which Salland they will be facing in the Amsterdamse Bos. The Deventer side’s inconsistency last season had much to do with whether or not they were able to call on their German contingent, but they may have greater stability this time round with the addition of New Zealanders Fraser Bartholomew and Finn Raxworthy. Given how competitive they could be without this infusion of new blood, they could prove a handful for a Borrenless VRA, although the home side will be looking to Teja Nidamanuru and Australian import Tyler van Luin to anchor a batting line-up which also blew hot and cold last year. Vikram Singh’s evolution into an allrounder means he may bowl a good deal more this season, and VRA’s young but fairly incisive attack will doubtless be the better for Van Luin’s presence as well.

BdJ:It’s always difficult to judge how the arrival of a single new overseas will affect the fortunes of a previously struggling club, much less two. Indeed that’s arguably the principle reason that Topklasse sides fortunes’ careen wildly {https://tkcricket.com/2021/09/08/better-together-a-two-pool-2022-topklasse-is-a-recipe-for-rancour/] from one season to the next. Salland arguably rode their luck to Topklasse survival last season, but with the two newcomers and a full delegation from across the Eastern border they ought to have an easier time of it in 2023. The departure of Borren along with sometime keeper Mitch Lees leaves new skipper Leon Turmaine looking a little lonely in the leadership group, and how well he manages his young side will likely prove crucial to their fortunes over the season, and indeed on Saturday.


RL’s picks: Voorburg, Punjab, Sparta, ACC, VRA.

BdJ’s picks: Voorburg, Punjab, Sparta, ACC, VRA.

Preview 2023: Voorburg miss De Leede, bigger changes at HCC

Rod Lyall 18/04/2023


After the anticlimax of last season’s grand final defeat Voorburg go into the new season without their former captain Bas de Leede, but champions HCC face much bigger changes as they set about defending their title.

De Leede, of course, has moved to Durham to join Ryan Campbell’s squad, but his loss will be at least partially balanced by the advent of 19-year-old South African Michael Levitt, and the return of Noah Croes, not to mention the arrival of Ryan Klein from HBS.

Levitt, who began his Dutch season with two centuries over the Easter weekend, made 795 runs for Stanmore in the Middlesex Premier League last year and, as a Dutch passport holder, may be of considerable interest to the national coaches.

As for Croes, he last played for Voorburg in 2019, when he made over 500 runs in the club’s first season back in the Topklasse, but since then he has become a regular in Melbourne University’s first-grade side as well as playing for Didsbury in the Cheshire Premier League in England.

Klein will join a pace attack which already includes fellow Dutch international Viv Kingma, although Logan van Beek will be resting in New Zealand for the first part of the season, perhaps creating room for another recruit, promising youngster Mees van Vliet, who has transferred from ACC, while Voorburg also have plenty of seam cover in their stalwarts Stef Mulder and Ali Ahmed Qasim.

The side will be captained by Sybrand Engelbrecht, who will be part of a batting line-up which includes another Dutch international in opener Musa Ahmad, as well as Levitt and fellow South African Karl Nieuwoudt, along with wicketkeeper Mohit Hingorani.

Having fallen at the final hurdle in each of the last two seasons – gallingly, after leading from gun almost to the tape last year – Voorburg will be hoping that this squad will be good enough to take them to their second championship, their first and only triumph to date having been in 2001.


A rather different dynamic is at work at De Diepput, where it is probable that fewer than half of last year’s championship team will represent the Lions this season: Reinier Bijloos and Olivier Klaus have retired, Damian Crowley and Yash Patel will be unavailable, Felix Bennett will be playing in England, and the club has recently been informed that Tim Pringle will be resting an injury for the whole of this New Zealand winter.

That being so, HCC will be enormously relieved that they have secured the return of Jonathan Vandiar, who demonstrated in his ten matches for Punjab last year that he has lost none of his destructive power: he averaged 83, and added three centuries to the five he scored during his spell at De Diepput in 2016-17, and he now has 2360 runs at an average of 67.43.

De Diepput’s proportions are even more bijou than those at ‘t Zomercomplex, especially square of the wicket, and Vandiar can be expected to take full advantage.

Patel’s absence will be covered by the arrival of Ratha Alphonse from relegated Kampong Utrecht, while Adriaan Verbeek will join HCC from ACC.

Also new to the defending champions will be South Africans Daniel Crowley, the younger brother of Damian, and 18-year-old Phillip Opperman.

