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'UNSW cricket, where Test players treat fifth graders like Test players and fifth graders treat Test<br />

players like fifth graders.'<br />

Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson<br />

'Rogers, you xxxx, you've got a yellow stripe painted all the way down your back!'<br />

Len Pascoe.<br />

'How many times do we have to win this f------ thing'<br />

Greig Robinson to seconds captain Terry Buddin after Terry insisted UNSWCC bat in the<br />

dark to win the final outright over Sydney Uni, despite already leading on the first innings.<br />

'Show me an anti-psycho and I'll show you an underachiever.'<br />

Greig Robinson<br />

'It was personal!'<br />

Terry's explanation after the outright had been secured.<br />

'Hey Rosco, how's that 700 lookin' Only 320 to go.'<br />

Brian Riley at the 80-81 first grade final v Northern Districts. At the start <strong>of</strong><br />

the summer NDs captain Ross Edwards predicted he'd make 700 runs that season.<br />

'So you like to drive, do you Well, let's see how your teeth look on the pitch.'<br />

Pascoe to Chris Chapman, 76-77 semi after Chappo got <strong>of</strong>f the mark with a perfect <strong>of</strong>f-drive.<br />

'Brutus, I'm not sure I should've done that.'<br />

Chappo to Mark at the end <strong>of</strong> the over.<br />

'No, we didn't bat anyone at No.4 today - we went straight from No.3 to No.5.'<br />

Terry Buddin keeps the umpires away from Dave Pratt during the tea break after Pratty had<br />

spat the dummy at them earlier in the day.<br />

'Now lads, we have a reasonable score on the board <strong>of</strong> 250 … so all we have to do is move up in<br />

one straight line in defence, don't miss a tackle just like the great St George teams <strong>of</strong> the '60's,<br />

and we will win for sure.'<br />

Captain Jim Robson's pep talk during the Poidevin-Gray final, SCG No.2, 76-77.<br />

'Mark's arm ball left many batsmen feeling gently violated.'<br />

Paddy Grattan-Smith.<br />

'Under the circumstances his slip-fielding was astonishing and cannot be explained by modern<br />

scientific methods.'<br />

Paddy on Jim Robson's poor eyesight.<br />

'Left-arm spinners are the lowest form <strong>of</strong> life. They should be shot at birth.'<br />

Dick Pym.<br />

'We still would have won, Chappo!'<br />

JR's response when Chappo told him he still worried about what would've<br />

happened had he dropped the last catch in the 76-77 first grade final.


<strong>Five</strong> <strong>Summers</strong><br />

<strong>Five</strong> <strong>Flags</strong><br />

1976 - 1981<br />

Editor: Mark Ray<br />

Layout and Design: Simon Ray<br />

Statistics: Greg Livingstone<br />

Reunion Organising Committee<br />

Greg Livingstone chairman (unelected, unopposed), Jim Robson, Jim Dixon, Greg Livingstone,<br />

Roger March, Greig Robinson, Mark Ray, Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson.<br />

For their financial support <strong>of</strong> this function, UNSWCC thanks<br />

Andrew McMaster, Peter Tout, Ge<strong>of</strong>f Garland, Jim Dixon and Mike Gregg.<br />

This booklet and extra material is available at www.cricket.unsw.edu.au<br />

© UNSWCC 2007


CONTENTS<br />

01 Foreword<br />

02 Getting into Grade<br />

07 The Boys from the Bush<br />

10 Talent to Burn<br />

- Poidevin-Gray 1976-77<br />

17 The Big Sting<br />

- First Grade 1976-77<br />

38 Strength and Depth<br />

- Second Grade 1977-78<br />

48 On Top <strong>of</strong> the Pile<br />

- The Club Championship 1978-79<br />

55 Proving the Point<br />

- First Grade 1980-81<br />

71 The Last Word


Foreword<br />

Tony Epstein<br />

President 1976-78<br />

Season 1972-73 was, to quote Charles Dickens, “the best <strong>of</strong><br />

times and the worst <strong>of</strong> times”. It was the season UNSWCC<br />

entered the Sydney grade competition from shires.<br />

We were the hot team from shires cricket but how would we<br />

compete against the clubs that formed the basis <strong>of</strong> the NSW Sheffield<br />

Shield team We had the players, grounds (four turf wickets) owned by<br />

the <strong>University</strong>, a great administrative structure. Thanks must be given to successive<br />

vice-chancellors and the university sports administration who provided the support and<br />

facilities for the club. UNSWCC currently boasts some <strong>of</strong> the best facilities and playing fields in Sydney.<br />

Alex Taylor received the first ball in grade cricket and square cut it to the Village Green boundary. The omens<br />

were great. The mighty <strong>Wales</strong> were <strong>of</strong>f and running. The first few seasons were undistinguished but built to 1976-77,<br />

the year <strong>of</strong> our first first-grade premiership. Four years is no time at all to go from second division to last in the top<br />

tier to first. It was quite an achievement. Four years later, we won our second first grade flag. From John Rogers to<br />

