Archive for the ‘Match Reports’ Category

IN THE PINK – THE STORY OF THE A RESERVE GRAND FINAL BLOCKBUSTER (DIRECTOR’S CUT)

Sunday, April 11th, 2010
Percy contemplates life, the universe and cricket

Percy contemplates life, the universe and cricket

Ask any cricketer about a perfect climax to the summer and, rather than replying “You must consult the Oracle” and giving you Warnie’s mobile number, they’ll invariably tell you: last over, one wicket, one run to win. And it was here in this extraordinarily scripted blockbuster that the Piggers found themselves late in the autumnal Sunday light of season 2009/10.

How did the glorious season come to this?

Day 1 Action

The Piggers were primed, pumped and ready to roll. Grand final opponents the Lumley Spawn of North Shore were undefeated all season – except against the Piggers, and the pride of pork were damned if the Swine Hex was going to be broken now. All Grand Finals need a grave injury concern story so Stato Horley rocked up with a infected hand of ballooning proportions (not from a Red Bellied Black Snake as he would tell you, but from a much less venomous common palm tree) and Fabo competed for honours with a bowling foot strapped to the max after an ugly confrontation with Kyle Sandiland’s face. Much pre-match talk centred about bowling first to maintain the rage and Spawn skipper Bromley took the matter out of the Piggers’ hands by winning the flick and going in to bat.

A Truly Maaaaaaaarvellous Start

And a better start from the Piggers you will not likely see as Whits managed to snick their opener for a royal duck – a sensational start. Spawn 1/0 after 0.1 overs. Then Mickan as usual failed to trouble the Piggers, evidently saving energy for his jaw muscles in the field, and the Spawn had slipped to 2/13. C Grade run bully Weaver appeared and scratched around helplessly in the face of some premium pinging from Whits and Stato and it wasn’t too long before a couple more scalps saw the Spawn reeling on the verge of disaster at 4/49.

But skipper Bromley was firm in the face of the storm and, true to the form guide from earlier in the season when he rode some luck to score a creditable maiden ton against the Pigs, he tapped the same vein to hold the fort in the face of adversity (and other clichés). Weaver had finally begun to settle in and the resistance had slowly commenced. Fabo, the Pigs’ own Claytons Matthew Elliot, bowled a testing but unlucky spell – until right out of the blue (or midwicket) Stato threw down the sticks to see Weaver on his way to a reasonably debateable run out call – a big wicket to halt the fightback and the Spawn sinking at 5/64.

Stato runs out Weaver with a direct hit

Stato runs out Weaver with a direct hit

GOOOONNNNNNNNNE!!!!

GOOOONNNNNNNNNE!!!!

The Great Spawn Comeback

But Fogg dug in creditably with his skipper and once again the match evened out as the Piggers began to search for the way back. It was of course the breakthrough man himself, Reduced Fat Buck, that pulled off a great LBW to dismiss Fogg to make it 6/109 and, with only the bowlers to come, the Pigs could sniff a sub-150 chase for the crown. But big Dougal Whalley was not having a bar of it, not in a game as big as this. The Haymaker warmed up the oven to tempt him and straight away he went for it – and straight away it was all over as it skied precipitously out to El Presidente…who grassed it, flat-bagging himself painfully and hilariously in the process. Turning point noted – and Whalley’s purposeful assault continued, sending maximums over Blackman’s undulating turf to the Spawn’s collective delight.

Whalley goes the tonk

Whalley goes the tonk

...and El Presidente flat-bags it...DOWNNNNNN

...and El Presidente flat-bags it...DOWNNNNNN

With Bromley nicking and plopping it around, the pair evened the keel and nosed themselves in front. And like Tiger’s pastime of punani, the well-oiled machine begins to unravel: Weedman all too casually drops a snick and heads begin to drop just that little bit. Bucky adds to the tension by going for a couple of boundaries and suddenly the toys are out of the pram Billy Buck-style, with the big unit howling white-eyed at the sky and his Piggers brethren. A quick half a glass of shut the hell up and he’s back amongst the living, but things are sliding. El Presidente growls out to “Remember Cammeray” to fire up the pork, the veteran invoking memories of their shameful surrender in the field in the previous season’s semi final, Peller mumbles discontentedly in the gully like a pungent baglady on the steps of Town Hall and Damo is chasing the little dogs with the little curly tails in his head.