But HCC are likely to rely even more than they have in the past on skipper Boris Gorlee, his predecessor in that role Tonny Staal, allrounder Hidde Overdijk, and left-arm spinner Clayton Floyd, all of whom have some experience in the national side.

Henrico Venter will doubtless support Overdijk in the seam attack, where he will need a new opening partner with the retiral of Bijloos, and Floris de Lange may get more opportunities in the first team with the changing of the guard.

The same goes for Overdijk’s younger brother Jan-Wieger, and a trio of Trijzelaars, Daniël, Justin and Piet-Jan, while there may be opportunities as well for young Teun Kloppenburg, son of former international Feiko.

But one more thing is certain: 2023 will be a season of rebuilding at De Diepput as the club celebrates 145 years of its existence.

Preview 2023: HBS, Punjab see turnover and transition

Bertus de Jong 16/04/23


After comfortable finishes in the top half of the table last season big name departures over the winter at HBC Craeyenhout and Punjab Rotterdam have left both clubs with significant gaps to fill. While Punjab retain the services of the four Zulfiqar brothers, skipper Sulaiman Tariq nonetheless faces a rebuilding task with big name bats departing for pastures new and two Afghan quicks heading south. HBS meanwhile have seen a series of retirements leaving new skipper Wesley Barresi to take charge of a comparatively untested squad of youngsters.

Punjab’s strong early showing last season owed a lot to their lead scorer Jonathan Vandiar, who will be turning out for HCC this summer, and to all-rounder and new Netherlands international Teja Nidamanuru, who has left for VRA. Word is the prolific Stephan Myburgh may also spend more time on the sidelines than on the middle this season, having been brought into the national set-up in a coaching role. Add to that Afghan pace occasionals Samiullah Salarazai and Ashiqullah Said both playing their cricket South of the border in Belgium these days, and the Rotterdammers have lost close to half a side’s worth of first-choice players.

The core of the side remains intact however, the dependable Sulaiman Tariq will lead the attack and the side for another season, and be able to call on a full complement of Zulfiqars. Of the four, Rehmat and Asad have been a fairly reliable source of top-order runs, while Sikander and Saqib’s all-round talents lend the side a degree of balance and batting depth. The veteran Sohail Bhatti will likely have to shoulder more responsibility with both the new ball and with the bat down the order, but the Rotterdammers will be glad of the return of Shoaib Minhas and Khurram Shahzad after a four-season sojourn at Hermes.

Minhas and Shahzad played a key role with bat and ball in Punjab’s first season in the Topklasse prior to the arrival of the Zulfiqars, and their presence goes some way toward offsetting the effect of the departures over the off-season. Nonetheless it may take some time for the new-look side to bed in, and if there’s a return to the inconsistent selection and player rotation of the past it could well hamper Punjab’s season.

The steady presence of the four Zulfiqars at the Zomercomplex along with Tariq and reliable stalwarts such as Yasir Usman, Mubashar and Mudassar Hussain nonetheless ensures a degree of stability that ought to allow the Rotterdam side to weather the departures, and indeed their pre-season form gives considerable casue for optimism.


Meanwhile over at Craeyenhout HBS have seen a similar exodus, the Crows seeing with a string of senior retirements. Former skipper Ferdi Vink and his brother Stephan are both understood to be hanging up their spikes, along with all-rounder Navjit Singh and the explosive keeper-bat Tobias Visée. Player coach Gavin Kaplan will also be absent this season, while Ryan Klein has moved to VCC, though his younger brother Kyle remains at HBS.

The experienced Wesley Barresi will take over the captaincy for the 2023, and will be able to call on the experience of now well-integrated overseas bat Tayo Walbrugh to provide some continuity at the top of the order at least. Should Walbrugh replicate his form from last season, when he finished top of the run tables with 844 runs at an average over 60, it should go some way to smoothing what otherwise looks a potentially rough transitional year for the Crows.

The loss of Singh, Visée, Vink and Klein leaves the top order looking rather thin otherwise, and the HBS faithful will hope Reese Mason can grow into a senior role at the top and that slow southpaw Julian de Mey recovers some of his past form with the bat. Leading the attack will be new acquisition Nic Adendorff, a right arm seam-bowling all-rounder brought over by Barresi from the Titans academy.

