Tag: opposition batters

  • Your ultimate Dandenong District Turf 1 season preview

    Your ultimate Dandenong District Turf 1 season preview

    We’ve dug deep to preview the 2023-24 Dandenong District Turf 1 season.

    Here’s a look at every clubs ins, outs and how they should perform…

    BEACONSFIELD

    Last year: Turf 2 premiers

    Captain: Mark Cooper (captain-coach)

    Ins: Thishane De Silva (Rowville), Kevin Seth (Heinz Southern Districts), Yohan Arumadura (Keysborough)

    Outs: Callan Tout (Narre South), Lachie Ramage (Kooweerup)

    Snapshot: Despite recent Turf 2 premiers immediately falling back down, there’s a sense of expectation on Beaconsfield, it feels different to those gone before it. But that doesn’t mean the Tigers won’t need to improve in all three areas to match the Turf 1 powers. They start their season on the road before the battle of the creek returns in round 2 against Berwick.

    Young gun to watch:

    Mitch Tielen.

    A talented young player that the Tigers expect to grow this summer.

    BERWICK

    Last year: Sixth

    Captain: Jarrod Goodes

    Ins: Jarrod Goodes, Corey Bevan, Matthew Robertson (all returning), Jarrod Wills (Dandenong), Matthew Hague (returning to DDCA)

    Outs: James Wilcock (Drouin), Andrew Perrin (St Marys Nagle), Damith Mapa (Mordialloc)

    Snapshot: The Bears enter the 2023-24 season with a sense of mystery. While they have lost three star players, they’ve welcomed back a number of guns as well. They’ll back their own in and Jake Hancock will appreciate the return of red-ball cricket.

    Young guns to watch:

    Jarrod Wills, Toby Wills, Mason Binns

    Three young players the Bears have big hopes for this summer.

    BUCKLEY RIDGES

    Last year: Runners-up

    Captain: TBC

    Ins: Charuka Tharindu (Sri Lankan draft), Roshen Silva (Sri Lanka), Lucas Carey (Bonbeach), Ben Wilkinson (England), James Anson (England), Zafar Sheik (returning from Casey South Melbourne)

    Outs: Mahela Udawatte (Hallam Kalora Park)

    Snapshot: The Bucks storm into the Turf 1 season with a plethora of ready-made recruits. Expect Roshen Silva to have an enormous output with the bat, particularly with the return of two-day matches. Successive grand final defeats won’t sit well with the Bucks, they’ll be out for immediate redemption.

    Young gun to watch:

    Cooper Grey

    A talented all-rounder ready to make a big step.

    HALLAM KALORA PARK

    Last year: Preliminary finalist

    Captain: Jordan Hammond

    Ins: Mahela Udawatte (Buckley Ridges), Charith Keerthisinghe (Phillip Island)

    Outs: Sachith Jayasingha (Doveton North), Ryan Hillard (retired)

    Snapshot: After falling agonisingly short a grand final berth, and with the addition of two strong recruits, it’s hard to see the Hawks not improving this season. Udawatte will steady up the top order and allow the Hawks to build a base before their hitters make an impact late in the innings. The loss of spinner Jayasingha hurts but they’ve wasted no time in finding another tweaker in Keerthisinghe.

    Young gun to watch:

    Lachlan Gregson.

    Despite being an established Turf 1 cricketer at just (age) 20, the Hawks still expect development out of Gregson.

    NARRE SOUTH

    Last year: Fifth

    Captain: Kyle Hardy

    Ins: Callum Nicholls (Glamorgan), Alex Cruickshank (Cambridge), Callan Tout (Beaconsfield)

    Outs: Jonty Jenner (South Africa), Zak Wilson (England), Harry Finch (England)

    Snapshot: Former first-class star Jeevan Mendis is likely to plant himself at one end for 20-plus overs in two-day cricket, making life extremely hard for opposition batters. While they have finished in the third to fifth mark since joining Turf 1, the Lions feel it’s time for them to take a scalp at the pointy end of the year.