Mark Ray. Not bad for the newcomers to grade.<br />

The years <strong>of</strong> transition from shires to grade were tough. Would we make the grade Would we earn respect from<br />

the hard heads <strong>of</strong> the established clubs.<br />

Being humble, I will quote JR: “My perception was that you and Ralph Merrell were the club’s main strength<br />

administratively – keeping it honest, keeping it as good financially as it could be - and you were a rallying point in<br />

the lower grades. Tony, you took on the president role with a gulp, but a climate <strong>of</strong> confidence developed throughout<br />

the club for which you can take much credit.” Great words and, if half true, I am very grateful. But at the end <strong>of</strong> the<br />

day results are gained on the field and UNSWCC was blessed to have the likes <strong>of</strong> JR, Ge<strong>of</strong>f ‘Henry’ Lawson, Greg<br />

‘Gulgong’ Watson, Mark Ray, Jim Robson, Chris Chapman and another 80 cricketers <strong>of</strong> varying ability. Uni cricket<br />

ranged from Henry to Andrew ‘Splinter’ McMaster and all contributed to make it the great club we are and will be<br />

continue to be.<br />

There are three significant aspects about university cricket that the NSW administrators have not understood.<br />

First, universities own and control their own grounds, and do not rely on councils with limited budgets. Although<br />

the club now has to find money to maintain administration and facilities it still has a huge university supporting it.<br />

Second, many students and potential players come to uni from the country and enjoy playing cricket for the university<br />

where they study and set <strong>of</strong>f on their careers. Third, university cricket is run by the players – all roles from president<br />

to selectors are filled by players from all grades who contribute equally to the running <strong>of</strong> the club. No senior<br />

management and players dictating terms. Membership subscription for the season is the same for a fifth-grade player<br />

or a Test cricketer.<br />

Finally, JR again. “During your three years as president you were on the receiving end <strong>of</strong> trophies for Poidevin-<br />

Gray, first grade, second grade and the club championship – in which you were a team captain – a rare feat.”<br />

It was a privilege to have been involved in such a great era.<br />

1


Getting<br />

Into<br />

Grade<br />

In 1972 the Sydney grade clubs were amazed by UNSWCC’s admission to the big time. The former<br />

St George and NSW player, John Rogers, discusses those difficult early years.<br />

Astonishment. Disbelief. Ridicule. That’s how the Sydney grade cricket scene viewed the elevation <strong>of</strong> UNSWCC<br />

from the shires competition to grade status for the 1973-74 season. Of course UNSWCC hadn’t seen it that way at all.<br />

To club members at the time it was a just result for years <strong>of</strong> dominance <strong>of</strong> the municipal & shires competition with<br />

five A grade premierships in the previous eight seasons as well as a couple <strong>of</strong> B premierships.<br />

The previous change to the set-up <strong>of</strong> the 16 clubs in Sydney grade happened in 1965-66 when Paddington was<br />

wiped out to be replaced by Sutherland. The revamp was not confirmed until the end <strong>of</strong> a long and nasty court case<br />

brought by Paddington. Your correspondent happened to be an interested party, as he’d had a very good year with<br />

Paddo and was forced to find another club in St George.<br />

In 1973 the association, conscious <strong>of</strong> Sydney’s burgeoning population, the NSW <strong>Cricket</strong> Association wanted to<br />

bring in Penrith (then called Nepean), and, still smarting from the Paddington fight, took the s<strong>of</strong>t option <strong>of</strong> enlarging<br />

the competition. But 17 clubs would have meant a bye and, without any other outer area <strong>of</strong>fering a good case, the<br />

solution was to bring in the noisy nuisance dominating the suburban competition - UNSWCC. Clem Barrington,<br />

Ge<strong>of</strong>f Garland, Rick Wegner et al, take a bow. It was a clever coup straight out <strong>of</strong> left field.<br />

Two more clubs was the last thing the other clubs wanted. But no one wanted forced mergers or dismissal, and all<br />

could see merit in the large Penrith area being admitted. But the existing university club (Sydney Uni) was a basket<br />

case. It hadn’t won a premiership in the 20th century and the best recent result was a semi-final appearance 20 years<br />

previously. How could a much smaller uni, which had produced no players <strong>of</strong> note, expect to be able to compete<br />

What’s more, SUCC was the oldest club in the country and UNSWCC was one <strong>of</strong> the youngest, born just over 20 years<br />

earlier as UNSW emerged from Sydney Tech. It had been no easy climb to first grade status.<br />

UNSWCC’s well-known disregard for silvertails was forged in the struggle for a decent ground and decent facilities.<br />

While Sydney Uni had its picturesque ovals, it was not until 1968 that the UNSW’s Village Green moved to its<br />

present site, with the Sam Cracknell Pavilion appearing a year later. For years a tent had acted as a pavilion, loos<br />

were 200 metres away, and afternoon tea was taken on the other side <strong>of</strong> Anzac Parade.<br />