For the rest the season will be something of a baptism of fire for the youth and second-team graduates that make up the remainder of the squad. Bowlers Benno Boddendijk and Yoran Visée boast a modicum of top-flight experience, though all told the seam attack looks rather green. Keeper-bat Martijn Scholte has also had a run in the firsts without quite finding his feet, and HBS will hope he and graduates Adil Ahmed, Elmar Boendermaker and Leon Stadhouder will be able to grow into their roles.

In the circumstances survival will presumably be the first goal for the venerable Hague side, who will not want to repeat their brief stint in the Hoofdklasse a decade ago. Much will depend on captain Barresi, not only to contribute with bat and ball but also to get the best out of a comparatively inexperienced side.

Topklasse Fantasy Cricket Returns

cricxiBowing to whelming popular demand, CricketXI and TKcricket are delighted to announce the return of Topklasse Fantasy Cricket for the 2023 season.

Pit your managerial wits against your friends and team-mates, test your Topklasse knowledge against the self-styled experts.

Submissions for teams and leagues are now open over at CricketXI. Entry is entirely free, the trophy for the global winner is a rather fancy hat. (Hat currently believed to be in the custody of Mr RC Campbell, county Durham)

Have we missed any signings, retirements or transfers? Get in touch and let us know.

2023 Preview: Change at VRA, continuity at Excelsior

Rod Lyall 13/04/2023


With nearly two-thirds of the national titles between them since the turn of the millennium, neither VRA Amsterdam nor Excelsior ’20 Schiedam will have been happy with their mid-table position last year; Excelsior last won the championship in 2019, while VRA have to track back to 2011 for their last victory.

And there will be a massive hole in this season’s Topklasse: the one left by Peter Borren’s return to New Zealand over the winter.

With 8786 runs at an average of 36.16, 348 wickets at 25.24 and 194 catches in his 315 matches for VRA, Borren is literally irreplaceable, but he has left behind a legacy of some young players who have already proved their worth in the top flight and who will now need to fill as much of that gap as they can.

Leon Turmaine will take over the captaincy (a fourth area in which Borren will be missed), and he will be looking to international stars Vikram Singh, Aryan Dutt and Teja Nidamanuru (transferred from Punjab) to form the core of the side.

The squad will also be strengthened by the arrival of 24-year-old Australian allrounder Tyler van Luin, a left-handed batter and right-arm fast medium bowler who is one of the key players in the Queanbeyan side in the ACT first-grade competition, and who has also played in the ACT representative side.

Turmaine will be hoping that Singh and Shirase Rasool are able to open together more regularly than was the case last season, but with Van Luin and Nidamanuru to follow, along with Luke Scully, Jack Balbirnie and Dutt, the top order has a more solid look than it did last year.

It will be interesting to see how Van Luin is able to team up with left-armer Ashir Abid, one of the crop of youngsters fostered by Borren over recent seasons.

Singh, too, demonstrated in Johannesburg that he is capable of developing into a serious allrounder, and with the spin options of Dutt, Turmaine himself, Balbirnie, Nidamanuru and the 17-year-old Udit Nashier, captain of the national Under-18 side, the skipper will have plenty of bowling resources at his disposal.


Excelsior’s young guns who won them that 2019 title now have several more years’ Topklasse experience behind them, Roel Verhagen, Tim Etman and Rens van Troost having played more than 130 top flight matches apiece.

So has long-serving overseas Lorenzo Ingram, who has made 4962 runs for the club at 47.26 and taken 136 wickets at 18.77; it’s a fair bet that he will complete the double of 5000 runs and 150 wickets before stumps are drawn for the last time in August.

Captain Tom Heggelman also has double milestones in his sights, with 2980 runs at 16.37 and 189 wickets at 21.45 from his 273 games, and Tim Etman too only needs 25 runs to reach 3000.

Excelsior have lost Joost Kroesen to Sparta, but his younger brothers Gijs and Luuk are still in the squad, and there are two more younger brothers in the mix as well: left-arm seamer Niels Etman proved a more than useful new-ball exponent last year, while Stan van Troost will be looking to cement his place in the middle order.

Also missing from this season’s line-up is overseas Brett Hampton, but the Schiedammers have found a very promising successor in Michael Hart, a 24-year-old Western Australian who is yet another from the state to come to Thurlede, following in the footsteps of Wayne Andrews, Tim Zoehrer, Murray Goodwin and several more.

Hart has taken 330 first-grade wickets for his Subiaco-Floreat club with a best of seven for 47, and compiled over 3700 runs, and he is likely to make a significant contribution to the side’s challenge for a top-six spot.

