ashley bach
Cricketer Of The Year
And it just continues to get better by the day.The greatest internet sporting thread of all time.
And it just continues to get better by the day.The greatest internet sporting thread of all time.
Sorry guys, on a thread reread but just wanted to point out this is 100% correct. It is why we are often surprisingly good.The more rural CWers might bash me for saying this but in my observation small town and country NZ is comparatively luxurious in terms of per-capita facilities.
Yep. Have a good Kiwi friend of mine (former first class cricketer) who says this all the time. Play well for your club, you get picked for your country / province, do well there and the sky is the limit. That is really what differentiates Aus / NZ, even more so than England where I live which is much more formal.Sorry guys, on a thread reread but just wanted to point out this is 100% correct. It is why we are often surprisingly good.
The greatest advantage New Zealand, Australia and England have in world sport, that not even the Americans have, is you can go from club nobody to world champion no matter where you live. It's why I will never, ever be in favour of ditching the Hawke Cup or NPC or giving too much favouritism to age group players.
I live near a town of 2000 people. It is not a rich town, though there is obv affluence around and we are far from Gizzy or Kaitaia, but we are not Cambridge or Raglan or a bunch of wankers from Epsom.
Off the top of my head we have a rugby/cricket club and athletics track, a community not for profit gym, another gym some guy runs at his house(?), a horse club, a community pool and a mini putt. I think there's a soccer team too. A couple of years ago the town won the club rugby competition using mostly local players (you will find a few not local schools in there but those guys came to the region for non-rugby reasons, and one brief Chiefs player might have coincided but I'm not sure) against much more fancied clubs because they were lucky to have some very good coaches in the area. Since then a lot of those players have gone on to professional contracts, overseas paid club rugby gigs and several about to be super rugby players. One might be an All Black at the 2027 WC fingers crossed.
A town of 2000 people produced that team who launched various players' careers. There will be even better club teams around NZ, and that is why Oceania is the best in the world at sport. You can walk in off the street to play some sport even if you weren't a superstar at school and you have an opportunity to go to the top.
Australia has this system too. It's why everyone else is screwed from the start facing the Southern Hemisphere in sport.
Nope they were right.Tho reading comments about him already being targeted for future International honours is laughable.
A lot of this is genuinely why I feel that the population base thing people throw out from time to time to prove that some nations - basically subcontinent nations - have a way easier time of it with regards to talent pool isn't really accurate. There is definitely a critical mass of fans and players that you have to maintain in order to have talent coming through but that threshold is lower than people think and after that, good structures and a strong culture matters way way way more.Sorry guys, on a thread reread but just wanted to point out this is 100% correct. It is why we are often surprisingly good.
The greatest advantage New Zealand, Australia and England have in world sport, that not even the Americans have, is you can go from club nobody to world champion no matter where you live. It's why I will never, ever be in favour of ditching the Hawke Cup or NPC or giving too much favouritism to age group players.
I live near a town of 2000 people. It is not a rich town, though there is obv affluence around and we are far from Gizzy or Kaitaia, but we are not Cambridge or Raglan or a bunch of wankers from Epsom.
Off the top of my head we have a rugby/cricket club and athletics track, a community not for profit gym, another gym some guy runs at his house(?), a horse club, a community pool and a mini putt. I think there's a soccer team too. A couple of years ago the town won the club rugby competition using mostly local players (you will find a few not local schools in there but those guys came to the region for non-rugby reasons, and one brief Chiefs player might have coincided but I'm not sure) against much more fancied clubs because they were lucky to have some very good coaches in the area. Since then a lot of those players have gone on to professional contracts, overseas paid club rugby gigs and several about to be super rugby players. One might be an All Black at the 2027 WC fingers crossed.
A town of 2000 people produced that team who launched various players' careers. There will be even better club teams around NZ, and that is why Oceania is the best in the world at sport. You can walk in off the street to play some sport even if you weren't a superstar at school and you have an opportunity to go to the top.
Australia has this system too. It's why everyone else is screwed from the start facing the Southern Hemisphere in sport.