    Young gun to watch:

    Riley McDonald.

    A young wicketkeeper-bat who has Turf 1 experience but hasn’t exploded just yet. He will get plenty of opportunities to showcase his talent at the top of the order this season.

    NORTH DANDENONG

    Last year: Elimination finalist

    Captain: Clayton McCartney

    Ins: Jurgen Anderson (Long Island), Randeep Sahota (Springvale)

    Outs: Austin Heldt (Premier Cricket), Nimesh Kariyawasam

    Snapshot: The Maroons broke through with a finals berth but are hungry for more. The return of Anderson will help, as will the addition of Sahota, but David Bell’s men need their regular starters to capitalise with the bat. North Dandenong often found itself in a strong position before a cluster of wickets derailed its innings last summer. If the Maroons can convert on those starts, it will go a long way in them breaking their premiership drought.

    Young gun to watch:

    Riley Shaw.

    There’s a selection of young players climbing through the Maroons’ grades, but Shaw is showing plenty of signs. He’s a top-order bat who has improved his off-spin.

    SPRINGVALE SOUTH

    Last year: Premiers

    Captain: Ryan Quirk

    Ins: Tharinda Wijesinghe (Sri Lankan draft), Stephen Hennessy (Keysborough)

    Outs: Nil.

    Snapshot: It’s very much a case of don’t fix what isn’t broken for the Bloods. With back-to-back crowns, it’s understandable why they haven’t tipped Alex Nelson Reserve over. Cameron Forsyth isn’t listed as an out, but he will miss the opening half of the season through travel. The addition of Wijesinghe, a right-arm leg spinner, is perfect as spinner Jarryd Straker will need assistance covering the extra overs in two-day cricket’s return.

    Young gun to watch:

    Brayden Sharp.

    He’s a talented bat with limited Turf 1 experience, the Bloods expect him to take his game to a new level this summer.

    ST MARYS

    Last year: Seventh

    Captain: Susa Pradeep

    Ins: Sheshan Udara (Sri Lankan draft), Saveen Nanayakkara, Safaris Moahomad, Rasandu Thilakarathna, Danidu Gunarathne

    Outs: Ashan Anthony, Kasun Niranjana, Daveen Sasindu

    Snapshot: The Saints avoided relegation by the skin of their teeth last summer and will be fighting against it again this season. While many would assume their objective should be remain in Turf 1, they internally would like to strive for more. That ambition hinges on the performance of Sri Lankan draftee Sheshan Udara, who is racing against the clock to land at Carroll Reserve.

    Young gun to watch:

    Rasandu Thilakarathna

    Will bat in the top order and bowl handy spin for the Saints this year.

    Originally published as Your ultimate Dandenong District Cricket Association Turf 1 season preview

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  • How ‘disgusting to face’ Fotia earned Victorian deal

    How ‘disgusting to face’ Fotia earned Victorian deal

    Promising underage performances, trips interstate and season-ending injuries; Matt Fotia has spoken about the experiences that led him to signing a contract with Victoria.

    Victoria had to look no further than its own backyard for its next tearaway.

    Ringwood’s Matt Fotia has capped off an imperious Premier Cricket summer, one that grossed 49 wickets at an average of just 14, by signing on with Victoria.

    The right-arm speedster took a wicket in each and multiple in 14 of his 17 Premier Cricket matches in 2022-23, with season-best figures of 7-54 in a hostile spell of bowling against Prahran.

    While his stack of scalps was by and large his best season to date, Fotia’s push to the next level has been in motion for some time.

    The now 28-year-old holds the record for most wickets for Australia at underage level with 37, leading a list of bowlers that includes Test quicks Josh Hazlewood (21) and Jhye Richardson (17).

    And although he showed promising signs during that 2013-14 period, Fotia felt he wasn’t ready to play state cricket.

    “Sometimes wickets can be a misnomer, there were a lot of half-trackers to the deep boundary (in that 37),” Fotia said.

    “I wouldn’t say something went wrong because I worked, I have done uni – I look at guys that got deals at that time, guys I would’ve been competing with, and they don’t play cricket anymore.