So with Tim Etman and Verhagen to start, Ingram, Hart, Heggelman and either Luuk Kroesen or Stan van Troost, Excelsior will have a pretty impressive top six, while the seam attack of Niels Etman, Hart and Rens van Troost, backed up by the spin of Ingram and Umar Baker, will cause plenty of problems for opposing batters.

2023 Preview: Salland, VOC look to hit the ground running

Bertus de Jong 12/04/23


Though both wound up in the wrong half of the table last year, neither VOC nor Salland looked in serious danger of relegation through the second phase of the 2022 season. For Salland that was in part down to a bit of luck in that they took all their phase one points through to the relegation fight, and Victor Lubbers’side will be happy enough if they can survive another season in the top flight. In VOC’s case, the T20 Champions will feel they rather underperformed in the longer format last year.

The Rotterdammers were rather reliant for runs on international opening pair Max O’Dowd and Scott Edwards last season, the only VOC bats to cross 500 runs for the season in 2022. Former West Australia under 19’s bat Lane Berry arrives at Hazelaarweg to bolster the top order, which will be particularly welcome when the national side comes calling for Edwards and O’Dowd during the mid-season T20 competition.

Nonetheless they will hope from more regular contributions from skipper Tim de Kok, whose form was rtaher all-or-nothing last year, and Bloodhounds fans will hope his predecessor Pieter Seelaar has another season in him, along with the evergreen Jelte Schoonheim. The arrival of the veteran Atse Buurman from Sparta means their will be no lack of experience at Hazelaarweg, but with the exception of all-rounder Arnav Jain the middle order does look rather long in the tooth.

Arguably more of a concern is the bowling however, especially if Seelaar is unable to lead the spin attack and Pierce Fletcher’s coaching duties keep him off the roster too often. Max Hoornweg and Belgium’s Burhan Niaz have been an adequate new ball combo, but the pair managed only 30 wickets between them last season. Arnav Jain’s offspin bagged him 20 scalps last summer, but a shoulder injury has kept him from bowling for much of the off-season. The arrival of Asief Hoseinbaks from Dosti adds another slow-bowling option, and Sieb van Wingerden continues to show promise, but all told the VOC roster looks rather batting heavy again for 2023.


Conversely Salland’s chief strength last season was their reserves of quality slow bowling, with German spin pair Elam Barathi and Venkatraman Ganesan the stand-outs. The German contingent will be back this season, with Talha Khan and Sahir Naqash also turning out for the Deventer side again. Indeed the core of the side is largely unchanged, Piyaranga Ottachchige again takes the glove and Victor Lubbers again captaining, as well as providing another seam option alongside his brother Reinder or Gijs van der Molen. Newcomer Fraser Bartholemewwill likely take over the as Reinder’s new ball partner however, and Salland will hope the Kiwi right arm quick will lend the seam attack a cutting edge it was previously lacking.

It was the batting side of things that was Salland’s main weakness last year with no bat passing 350 for the season, though a second signing from New Zealand may go some way to redemying that deficiency. A product of the Central Districts youth system, Finn Raxworthy’s occasional legspin may add an extra dimension to the spin attack but his primary role will be to bolster the batting. Alongside the two signings Salland have also added some locally-based foreign talent to the rolls in Australian James Ridley and South African Ruan du Plessis (though not the former Easterns bat of the same name) lending the roster some much needed depth for when the German contingent are unavailable.

A shallow player pool was a significant issue for the Deventer side last season, availability issues occasionally even seeing the venrable Steven Lubbers called out of retirement. That looks likely to be less of an issue this season, though the squad remains rather geographically disparate, which has hampered preparations. “We are a team completely scattered across two countries, with almost no one of our squad actually living in Deventer, meaning that our pre-season shape up is messy to say the least” Lubbers told Tkcricket. “We finished 7th out of 12 last year which we of course were incredibly happy about, our goal for 2023 is nothing different than 2022: surviving demotion. It is important that our batting clicks, as we often struggled to set a decent score on the board. There will be a big role for the Germans, Raxworthy, Piyaranga and myself to play this year. Making the top half after the first phase would relieve all the pressure, but we’re realistic and may well see ourselves in the bottom half, meaning we will have to come up with the same season finale as we showed last season by winning 5 of our last 6 games. Our goal is not to do well in the Topklasse for a single season, but to become a mid-table team for multiple years.”