Whits pings one down

Whits pings one down

The Return Of Whits

And suddenly, like a whiff of fresh camel toe, everything snaps back into focus as first Bromley finally snicks one that goes to hand, ending an impressively stout if not pretty resistance, and then a silver duck later another snick and the Piggers can breathe again with the end nigh at 8/169 – as seemingly always, led by more great bowling by the Whits which bags him 4/52. But there’s no prisoners being taken by Whalley and he cracks his maiden 50 for the season in the only game that counts.  But just as the 200 looms he skies to the Haymaker, ending a great dig deservedly appreciated and congratulated by the Pigs. Collins repeats the effort to Bucky in the gully and Stato, with a shining 4/41, has closed out the innings at 192 – the Piggers’ exultation mixed with palpable relief.

The Pigs Bat Off

So with a shake of the hoof and 17 overs remaining, openers El Presidente and the Haymaker stride out into the golden light to chase the trophy, expecting fire, brimstone and the smell of fish from the Spawn. But the opening bowlers misfire badly, leaking extras and giving the Piggers some appreciable breathing space.  The Haymaker settles in first with a few boundaries and just when it looks like he’s on top, suddenly tall trees Collins takes an outstanding what-the-hell blind leap (difficulty level +11) at mid off to snare one of the best speccys you’ll ever see and the Spawn rightly celebrate like drunken marines.

Captain Wookie takes his furry time getting to the crease and the LBW appeal-a-thon commences in earnest. But El Presidente continues his sum contribution of nothing to the game by getting plumbed and at 2/34 the door swings open with the Spawn nosing their way in front. Skeletor joins the skipper and is as nervous as he was at Schoolies (last year) and just as likely to score. But they survive a surprisingly subdued effort by their opponents in the afternoon shadows and the bails come off for stumps with the score 2/50 and the game looking finger licking good for a delicious ending.  While the Spawn circle up and get all Michael Vaughan about things, the Pink Pigs crack open some icy imported lemonades and wander over to cheer on the Black Pigs on Blackman Upper as they feast on the dismembered carnage that was Macquarie Uni, Sneak Leaney left stranded agonisingly short of an awesome Grand Final ton in their record Pigs total of 421. Could tomorrow better today’s champagne cricketing fare, punters?

Chewie & Damo compare notes on body hair

Chewie & Damo compare notes on body hair

Day 2 Action

The few empty seats in the Blackman Arena from yesterday are now filled to capacity and the queues for the toilets are already long as the Piggers pull up their respective chairs for a long day of cigger stealing, nailbiting and nosepicking.  Chewbacca is, to say the least, positively positivist, plainly stating 30-odd more runs and the Spawn would not be able to get back into the game and everyone would live happily ever after from there. Well if anyone can back their words with action (as he keeps telling us all year over and over and over) the Wookie can and so he gets right out there in the midday sun and shows everybody how to do it…straight to second slip. Tears of joy are practically streaming from the Spawn as they roar exultantly “That’s the game boys!” with the Pigs’ premier batsman gone.

Peller Cooks Up A Storm

But these overconfident Spawn words the chiselled, battle hardened Peter Eller slurps up greedily, deeply, like habanero chillies in a tabasco and sulphuric acid jus, wincing only slightly as they burn through his gut, loving it, embracing it – so after a few hours it can be triumphantly and explosively shat out*.  And so with jaw set and teeth gritted, the P-Train sets about winning a Grand Final with his bat…again (see Peller vs Gnomes 2005/06). But Skeletor busts into Peller’s reverie with his 276th LBW dismissal of the season, a new Pigs record. Suddenly, it’s 4/72 and there’s a whole lot more weight being pulled by the P-Train. Adam Ant comes out and languidly goes about the chase in that Bevan-esque way of his, mixing thoughts of cover drives with “should I put the Pigs up the front or the back of the wedding reception next week, hmm maybe the back…” and the partnership is looking ominous until he’s fired out LBW, 5/99. The Spawn can scent a whiff of victory in the air.

Fabo cuts for a boundary!

Fabo cuts for a boundary!