Yet gradually a tradition grew, fostered carefully by Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Stan Livingstone who was the driving force in the<br />

establishment <strong>of</strong> the club and its debut M&S season in 1951-52. Just two years later the club had earned promotion to<br />

A division <strong>of</strong> the M&S and had three teams - but trophies were elusive.<br />

Meanwhile in Sydney grade circles a certain Jack Chegwyn was assuming legendary status not only as the chairman<br />

<strong>of</strong> the state selectors but as founder <strong>of</strong> the Cheggy trips to country NSW, with the likes <strong>of</strong> Keith Miller and most<br />

<strong>of</strong> the state team in tow, drawing large crowds and creating enormous goodwill for the game. What’s that got to do<br />

with it, you may ask Well Jack’s son John had pronounced himself uninterested in the grade scene, and in 64-65<br />

captained UNSWCC to its first A division title in the M&S competition. They repeated the triumph the next season.<br />

That would not have gone unnoticed at the association and if one thing was needed to establish credibility for the<br />

club, Jack Chegwyn’s son had done the trick with consecutive trophies. With another three trophies coming in the<br />

2


next six years, plus four club championships, Clem Barrington, Ge<strong>of</strong>f Garland and co had performances to back up<br />

their lobbying efforts for elevation to the grade competition.<br />

If there was one person out there in Sydney grade who knew a bit about UNSWCC – it was me – but I have to<br />

admit I was not in favour <strong>of</strong> the club’s promotion. Back in 67-68 as a state colts player, I’d talked my way into playing<br />

four intervarsity matches for UNSW. We’d been beaten by a helluva good UWA team, then I got a pair <strong>of</strong> ducks<br />

against a NZ unis team, and had gone on tour to Hobart and Monash unis. So I knew a bit about the club’s players<br />

and <strong>of</strong>ficials. There was one standout player in fast bowler John Middleton who’d have got a game in any first grade<br />

team, and several other useful players such as Dave Wills, Ian Lowe and Jimmy Pratley. But alongside the mighty St<br />

George team I was then playing with, most <strong>of</strong> them would have been lucky to make the thirds.<br />

First grade 75-76. Back: Jack Denny (groundsman), Al Goodwin (scorer), Paddy<br />

Grattan-Smith, Dick Pym, Steve van der Sluys, Ge<strong>of</strong>f Kirkwood, Dave Pratt, Mal Grave.<br />

Middle: Bob Mansfield, Chris Chapman, John Rogers (c), Jock Martel, Mark Ray.<br />

Front: Jim Robson, Greg Watson.<br />

But the decision for UNSW to come into grade was a done deal and that was it. Like it or not, the grade clubs had<br />

to get on with it – including me, who was entering my second year as St George captain. Two seasons earlier six <strong>of</strong><br />

the St George stars had retired or left, and after some deliberation I’d been given the job <strong>of</strong> succeeding the legendary<br />

Warren Saunders as captain. We came in 13th out <strong>of</strong> 16, something <strong>of</strong> a decline from the previous four seasons where<br />

we’d been third, first, first and first.<br />

All eyes were on what the new boys in the competition would do - and Penrith made a good start by announcing<br />

that former Test centurion John Benaud was to be captain-coach. Was the UNSWCC team that had dominated M&S<br />

for years fired up and ready to show that that success could be transferred to the much tougher grade scene The<br />

answer sadly, was “anything but”. Like the St George team two years earlier, vocation and family had caused most <strong>of</strong><br />

UNSWCC’s stars to pack up and leave. Worst <strong>of</strong> all, John Middleton had gone some time earlier. The only face recognisable<br />

to me from years earlier was Ge<strong>of</strong>f Garland. And <strong>of</strong> the most recent M&S premiership team, only a young<br />

Jock Martel, Roger Robertson, Alex Taylor and Greig Robinson were still there. So for its launch into Sydney first<br />

grade, here was a UNSWCC team with not a single player <strong>of</strong> first grade experience - just one long-term club member<br />

in Ge<strong>of</strong>f Garland, and a bunch <strong>of</strong> green, untried youngsters.<br />

So how did they go The predictions <strong>of</strong> the pundits turned out to be true, with the two new teams finishing on the<br />

bottom – but on the strength <strong>of</strong> a win over Sutherland, we came 17th and Penrith 18th. After 10 games Ge<strong>of</strong>f<br />

Garland’s struggles with the ball were such that he found himself in the seconds and a former Melbourne grade player,<br />

Les Cupper, took over as captain - in time for the win over Sutherland.<br />

3


St George’s last home game for the summer, against UNSWCC, put the kybosh on my captaincy career at the great<br />

old club. Saints’ former state quick John Martin had long been the most feared bowler in Sydney grade and he tore<br />

through Uni to take 6-10, bringing in last man Ge<strong>of</strong>f Garland (back in the team as a player only) at 9-60. Over the<br />

next couple <strong>of</strong> hours Ge<strong>of</strong>f and Alan Jacobs put on 70, and while Saints won by seven wickets that last wicket stand<br />

had the St George faithful calling for blood.<br />

Chris Chapman, above, checks his grooming at the Village Green.<br />

And below, the suave Jim O'Brien takes some sun at Caringbah.<br />

With no improvement on 13th position on the ladder, my head was on the block, and much behind-the-scenes<br />

manoeuvring saw Ray Tozer appointed captain for the next season, with me continuing as a somewhat disenchanted<br />

club member.<br />

Changes were happening at UNSW too, with the Pym brothers, John and Dick, <strong>of</strong>fering to come over from<br />

