He's got some pretty decent wheels, was clocked at 140k as a school boy a couple of seasons ago.Is Kuggeleijn any good? Heard he is quick, anyone know how fast? Young batting talent needs to be uncovered this season. Walsh maybe? Stella season from Pollard? I hope so.
Here's some footage of Kuggeleijn bowling:Yeah I dont see the use of an all rounder, top order batsman is what they are short of. Franko, Woodcock, Boam, Elliott even Ryder, what are they on about? At least 3 of them wont be playing for the Blackcaps anytime soon. Although I agree, Woodcock isnt the spinner the media thinks he is. Just a dart thrower who is a dog fighting batsman.
Is Kuggeleijn any good? Heard he is quick, anyone know how fast? Young batting talent needs to be uncovered this season. Walsh maybe? Stella season from Pollard? I hope so.
I heard Peter Trego was coming out to New Zealand this summer, so he was my initial guess. Turns out he's signed with CD however.Sounds a lot like a teammate of Jeets' doesn't it, Chris Woakes.
Really short paces in his run up which is weird, but his actual action looks powerful.Here's some footage of Kuggeleijn bowling:
Scott Kuggeleijn - YouTube
He scored a lot of those runs against sides that are a shandy off schoolboy 1st XIs. Good player, not as good as either of his brothers.They should give Craig Cachopa a decent run in the side. Not sure how his club form was last season but he absolutely lit it up in Auckland a couple of years back.
Haha you haven't been keeping up with the times..Home | Where is Lou?I see he hasnt played since the last NZ domestic season.. Might have moved back home.
If we are guessing possible recruits that fit the bill, then what about Will Gidman. Plenty of NZ contacts at Glouc including formerly Wgtn's James Franklin. His brother also spent about 2 seasons playing Plunket Shield for Otago.They used the phrase non-international though, and Woakes has played for England. Out of England reckoning would be a stretch too given he played for England about a week ago. It's possible they just stuffed that up a bit but I think it's unlikely.
I immediately thought of Chris Nash. He's been to New Zealand to play before, has improved his bowling enough over the last two seasons to be classified as an allrounder now and would arrest some of the top order issues Wellington have as he's a genuine opener. He'd fit the "experienced" vibe I think the article is sending out and he's never played for England.
Import tipped to 'do a job' for Central Districts
JONATHAN MILLMOW
The name Peter Trego drew mostly blank looks.
Somerset cricket fans will know him but some homework was required to get a handle on Central Districts' import for this summer's Twenty20 competition.
He's 31, six feet tall - short for an opening bowler - but has a reputation for being able to do most things on a cricket field.
Say what you like about him turning out in the Bangladesh and Zimbabwe Twenty20 competitions, but Trego was good for Somerset in the Champions League last year and scored a 60-ball century against South Africa in July.
Central Districts coach Alan Hunt wanted a player with experience to cover for the loss of his international trio of Ross Taylor, Jacob Oram and Doug Bracewell, and maybe even Adam Milne.
Theoretically he needed someone like Shane Watson or Jacques Kallis but with money always an issue, he came up with Trego.
"His name kept popping up as a guy who could do a job for us," Hunt said. "When he scores runs he gets them at a fair clip and he can bowl at the start and at the death. He is quite flexible."
Trego played at Middlesex and Kent before joining Somerset and Hunt said Oram had asked around about him in England and the feedback was positive.
Trego's career record is 5613 first-class runs at an average of 34.86 and 242 wickets at 36.59. Perhaps more relevantly, his Twenty20 statistics are 2070 runs at 23.25 and a strike rate of 120, and 60 wickets at 30.15 and 8.52 runs per over.
Central deserve a return on their import this season. Last summer they brought out Graham Napier and he broke down before the first game.
Trego's contract runs from the round two clash against Wellington in Napier on December 7 through to the final on January 20.
He misses the opening round on November 23 because Central felt it was a luxury to have him sitting around for two weeks. He will play two Plunket Shield matches in mid-December.
Tough line to turn Cricket Wellington around
MARK GEENTY
Cricket Wellington announced a $142,000 loss to club chairmen last night, more than double that of the previous financial year.
Chief executive Peter Clinton and board chairman Peter Garty fronted their stakeholders at Westpac Stadium, blaming the deficit on lack of sponsorship in tough financial times, and overly optimistic forecasting for hospitality revenue during the South Africa tour. It continues a worrying trend of financial losses which increased from $17,000 in 2009-10 to $69,000 in 2010-11.
But Garty, Wellington City Council's chief financial officer, vowed it would not continue. Clinton had trimmed $100,000 from this year's budget and Garty predicted it would translate into a "slight surplus" next year, citing how the Wellington Rugby Union had turned around its finances. It would take CW two years to return to a sound cash position, Garty said.
"We intend to keep on that budget every month and just about every week. We think we're going to turn it around next year and the following year."
Garty and board member Steven Fyfe, formerly deputy chief executive for ANZ National Bank, double checked Clinton's budget and were satisfied with what they saw.
Changes would involve getting cash up front and confirming 70 to 80 per cent of CW's revenue before December. That includes securing deposits and confirmation from tour groups before England's visit in February-March. Up to seven part-time CW jobs were absorbed into two fulltime roles, and marketing manager Warrick Dent, who resigned to work for the council, won't be replaced.
The optimistic hospitality forecasts for the three Wellington internationals against South Africa were made in the third quarter of last year, before Clinton succeeded Gavin Larsen.
It meant the bar was set very low for this year. “We've set an extremely conservative budget in terms of hospitality, sponsorship and gate," Clinton said.
CW and the five other associations will receive a significant sum from Sky TV which has bought the rights to domestic cricket. The Firebirds' first two Twenty20 matches are under lights at the stadium on November 9 and 16. Then the Basin hosts three more Twenty20 matches, the first on Boxing Day.
Indeed. Personally I don't think Trego is really a very good signing at all, but him not having heard of him is a much poorer indictment on Millmow himself than Trego, and frankly just makes him entirely unqualified to comment.Absolutely no idea who will pick it up now...it should have been Sodhi getting the one before, but ND had more faith.
Millmow is such a fool. Just because he hasn't heard of Peter Trego, we all haven't? I mean the bloke is only No.1 in the UK MVP standings this summer. He rattles off first class stats then 'perhaps more relevant' are his T20 stats? Seeing he's playing a full HRV campaign and 2 Plunkets, that stands to reason, big John. Then we get meaningless career T20 stats, when ones more pertinent like the fact he scored 52 runs and took 2 wickets this summer.
Also, Graham Napier did well to play a full part in the first game last season after breaking down before it.
More of the same from the Dom Post's resident fool.