Fabo Brings The Sand

In the previous match up against the Spawn, Fabo proved to be the Pigs innings saviour with the bat with a pugnacious unbeaten 50 and he’s promoted above Weedman to introduce a bit of that trademark Fabo sand in the va…what, you can’t say that? Only Mordaunt? Ok, ok.  With some punchy slogs Peller is starting to build something special, like the aftermath of a curried baked bean tortilla, when ANOTHER sensational catch, this time at deep midwicket, is snared and the P-Train is terminated at Spawn junction, 6/113. The Spawn have fought tooth and nail to hang in by their fingernails in the contest and now they are reaping the rewards with cricket the real winner (and other clichés).

So the Weedman slinks his funky way out to the middle – 3 wickets, 80 runs and the Spawn are deservedly on top, their tenacious and unrelenting grind pushing the Pigs’ resolve to the limit, and beyond. Do the Pigs want it as much as their opponents? Do they deserve it as much as their opponents? A quick wicket here and the Pigs would almost certainly be broken – the Spawn well deserved premiers 2009/10.  And so it is here at this moment at this time right now that Weedman chooses to make his mark, possibly his finest contribution since he decided to start bringing Bob Marley to poker**.

Weedman Smokes ‘Em

That whole confidence thing? The Weedman tears up the book, rolls a large one and turns the bass up to 11, playing his shots and leaving Fabo playing second fiddle as they turn the game on its head. Nothing too reckless, too brainless, just two committed Piggers so different in character and yet so much the same in their determination never to be beaten, a testament to being positive.
The Spawn begin to flag, maybe tiredness creeping in or maybe just not expecting the free-spirited exhibition unfolding. The pair uninhibitedly drag the target down to just 45 runs needed when Weedman has a pure sparkling psychedelic moment, leaving his body for some astral travelling and watching himself not play a shot to a ball cannoning catastrophically into his castle, much to the Spawn’s astonishment and absolute relief. They are back on top.
Nonetheless of course Ricky gets a heroic reception back on planet Earth but was the partnership just a last gasp from a dying swine? But Bucky has been off quietly to one side compartmentalising on his own before Alicia tells him to stop it or he’ll go blind. Realising this is not good in the context of the premiership, he goes out there brimful of whatever stuff it is that makes big units like him unstoppable on the footy field but strangely not at poker. He starts by cracking his first ball through point and everyone goes bananas – the feeling is good, we’re gonna get there. But RFB’s stay is cut all too short when he inside edges one on to the sticks and he trudges off, broken hearted. An unsettled quiet falls over the Pig Sty.

It's close...

It's close...

The Repeat Repeats

Stato Horley, he of infected hand and barely recognisable cap, goes out to join Fabo, seeking to repeat his wall-like efforts against the Spawn in the first round when he batted the Pigs to a one wicket victory. Two Pigs with history against the Spawn – what are the chances of a repeat?
The Pigs are 8/150, still a long way from victory but Stato is making Rahul Dravid look more exciting than Megan Fox smeared in vodka and dark chocolate and Fabo is grinning his sandy way around the park, chipping off the runs with steely glee. The Black Pigs arrive with trusty 7-tonne mascot Percy Pig – they’ve won by a million and, after roaring celebrations, are keen to pop a few frosty apple juices and settle down to cheer on the Pink Pigs and Paul Weaver.

It’s tense. Every single run is cheered by the pulsating crowd. The Spawn’s royal blue marquee goes tits up in a gust of wind, redolent of their shaky onfield resolve? Percy Pig looks on impassive and heavy, contemplating whatever impassively heavy mascots ponder.  Tea is taken and the combined Pigs rise as one to cheer off Fabo and Stato. Everyone is amazed at how relaxed he is – “Hey guys, this whole ‘Head down’ thing you keep yelling…well NO SHIT GENIUSES!”. The bbq (pork sausages of course) is seagulled mercilessly by all. No one can wait for the end, no one can sit still.