Mosman. John was given the captaincy. “Kanga”, as he was known, had played for some years with Mosman where<br />

England’s Barry Knight had been a fixture, and Pymmy was an admirer and a similar fanatic about the game. But<br />

while Knight was all style and class, Pymmy had a technique diametrically opposed. He was an ungainly stopper <strong>of</strong><br />

an opening bat, with pads that always seemed to spread at the ankles and brush the ground. As the bowler<br />

approached, he’d crouch front-on with bat thrust forward and eyes staring like a pair <strong>of</strong> moons and kill the ball dead<br />

in front <strong>of</strong> him. And when he wasn’t blocking, he was sort <strong>of</strong> galloping between the wickets in knock-kneed fashion<br />

with arms waving, shirt flailing in the wind, and shouting instructions, comments, jokes and questions to his partner.<br />

And if J Pym wasn’t enough, there was brother Dick. If slightly less eccentric in most people’s eyes, Dick was<br />

regarded as a classic fast bowling ratbag - with a temper to match. Tiny for a fast bowler with a whirlwind approach,<br />

Dick’s bowling was littered with beamers, bouncers, <strong>of</strong>f-spinners, no-balls and wides. Either stumps would fly or the<br />

pickets would rattle. He didn’t like batsmen and it showed. Woe betide any fielder who spilled a catch or misfielded.<br />

And ditto for umpires who didn’t call it his way! Dick had been a volatile pitcher for the NSW baseball side and he<br />

brought that aggression to his cricket.<br />

4


Penrith took the obvious route by appointing a big-name former Test player to guide them into grade cricket.<br />

<strong>Wales</strong> took a typically non-conformist approach, stamping themselves as proud and independent. In their different<br />

ways both clubs adapted fairly quickly to rise through the ranks.<br />

<strong>Wales</strong>’s second season produced three wins for 17th spot, again relegating Penrith to last place. Both Pyms did<br />

well, John made 581 runs while Dick took 27 wickets at 32. Chris Chapman and Mark Ray also scored more than<br />

500 runs, Jock Martel got the club’s first century, a fitting landmark for one <strong>of</strong> the club’s most important figures, and<br />

Steve van der Sluys snared an impressive 48 wickets with his huge in-swingers.<br />

So despite the placing, there were some good signs. John Pym’s report as captain has the prophetic words : “We<br />

could be semi-final contenders in two years” . Firsts had been unbeaten in its final five matches <strong>of</strong> the season, seconds<br />

had won the Encouragement Award (which covered the last six games <strong>of</strong> the season), and the Poidevin-Gray<br />

team was unbeaten throughout but got pipped for a place in the final.<br />

Things were looking up, but John Pym was heading overseas and would miss the next season. For me at St<br />

George, a year under Tozer had not been fun. While I contemplated retirement during the <strong>of</strong>f-season, to my surprise<br />

I fielded a phone call from Ge<strong>of</strong>f Garland proposing that I leave St George and captain UNSWCC. If anything convinced<br />

me, it was that I felt I had unfinished business. I had enjoyed being captain <strong>of</strong> St George, even if my results<br />

had been poor. The season without the job had given me time to reflect and review what I’d done. I’d had a connection<br />

with the UNSWCC from years before, and it was clear they needed a hand. So with some misgivings, fuelled by<br />

sceptical comments from the old St George stars who nevertheless wished me well, I turned up for that first practice<br />

<strong>of</strong> 1975-76.<br />

At St George, pre-season ran like clockwork. The nets were controlled properly and selectors moved around purposefully<br />

with everyone decked out in creams. If you didn’t bowl fast or wrist-spin, then you could forget being<br />

selected above thirds. Batsmen batted watchfully, defending with care but hitting the bad ball forcefully.<br />

So what did I find at the Village Green Typical Uni semi-organisation. A bunch <strong>of</strong> largely scruffy, long-haired<br />

students in all sorts <strong>of</strong> shorts and T-shirts but somehow most people got a chance to practise. Yet I couldn’t see anyone<br />

apart from Dick Pym with any pace – and he was all over the place. There were two wrist-spinners <strong>of</strong> promise in<br />

Ge<strong>of</strong>f Kirkwood and Steve Campbell, but they were very raw. The batting to say the least looked average. The more I<br />

looked, the more I could see I’d been landed with a team <strong>of</strong> medium-pacers, finger-spinners and wet-behind-the-ears<br />

batsmen who scored at a snail’s pace. I wasn’t happy.<br />

After posing for a headshot for the Herald, Chappo reveals his corked bicep to stunned teammates.<br />