Yeah and the point I was making about ‘comparative luxury’ and ‘per capita facilities’ was that even within NZ, there’s a particular advantage to coming from a smaller place. My anecdotal evidence for this is partly based on being from Auckland but playing in Counties. It’s not a perfect comparison, but for example there are really only 4 clubs for 400,000 people in what would be broadly regarded as ‘South Auckland’. Then in Counties, you have clubs representing tiny population bases. I can tell you that the facilities available for the clubs representing a player base of 100,000 people are hardly any better than those for a population base of 1,000.Sorry guys, on a thread reread but just wanted to point out this is 100% correct. It is why we are often surprisingly good.
The greatest advantage New Zealand, Australia and England have in world sport, that not even the Americans have, is you can go from club nobody to world champion no matter where you live. It's why I will never, ever be in favour of ditching the Hawke Cup or NPC or giving too much favouritism to age group players.
I live near a town of 2000 people. It is not a rich town, though there is obv affluence around and we are far from Gizzy or Kaitaia, but we are not Cambridge or Raglan or a bunch of wankers from Epsom.
Off the top of my head we have a rugby/cricket club and athletics track, a community not for profit gym, another gym some guy runs at his house(?), a horse club, a community pool and a mini putt. I think there's a soccer team too. A couple of years ago the town won the club rugby competition using mostly local players (you will find a few not local schools in there but those guys came to the region for non-rugby reasons, and one brief Chiefs player might have coincided but I'm not sure) against much more fancied clubs because they were lucky to have some very good coaches in the area. Since then a lot of those players have gone on to professional contracts, overseas paid club rugby gigs and several about to be super rugby players. One might be an All Black at the 2027 WC fingers crossed.
A town of 2000 people produced that team who launched various players' careers. There will be even better club teams around NZ, and that is why Oceania is the best in the world at sport. You can walk in off the street to play some sport even if you weren't a superstar at school and you have an opportunity to go to the top.
Australia has this system too. It's why everyone else is screwed from the start facing the Southern Hemisphere in sport.
Oh 100%. But I think also just densely populated urban areas in general are gonna have less facilities per capita.Think that's a lot to do with "South Auckland" being more heavily weighted towards Maori/PI and rugby being the main sport. Counties is more your rich white farmer types and the facilities in some of those places reflect that.
It's because of what Community Boards can achieve. They can't put together money for water infrastructure (it's also not their job), but they can sort out an awesome park.Yeah I've spent some time working in some rural hospitals and they have some insanely high quality sports facilities for the population size.
Absolutely 3rd rate schools and hospitals.
But great sports facilities. You might have x ray facilities 3 only days a week, and your water quality will be either contaminated with farm run off and have permanent boil water notices or else it's non fluoridated because vaccines or something. But you'll definitely have that top-of-the-line scrum machine.
But also to come back to the South Auckland example - Papatoetoe is now the largest suburb in Auckland and the hub of the Indian community in Auckland. Cricket in South Auckland generally is largely Indian. There is a Papatoetoe Cricket Club, but for the most part you’d still have to say the population base is underrepresented by clubs/facilities. There are also ‘informal’ and ‘unofficial’ comps which probably attract more numbers than the actual comp. Probably getting bogged down in a tangential issue though which is that our largest base of cricket players are pretty much doing their own thing on the periphery of the club game.Oh 100%. But I think also just densely populated urban areas in general are gonna have less facilities per capita.
Sinclair was a few weeks youngerGreat to see the Wonderkid get a 240. He now has the 12th highest score by a Kiwi in only his 4th Test
Is he also the youngest NZ player to score a double hundred? Cricinfo list stops at 23 years and 360 days and no Kiwi's appear on that list (Ravindra was 24 years 79 days)
Edit: Williamson was 24 years 148 days so not him
He's certainly ever young in @Prince EWS' eyes.Sinclair was ever young?
I moved to a small town 3 years’ ago. One other factor is that things like Community Boards are run by the sports’ clubs. We also have a “Lands Trust” that holds vast swathes of public land “for the benefit of everyone in town”. The Trust board is stacked with members of the rugby club, and recently voted to give the club a 50 year lease on its fields and clubrooms at $0 per year.It's because of what Community Boards can achieve. They can't put together money for water infrastructure (it's also not their job), but they can sort out an awesome park.
Yeah this happens too.I moved to a small town 3 years’ ago. One other factor is that things like Community Boards are run by the sports’ clubs. We also have a “Lands Trust” that holds vast swathes of public land “for the benefit of everyone in town”. The Trust board is stacked with members of the rugby club, and recently voted to give the club a 50 year lease on its fields and clubrooms at $0 per year.