Stato & Fabo are chillaxed (on the outside at least) at tea

Stato & Fabo are chillaxed (on the outside at least) at tea

The Bladders Tighten

Play resumes. Bromley continues to bowl himself without success. There’s a lack of variety, not even a pie chucking spinner to mix things up. The field is not right – there’s no pressure and singles abound. The umpires have a quiet word with a particular Spawner about constant chatter – his day is done. The partnership continues, the scoreboard ticks over. Somewhere a Pig farts catastrophically. No one laughs, no one breathes.  The runs tick down. Fabo is putting the Pigs upper order to shame. Stato opens his shoulders, mistimes a straight hit off the cue end of the bat and the precious red leather plops hideously straight back towards bowler Bromley…who drops it. No one at the ground can believe it. El Presidente empathises with his pain – he thinks he lost the game yesterday dropping Whalley. Stato, who’s been waiting all his life to do this ‘cos he’s special like that, tells Bromley he thinks he’s just dropped the premiership. Somewhere, on a cricket field far, far away, Hershelle Gibbs starts crying.

Tense in the Pig Sty

Tense in the Pig Sty

The End Of All Things

The run chase reaches the teens, then single figures and finally, impossibly it seems, scores are tied. The Spawn are out on their feet – it’s been a heavyweight title fight all the way, body blow for body blow, a struggle titanic. In the Piggers Sty no one can breathe, no one dares move, a strangely comforting warm yellow liquid is running down chairs. It is impossibly unbearable to watch yet it is unbearably impossible to turn away.

Stato looks up from his guard to see Fogg charging in, every fibre of his being burning to smash the winning run. The world stops. Inconceivably, impossibly, he nicks it and walks, the Spawn going into paroxysms of delight, the minor premiers know a tie is enough for a win.
Unrivalled chaos in the Pigs camp, as Stato trudges off to an exceptional standing ovation, the 42 run partnership already a part of Pig lore. Matty Whitaker, as in the first game against the Spawn, has to exactly repeat his effort and defy the best their bowlers can give to win the game. “I just knew this would happen,” he mumbles as he strides out to the middle. One run, one wicket and, as the Pigs have taken their time ticking off the runs, there’s only an over and a half left to decide who will raise the premiership as champions. He swipes his way through four improbable deliveries, surviving a vein-popping shout for caught behind borne of pure desperation from the Spawn. Whits lives.

Justin John Fabo is on strike for the final over, the 354th bowled by Bromley. Regardless of the result it has been Justin’s finest hour, his finest display of turning back the furious and relentless storm and after several years wandering in the cricketing wilderness he has realised that his true home is with his porcine brethren. It is time, there can be only one.

First ball, no run. The Pig Sty is set to burst. Rolling sweat. Mouths dry. Pants wet.

Fabo carts the winning run over point. He's grinning already...

Fabo carts the winning run over point. He's grinning already...

Fabo slaps the second ball over point and is running, running, arms raised to the spinning heavens, roaring with delight, running, running the greatest golden glorious run ever, running straight into the delirious Pig hordes charging onto the field, and is piled upon in the greatest swarming, writhing stacks-on the sporting world has seen. The Pigs and their supporters bay apoplectically at the sky with ecstasy and relief. It is the greatest win. It is the greatest feeling.

The Pig Sty goes apeshit bananas...

The Pig Sty goes apeshit bananas...

The Pigs charge the field...

The Pigs charge the field...

...and Fabo's there to greet the charge...

...and Fabo's there to greet the charge...

STACKS ON BABY!!!

STACKS ON BABY!!!

THE TASTE OF VICTORY

THE TASTE OF VICTORY

YOUUUU BEAUTYYYYYY!!!!!

YOUUUU BEAUTYYYYYY!!!!!

A delirious tunnel forms and the mighty victorious Pigs are roared from the field, premiers 2009/10. If ever there was an example of the greatest test in a grand final, this was it. North Shore had fought for their lives, throwing everything they could at the Pigs and could hold their heads nobly – beaten but not defeated. It takes two teams to make an unforgettable grand final and North Shore will be a part of that history.  For the victors, that magnificent Pigs ethos had pulled them through. The support from the WAGS, the Black Pigs, Brown Pigs and assorted gallery of piglets, family, mates, and of course Percy Pig himself, was that extra special X-factor that kept the Piggers from slipping into the abyss. You are all part of this special win too – thank you, we loves youse all.

The Pigs tear into the Boat Race...

The Pigs tear into the Boat Race...