5


Somehow teams got chosen and <strong>of</strong>f we went to Manly for the first match. Manly were a formidable side and had<br />

won a premiership not long before through Mike Pawley’s excellent spin bowling, his aggressive captaincy and, as he<br />

described it, a team <strong>of</strong> runners. After tea on the first day, as Manly battled their way to 211, it dawned on me that<br />

behind the student disorder there were several very good fieldsmen and several very good cricket minds.<br />

The old St George team had been a good catching side but with the exception <strong>of</strong> the superb Brian Booth and to an<br />

extent myself, everyone waited for the ball to come to them or jogged after it in gentlemanly style. I’d made it clear I<br />

expected the Uni boys to keep an eye on me in the field, to charge after the ball and whip it to the keeper whenever<br />

they got it. And they did. What’s more a couple <strong>of</strong> sharp snicks were snared in the slips without any fanfare, and<br />

Chappo slid onto a magnificent catch in front <strong>of</strong> the sightboard that had me staring in disbelief.<br />

We almost got there but perhaps were a bit frightened to win, but on the Monday we stared down Sydney Uni by<br />

four runs to chalk up our first win. Three losses followed but at the VG we comfortably accounted for Ray Tozer’s St<br />

George with Jock’s fine catch <strong>of</strong>f Brian Booth the turning point. Still, at Christmas we were three wins for seven losses<br />

and not looking good with 200 in the first game our highest score.<br />

From there we were not to lose a game, with four wins and three rain-affected draws. We charged up the table to<br />

finish sixth. Essentially we mastered the art <strong>of</strong> playing on the slow turner at the VG. We’d bat first at every opportunity,<br />

hang in there as the top order struggled, and finish with a Gulgong-led flourish at the tail. The emerging Greg<br />

Watson (Gulgong), Dick Pym and the extraordinary in-swingers <strong>of</strong> Steve van der Sluys were surprisingly effective<br />

early and then spinners Mark Ray and Paddy Grattan-Smith would prise out the rest with help from what was<br />

becoming a very fine fielding team.<br />

Most <strong>of</strong> our wins had been against teams in the bottom half <strong>of</strong> the table, but we’d got quite a boost from two very<br />

fine wins in the Rothmans knockout, the one-day competition – one-day matches but not limited overs. We beat the<br />

representative ACT team and the Bob Simpson-led Western Suburbs, helped each time by two good opening partnerships<br />

between Mark and myself that gave us enough runs to let Mark and Paddy go to town.<br />

An opening partner for Mark was a real problem and I wasn’t the answer. Nor were Jim Robson, Chappo, Dave<br />

Pratt or Jock Martel suited to the job. We’d had a real boost with the arrival <strong>of</strong> Rob Mansfield to take over the keeping,<br />

but he would not be returning next year. Nor would van der Sluys, which meant our pace bowling was thin. OK,<br />

we were becoming competitive, but premiership contenders we weren’t. We needed a reliable opener, a keeper good<br />

at handling spin, a bit more steel in the middle order and another quick. And a wrist-spinner on our turning wickets<br />

would help.<br />

Solving those problems over the <strong>of</strong>f-season was the key to the unsheathing <strong>of</strong> the Bee’s stinger!<br />

Jim Robson poses for the Herald at the start <strong>of</strong> the 75-76 season.<br />

6


The Boys<br />

From<br />

The Bush<br />

One factor that made UNSWCC unique in the 1970s was an influx <strong>of</strong> spirited, talented players<br />

from the country. City boy Roger March looks at the huge influence those cricketers had on the<br />

club’s run <strong>of</strong> success.<br />

A university cricket club, unlike its suburban counterparts, does not have close ties with its local community. A<br />

university cricket club creates its own community, its own culture and its own history. I would argue that the culture<br />

<strong>of</strong> UNSW cricket has been, in large part, shaped – and continues to be shaped – by country cricketers who arrived in<br />

Sydney full <strong>of</strong> life, friendly, unpretentious – and athletic. The club gave them the community they had left behind in<br />

the bush. In return, they gave the club much <strong>of</strong> its spirit.<br />

As I look back to the club’s golden era from 1976-77 to 1980-81 there is a remarkable constant: the contribution<br />

made by the guys from the country. Indeed, three country cricketers played in the Poidevin-Gray-winning side <strong>of</strong><br />

1976-77, the club championship year and the two first-grade premierships: Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson, Jim Robson, and Greg<br />

Livingstone. Signs <strong>of</strong> their huge contribution were evident from that landmark P-G season. Jungle topped the batting<br />

averages with 130, followed by Livo, and Henry finished with 23 wickets at 11 apiece. In the two-day final, Jungle<br />

(78) and Livo (55) topscored in a total <strong>of</strong> 250 before Henry decimated Central Cumberland with 7-43 for Uni to win<br />

by 125 runs. The P-G side had a number <strong>of</strong> other country boys: Nigel (Big Nige) Perger, John (Chemical) Carmichael<br />

and Peter (Jacky) Jourdain. The 1976-77 first-grade side also had Steve (Klinger) Campbell and Greg (Gulgong)<br />