    “Maybe I was a good bowler for that skill set but in terms of the next level at the time, there were other guys more suited.

    “I can see why I didn’t get picked, and from then, you think it’s going to be linear, ‘oh I will just take a few wickets and I will get a deal’.

    “I went to England, came back for the pre-season a bit out of shape and figured out pretty quickly that that’s not how it works.”

    Despite returning to be a regular fixture in the Ringwood First XI, it took a chaotic pair of seasons to spark a resurgence in Fotia.

    Coinciding with the two Covid affected seasons, he had a summer in Tasmania at Glenorchy before enduring a season-ending injury the following year.

    With the pectoral injury restricting Fotia’s bowling, it resulted in him falling to the Third XI to steer Ringwood’s future prospects and develop his batting.

    “Coming out of lockdown I was doing a lot of running and thought I better get some strength work into me,” he said.

    “I had a struggle when doing a final set of push-ups and I thought that was normal, then I bowled that night and felt a bit sore, I just thought it was DOMS (Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness).

    “I was able to bowl normal pace so I thought it was just the muscle sorting itself out but I woke up and my arm was blue.

    “Playing threes was really enjoyable, playing as a batter, captaining and working with the younger blokes.

    “I learned how to bat a bit, the first couple of games I was batting like a number 11 because I didn’t know how to bat any higher than 10.

    “So, even though I didn’t make any runs, I had to learn how to bat with a bit more confidence.”

    With a season-best wicket tally of 32 prior to the season just gone, Fotia understands why people want to know what has caused the 17-dismissal improvement.

    But he says it’s not one magical adjustment, instead a number of minor tweaks.

    “It’s probably a bit of maturity in my body,” he said.

    “This year I did a lot of work on my upper body to strengthen my pec, so it might be a bit of that.

    “I am 28, turning 29, so my body is fitter, stronger and the wicket at Ringwood helps a little bit.

    “Even though I am bowling fuller, I don’t have to bowl really full and I always try not to go for runs.

    “I want to bowl a maiden every over and if I get hit for runs, that’s all I want to go for, I rarely try and get someone out, obviously in a close game I am trying to get a wicket but more often than not I am trying to bowl a dot.

    “People ask me that, it doesn’t feel like I haven’t done much differently but if you ask coaches, they can say they can see something different.

    “It’s hard when you’re bowling because everything feels so similar.”

    While opposition batters had difficulty escaping Fotia’s spells unscathed, even Ringwood – and now Victorian – teammate Tom Rogers says he finds him “disgusting to face”.

    “I hadn’t seen Fot bowl a lot in the last few years because he had the Tassie trip and the pec injury,” he said.

    “I remember watching him bowl in a Queensland game and he was bowling to Peter Forrest – who was still an unbelievable player at the time.

    “Fot roughed him up with a few short balls, he (Forrest) played and missed five or six times and Fot ended up nicking him off.

    “It was one of the best spells I have ever seen.

    “He always seemed to have one or two balls where he would miss; he would float one too full or bowl a half-tracker and the good players would get him.

    “Whereas I faced him in a centre wicket before the semi-final and I reckon I hit one ball for the night, he kept pitching it on leg stump and beating my outside edge.

    “I turned to Gibbo (Ringwood wicketkeeper Ben Gibson) and said ‘I can’t hit the ball’, he just didn’t miss, that was when I realised this year; his pace is great, he seams the ball and is relentless.

    “He doesn’t miss and it’s disgusting, as a left-hander, it’s disgusting to face.”

    As for what he wants to accomplish in Victorian threads, Fotia isn’t buying into expectations as that benchmark of success is something his earlier, more immature self would have done.

    “I’m trying not to put an expectation on what I can achieve from here, when I do that I don’t stay in the moment,” he said.

    “I just want to get in and learn as much as possible about my game and being professional and hopefully that will take me as far as I can go.”

    Originally published as How Ringwood’s Matt Fotia has become a state cricketer

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