Stellarbrations

The Great Northern’s kegs took a fierce bollocking that evening as the Piggers commenced their celebrations long and loud into the night. The Boat Race, it should be noted, was comprehensively won by the Pink Pigs, handing the Black Pigs their only defeat of the weekend. It is from this point of course that brain damage begins to cloud the memories and a beer-soaked curtain falls on the celebrating beasts, but there was one thing no one in the Pigs could forget:

The greatest of wins for the greatest of mates – it does not get any better than this. See you all on the cricketing field of dreams next time.

The victorious Pigs

The victorious Pigs

* Interestingly this recipe was later attempted on Celebrity MasterChef by Simon Katich with some spectacular and ultimately tragic results.
** Matty “Buckets” Jackson disagrees on this point. A lot. And again. Once more.

Black Pigs win C grade trophy

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

By Michael Eckstein

Scorecard

The Black Pigs went into the C Grade final on a high, following a stunning victory in the semi final over the “Centrals”. The triumph was set up by two dominant batting performances in the first innings – Demo scoring 72 and Ned hitting a quick fire 89. Jack and Worm were also impressive, building strong partnerships for the 4th and 7th wickets. Chasing a total of 336, the Centrals crumbled under the heat of the Australian sun and the heat of Ned and Demo’s bowling. Jack and Chris ripped through the middle and late order and the match was over before you could say Rybarczyk.

So, onto the final the Black Piggies marched. There was much talk prior to the game of a bonding session involving 1kg schnitzels, but thankfully this never eventuated and all Pigs arrived at the match feeling fresh and fired up.

Macquarie Uni, who were coming off a controversial victory against North Shore, won the toss and elected to field, clearly afraid off the much vaunted Pigs bowling attack. Needless to say, this might have been a slightly erroneous decision.

Dog and Matt walked to the crease with a confident air about them. 20 overs later they walked back for a drink and Matt had chalked up a half-century. Talk about peaking at the right time. After some hard earned electrolytes they were out in the middle again. Matt had said to Dog something a long the lines of “This is us today mate, you and me. Our game”. He was bowled shortly after chasing Mac Uni’s spinner. Matt’s departure left Dog feeling a little antsy. He chased the Mac Uni spinner and was subsequently clean bowled.

Enter Fame and Stooke. Fame is C Grade’s pinch hitter – he pads up all day and when the captain says “get us some quick runs”, on he comes. And thus, on he came and henceforth quick runs were attained. Having done his job he packed his suitcase, turned the Out of Office on and popped one up to a thankful midwicket.

Stooke made a classy 30 odd before getting fired by our friendly professional umpire, adjudged LBW. He was filthy, really really filthy. Filthier than a dirty little pig covered in filth. The Mac Uni players went loco and on came Nasir and Demo. They both went (relatively) cheaply although Demo managed to land a few punishing blows before his departure. At this point the Pigs were not looking so comfortable, sitting on 6/190-something. What’s more, the brilliantly unpredictable stick work of Nasty Hands Ned was about to be on show. It was clear that this match was going to go one way or the other.

4161464262146666664161… the Mac Uni spinner’s figures were evidently, grossly disfigured and Nasty had made another quickfire 80 odd.

Meanwhile, Sneak Leaney had been quietly going about his business. Maybe inspired by Ned’s brutal handling of the bowling attack, he shortly thereafter pulled a number of glorious shots out from the kit bag, including his trademark cut – a shot he executes so beautifully it would make even the most hardened butcher cry.

With able support a long the way from Worm and Thommo, Sneak made his way to 97. 2 balls left in the day. Rosie down the other end, after smashing two huge sixes in the previous over. NOOOOOOO! Sneak ended up stranded on 97 after running a single and Rosie getting bowled. Nevertheless, 421 runs on the board a job well done. The “batting group” had performed and now it was up to the “bowling unit” to do their job.

The next day began beautifully. In front of Percy the Pig, Nasty cleaned bowled their most highly credentialed batsman. He opted to leave a ball outside off stump, unfortunately for him the ball magically changed direction and ripped out the aforementioned stump.

Demo then picked up the next key wicket after bowling some absolutely gorgeous lines. It was a joy to behold – watching the ball arrow into 2nd slips hands. Matt had caught one! And a big one at that.

Ned executed a very cheeky run out and Jack took some more scalps (can’t remember exactly what happened – short term memory has suffered due to activities on Sunday night) and then Fame came on to drop some hand grenades on the unsuspecting Mac Uni batsmen. He took a couple of relatively inexpensive wickets and it was looking like we would have the match wrapped up before lunch.