Watson, who holds the distinction <strong>of</strong> being the club’s first first-class representative.<br />

By the time <strong>of</strong> our 1980-81 first-grade premiership, no fewer than seven members <strong>of</strong> the team hailed from the<br />

country. In addition to Henry, Jungle and Livo, there were Big Nige, Steve Campbell, the versatile Jim (Disco) Dixon<br />

and Chris (Cliff) Hanger. For a young metropolitan university in the eastern suburbs <strong>of</strong> Sydney the contribution <strong>of</strong><br />

these young men from the country is remarkable enough. Even more remarkable is that Henry and Livo are still great<br />

ambassadors for the club, Jacky is president and, in testament to something that only DNA tests could discover,<br />

Disco and Jungle have entered their fourth decade <strong>of</strong> playing grade cricket. The bush connection had an impact on all<br />

grades, and in that golden era the contribution <strong>of</strong> country cricketers to the club reached its zenith. Big Nige and Paul<br />

(Tacho) Deegan were members <strong>of</strong> the premiership-winning second grade side <strong>of</strong> 1977-78. What other country lads<br />

might have lacked in prowess they made up for in personality. People such as Ian (Kyogle) Smith and Andrew<br />

(Splinter) McMaster became legends for their love <strong>of</strong> the game, their affection for the club and for their ‘outgoing’<br />

personalities.<br />

The celebrated country tours <strong>of</strong> the 1970s were an initiative <strong>of</strong> first-grade captain John (JR) Rogers. These reinforced<br />

the club’s links to the country and reunited its country players with their home towns and their families. They<br />

also helped spread the word about UNSW cricket. According to JR, in the 50s & 60s there'd been a lot <strong>of</strong> tours<br />

(weekend ones) by the Jack Chegwyn group - they had legendary status as great weekends - and grade clubs would<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten do a weekend, end-<strong>of</strong>-season tour. Also, Bob Simpson led some country tours as part <strong>of</strong> the then Tooheys sponsorship<br />

<strong>of</strong> NSW cricket. But the UNSW country tours were different, <strong>of</strong> course. The concept <strong>of</strong> a week-long series <strong>of</strong><br />

games in different country centres on consecutive days with minimal hosting requirements (just billets and a BBQ,<br />

plus venue and team) had never been done before. It also allowed city blokes to connect with the bush and its people<br />

– and most <strong>of</strong> all it was great fun for us and the locals alike. JR even reckons it helped our cricket when we got back<br />

because we had played on four or five straight days and ended up back in the city tired but with our skills sharpened.<br />

7


The tours also helped players from different grades get to know each out on the road. The country players who<br />

joined the club tended to get on well pretty quickly because <strong>of</strong> their shared experiences growing up in the bush. Many<br />

lived together in Uni colleges or in share houses around the eastern suburbs, and a strong sense <strong>of</strong> community quickly<br />

developed at the club. The country guys played first for fun and that attitude filtered through to everyone else. We<br />

were able to surprise and impress a lot <strong>of</strong> other clubs because we appeared to be a bunch <strong>of</strong> carefree larrikins but we<br />

could also apply ourselves on the field and play tough and successful cricket. And, <strong>of</strong> course, we had<br />

inherited a history <strong>of</strong> success from the original club that had dominated the shires competition.<br />

A local looks after Greg Watson and Ge<strong>of</strong>f Kirkwood at the bar in Griffith, 78-79.<br />

While the influence <strong>of</strong> the country cricketers was pr<strong>of</strong>ound, the city provided its own rich cast <strong>of</strong> characters. We<br />

probably all have different memories <strong>of</strong> the wonderfully idiosyncratic Pym brothers, John and Dick, Paddy Grattan-<br />

Smith, John (JB) Barford and Nev Jansson. And who, among those who knew and played alongside Ge<strong>of</strong>f Kirkwood,<br />

do not feel an enormous sense <strong>of</strong> loss at his passing. Fantastic supporters such as Bob (Snake) Patterson and Dave<br />

Lemon played their part, along with so many others, in shaping the club. The carefree summers <strong>of</strong> the 1970s are a<br />

lifetime away, yet memories <strong>of</strong> the great characters <strong>of</strong> the era remain with us today.<br />

A wet wicket at Wagga. Behind JR are from left:<br />

Greg Watson, Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson, Peter Jourdain and<br />

John's younger brother, the late Derek.<br />

8


A typical country tour team in the mid-70s, with players <strong>of</strong> all standards and hairstyles.<br />

four club legends<br />

from the bush<br />

Greg<br />

Livingstone<br />

Albury<br />

Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson<br />

Wagga Wagga<br />

Jim Robson<br />

Goulburn<br />

Jim Dixon<br />

Goulburn<br />

9


Talent<br />

to Burn<br />

Poidevin-Gray<br />

1976-77<br />

Jim Robson, the P-G captain, could not improve on his<br />

perceptive original report on the club’s first major trophy.<br />

So here it is, straight from the 76-77 annual report.<br />

10


Back: Nigel Perger, Neville Jansson, Dave Meagher, Greg Livingstone, Ge<strong>of</strong>f Kirkwood, Mick Watt, John<br />

