Kippax
Cricketer Of The Year
You wonder how NZC looks at these names just five weeks down the road, Tipene Friday and George Worker > Hamish Rutherford.
You wonder how NZC looks at these names just five weeks down the road, Tipene Friday and George Worker > Hamish Rutherford.
Why do professional cricketers have to get a part time job. Serious question.There is also an expectation that each player selected in the programme will also continue their work and commitment to develop a career outside the game by way of a part time job, study or work experience. This is an important aspect of the programme and will form part of the players individual performance plan.”
Do they only work during the off season?Because domestic cricketers earn **** all money, and they need skills for life after cricket.
how is this high performance centre different from the one that ruined 5 years worth of bowlers coming through.The new initiative will see the ten selected players commit to a 20 week training programme between 1 May and 30 September 2012 that also includes five camps at the NZC High Performance Centre in Lincoln.
Fortunate not to be out for a golden duck, tbh.
Millmow is the dregs. How he's still allowed to 'write' for the papers, I don't know.Millmow can jog on, for a start. Bitter ex-bowler who from everything I hear was a giant pea-heart who wouldn't battle through a mere niggle. Who is he to be the gatekeeper of anyone's career? Good on OB if he's giving it one last crack. It's his business and his business only. I doubt I'd demand, or receive, a contract again so who cares?
Carl Cachopa continued his amazing transformation as a batsman. Up until three matches ago he had played nineteen matches since his debut for Auckland in the 2004-05 season, scoring 533 runs at an average of 20.50. He then scored his maiden first-class century and has now scored 412 runs at an average of 82.40 in his last five innings. He has also scored a century in each of his last three matches.
Craig Cumming .................. became just the third player after Bert Sutcliffe and Mathew Sinclair to pass eight thousand runs in domestic cricket. He also shared his forty sixth century partnership to leave him level with Sinclair, the most by any player in New Zealand domestic cricket.
Rutherford's batting has blossomed this season. Coming into this season he had scored just 131 runs at 11.90 in his six matches to date. He wasn't required by Otago until the last four matches of the season, but he still managed to finishthe Volts top scorer for the season with 607 runs at 86.71
Wagner was the top wicket-taker for the second season in a row, finishing with forty six wickets at 26.32. He has now taken ninety seven wickets in the last two seasons at an average of 22.30.
De Boorder finished with the most wicketkeeping dismissals for the season equalling Gareth Hopkins' Otago season record in the process. De Boorder totalled 38 dismissals with 36 catches and two stumpings.
Tim McIntosh started this season needing just 198 runs to pass Trevor Franklin as the top runscorer for the Auckland Aces. After seven matches he has scored just 182 runs and was dropped for Auckland's next two matches. However he was recalled to play the Canterbury Wizards against who he had an exemplary record having scored 1,344 runs at an average of exactly 56 including five centuries. He once again showed his liking for the Canterbury bowlers adding a double of 54 and 142 not out.
Edit: The original article incorrectly referred to Craig rather than Carl Cachopa (so I changed that part myself)McIntosh also made sixteen catches in the field to finish top catcher for the season. He also passed Jeff Crowe's Auckland record of fifteen catches in a season that had stood since 1990-91.
It was amazing how much Graeme Hick dominated NZ domestic cricket in just the 2 seasons he was here. Setting a provincial record for an association with at that time about 30 years of history, which was still standing 24 years later. I was a teenage then, and went to watch a Shell Cup match at Mt Maunganui with him playing, but he was out for about 15, then it rained .....Daniel Flynn hit his third century in successive matches for the Northern Knights, as he scored 123 not out against the Auckland Aces. This was his tenth century for the Knights equalling Graeme Hick's record of most centuries for them. However it was just his first century against the Aces.