And so it was, Dog took the final wicket and the first of many VB tins were brought out. Happily, the Black Pigs then trotted down to Blackman Lower to watch the Pink Pigs win an absolute thriller. Nice work Weaver!

THE END.

C grade with beer

*please note I can’t actually remember much of Sunday. Since beginning typing about 2 hours ago my extended hangover has returned in full force. Feel free to point out any omissions / correct any errors.

Pigs win C grade and A reserve grand finals

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Congratulations boys!

grand final winning teams with beer 2

Full match report to come.

Pump it pink

Friday, March 26th, 2010

by Damo

Well Piggers,

The pointless activities of this week are almost at an end. Sure, we may have sold a few videotapes, won a couple of court cases, taught a few equations and dicked around on the internet more than anything else, but we haven’t yet won a Premiership, which of course, if the only thing that really matters this week.

As our ridiculously hairy-backed Skipper predicted, Pig Park brought out the best in us for the semi – we were vocal, confident and focussed. However, it is easy to be confident when bowling a team out for 75 at a ground that we haven’t lost at in 22 appearances. Tomorrow we are unlikely to have it so easy.
We are playing the No. 2 side in the comp (who just happened to end up with the Minor Premiership), which means that they are likely to build a partnership or two and throw down a few gems.
Batsmen, from 1 to 11, need to protect their wicket. After all, it’s your GF wicket – your firstborn is not as valuable. If we bat for 72 overs, Ricky is paying $1.09 for the win.
Bowlers need to be patient with that line and length, as well as fire the firetruck up Stato!
Fielders have to hunt the ball and try their absolute best not to f*ck it up when it comes their way, particularly if it’s in the air.

The important thing is that regardless of how the game is panning out, we all keep our heads high, maintain the chatter and give it our all because there is no next week. If we’re under the pump; we just keep plugging away. If we’re doing the pumping; we pump Pump PUmp PUMp PUMP it hard!

Remember; we’re playing a team that last week nearly lost to a team whose captain was run out while congratulating his partner on the boundary he’d just hit. We haven’t lost to them yet and we’re not gonna start tomorrow.

As extra inspiration, I’ve attached a picture of the backbone of this Premiership side; our much-loved wicky.

Ricky

Grand final weekend

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Gentlemen of the Pigs, Supporters, families, and friends,

Welcome to Grand Final weekend wherein the Pigs CC will field two teams. An astonishing achievement already – well done everyone, even the useless B Graders who could not hit a 100 runs against a team of all current players’ children (most of which are less than 4 years old) – firm, but fair.

Below is an email from the NSCA, all grand finalists please read (yes, that is the same Michael Clear – so behave).

Even better is that both games are at the same ground and I can assure you that the NSCA is looking forward to having two Pigs teams, and supporters, and Pigs, causing mayhem all weekend.

Photos – we will need a photo of each Grand Final Team for the NSCA, in full whites (can the chap in C Grade please roll down his trousers for the photos), and brown caps – so please be at the ground and take the photo at 12.40pm on Saturday. I would also like a club picture – so, I will try and organise that on Sunday at a time which is convenient so if you are yelled at to make your way for a quick photo, please do so. I will be mindful of people about to bat etc.

B Grade will be arriving throughout Saturday, but, will be there for all of Sunday. B Graders (and any other supporters of A and C), please try and be at the ground at 1pm on Sunday and we can settle in with a few quiet ones.

This Sunday will see a huge celebration at the Great Northern commencing shortly after we all leave the Blackman precinct. I will be booking a large area for all teams and all supporters so please show up just for a while (or all night). Beer will flow as will embellished stories from the season and hopefully one or two about the grand finals just played. Please invite all your friends, spectators etc to celebrate with us. Please leave your motor vehicles at home.

Best of luck everyone, and congratulations again for a great season. Whatever happens this weekend, ending up with 3 teams in the semis, 2 in the Grand Final and most other teams supporting us over our respective opponents this weekend suggests this club had a good season.

Team selections:

NSCA-A Reserve
North Shore v Pigs CC*
Blackman Lower Lloyd Rees Drive, Lane Cove West   View Map
27 Mar 2010 1:00PM, 28 Mar 2010 1:00PM

You know who you are