Carmichael. Front: Peter Jourdain, Mick Bryce, Jim Robson (c), Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson, Steve Howard.<br />

11


THE TEAM<br />

by JIM ROBSON & ROGER MARCH<br />

Greg Livingstone - young, stylish, free-flowing opening batsman. Livo batted so well in PG he<br />

was promoted from fourths to firsts. He was fluent in every innings. I still remember JR ringing<br />

me in Goulburn to say Livo's promotion was on the cards. Formed a perfect opening combo with<br />

Mick Watt. Livo was also quite a drinker in those merry days.<br />

Mick Watt - Fiery would do anything for his team to prevent the middle order facing the new<br />

ball. If in doubt he would take a ball to the body - if Matt Hayden had adopted this approach the<br />

2005 Ashes would have been ours. Fiery was the ultimate gutsy team player.<br />

Neville Jansson - a very accomplished batsman who retired far too early from grade cricket.<br />

With his enthusiasm he was crucial to our success. Great spirit and an outstanding contributor on<br />

the social scene.<br />

Dave Meagher - GPS boy who didn't appear to be one. He was the same as the rest <strong>of</strong> us - his<br />

dress sense was poor and his grammar no better than that <strong>of</strong> a lad from Albury or Wagga. As well<br />

as his talent with the bat he was blisteringly fast across the outfield. No wonder he won the 100m<br />

grade sprint and a trip to China.<br />

Peter Jourdain - Jacky Jourdain, despite using a size 4 Pakistan bat performed strongly in the<br />

middle order. His shots through mid-wicket were unrivalled in cricket throughout Sydney and led<br />

to numerous victories in single and double wicket contests.<br />

Jim Robson - the tall, charismatic country boy with the cheeky grin, quick wit and natural talent.<br />

Perpetual energy on the field, always shuffling and fidgety. The senior player, he brought all<br />

the psychological depth he'd learned watching the great St George league teams <strong>of</strong> his youth to the<br />

leadership <strong>of</strong> this talented bunch. An outstanding motivational speaker - see Henry's summary at<br />

the end <strong>of</strong> this booklet - middle-order batsman and fine slip fieldsman. Handy <strong>of</strong>fie - in the nets.<br />

Ge<strong>of</strong>f Kirkwood - leg-spinning all-rounder from Revesby. Knew more about life than the rest <strong>of</strong><br />

us. Full <strong>of</strong> surprises. One day he'd be in a restaurant with Henry Bl<strong>of</strong>eld, another in a Griffith pub<br />

discussing business with the locals. His top spinners, as Botham and Randall found out in<br />

Adelaide, were from the top shelf.<br />

Kirkie looks good on the dance floor.<br />

John Carmichael - like Kirkie, Chemical was a worldy character from Crookwell who could converse<br />

on any topic. Jack knew the game as well as anyone I met, and so he should, considering the<br />

number <strong>of</strong> days he missed Uni to visit the SCG. I'll never forget the day he orchestrated 10 <strong>of</strong> us to<br />

get into the Members Bar on only three badges.<br />

Steve Howard - very reliable and enthusiastic keeper. He was another to give the game up far<br />

too young - probably because there was no money in it in the 70s. He turned his life into the<br />

biggest challenge <strong>of</strong> all, school teaching. He had to take thunderbolts from our three quicks, Henry<br />

Lawson, Nigel Perger and Mick Bryce.<br />

Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson - Henry was sensational in this series. It seems like yesterday that I was standing<br />

deep in slips at the SCG No.2 watching him destroy Cumberland in that final. I think that was the<br />

day we realised he really was something special.<br />

13


Nigel Perger - Big Joel was a real talent with genuine pace and bounce. He was a natural storyteller, AFL footballer and Shalom<br />

basketballer who could do anything with a shiny five and a half ounces in his hand. Who will forget our throwing competition after<br />

the final, and a few beers, with Nige throwing balls from the middle <strong>of</strong> the SCG into the Members Enclosure.<br />

Mick Bryce - wore a "Gulgong" style belt to hold his creams up, and was a terrific bowler who complemented the other two. He<br />

had the ability to be quick and dangerous when conditions suited, or he could do the hack work when needed.<br />

Roger March - Groucho did everything a good manager needed to do: bring the beer. He was not required to get taxis, physios,<br />

press or women for the team like a modern manager. His job was so easy and he was so good at it I can't work out why he retired<br />

after the P-G win. A passionate man who gave his team great guidance.<br />

Livo plays it by the book. P-G final, SCG No.2.<br />

KIRKIE DOES THE WASHING<br />

We all knew that Kirkie bowled a non-turning leggie but didn't realise that the reverse action also<br />

applied to his laundry. I arrived at Sydney Uni for the first P-G match in 76-77 in my sparking whites<br />

expecting to man the drinks tray. Kirkie arrived in torn t-shirt and boardies to find that he hadn't<br />

packed match attire <strong>of</strong> any hue. He opted for mine and after a successful stint in the field insisted on<br />

washing them. The drinks tray (KB Kegs courtesy <strong>of</strong> R March) had left me in no condition to refuse.<br />

Kirkie was true to his word: he did launder them - after a fashion; what he washed them with or in<br />

will remain a mystery as they came back looking like one <strong>of</strong> the Black Caps' early ODI uniforms. Only<br />

a solid eight weeks by Mum in the laundry allowed me to return to the drinks duties in suitable attire<br />

for the SCG final.<br />

John Carmichael<br />

14


POIDEVIN-GRAY FINAL<br />

1976-77<br />

SCG No. 2<br />

UNIVERSITY OF NSW – 1st Innings<br />

M. WATT ………………………………………………… 6<br />

G. LIVINGSTONE ………………………………………………… 55<br />

N. JANSSON ………………………………………………… 11<br />

J. ROBSON ………………………………………………… 78<br />

N. PERGER ………………………………………………… 1<br />

G. KIRKWOOD ………………………………………………… 0<br />

P. JOURDAIN ………………………………………………… 25<br />

D. MEAGHER ………………………………………………… 23<br />

S. HOWARD ………………………………………………… 4<br />

G LAWSON ………………………………………………… 21<br />

M. BRYCE ………………………………………………… 0<br />

Sundries ………………………………………………… 26<br />

TOTAL ………………………………………………… 250<br />

CENTRAL CUMBERLAND – 1st Innings<br />

G. LANGTON c Howard b Lawson ………….…….….. 2<br />

G. McCULLOUGH b Lawson .....……….…….… 12<br />

D. MOLESWORTH c Watt b Robson .....……….…….… 33<br />

M. SARGENT c Howard b Lawson .....……….…….… 5<br />

P. MATTHEWS c Howard b Lawson ....……….…….… 8<br />

G. MATTHEWS c Robson b Lawson .....……….…….… 0<br />

M. STANEJEVIC c Howard b Lawson .....……….…….… 10<br />

D. PARKER lbw b Kirkwood .....……….…….… 5<br />

P. BUGG b Lawson .....……….…….… 26<br />

I. MONAGHAN c Kirkwood b Robson .....……….…….… 9<br />

M. ROLLS not out .....……….…….… 0<br />

Sundries .....……….…….… 15<br />

TOTAL .....……….…….… 125<br />

BOWLING LAWSON 7-43<br />

BRYCE 0-11<br />

PERGER 0-35<br />

KIRKWOOD 1-12<br />

ROBSON 2-9<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NSW won on 1st Innings by 125 runs<br />

STATISTICS<br />

1976-77<br />

BATTING M INN. N.O. H.S. AGG. AVE. 50s C/S<br />

J. Robson 5 5 3 89 261 130.5 2 5<br />

G. Livingstone 5 5 0 74 234 46.8 3 2<br />

N. Jansson 5 6 1 68 165 35 1 1<br />

M. Watt 5 6 1 56 136 17.2 1 4<br />

G. Lawson 5 2 1 35 56 56 1<br />

S. Howard 5 4 2 47* 56 28 8/1<br />

G. Kirkwood 5 4 0 48 68 17 3<br />

P. Jourdain 5 3 0 25 36 12 0<br />

D. Meagher 5 3 0 23 31 10.33 1<br />

N. Perger 4 2 1 1 1 1 0<br />

M. Bryce5 1 0 0 0 - 4<br />

J. Carmichael 1 0 - - - - 0<br />

15


BOWLING OVERS MAIDENS WICKETS RUNS AVERAGE<br />

G. Lawson 88.7 23 23 246 10.69<br />

G. Kirkwood 57 8 8 126 15.75<br />

M. Bryce 42 7 6 130 21.66<br />

N. Perger 52 15 5 131 26.2<br />

G. Livingstone 9 0 3 37 12.33<br />

J. Robson 7.4 0 2 56 28<br />

M. Watt 1 0 0 6 -<br />

P. Jourdain 1<br />

SUMMARY<br />

Runs for = 1119, Wickets Lost = 32, Average = 34.99<br />

Runs Against = 834, Wickets taken = 49, Average = 17.01<br />

RESULTS<br />

RD. OPPONENT UNSW OPPOSITION RES. PTS<br />

1 Sydney <strong>University</strong> 7/227 dec 103, 7/25 W1 6<br />

2 Sydney 4/124 dec 122, 1/59 W1 12<br />

3 Western Suburbs 3/248 dec 2/125 D 12<br />

Semi St George 8/230 9/275 dec D<br />

Final Cumberland 250, 0/40 125 W1<br />

16


The<br />

Big Sting<br />

First Grade<br />

1976-77<br />

It took UNSWCC a mere four seasons to go from the top <strong>of</strong> the shires competition to the top <strong>of</strong><br />

the grade competition. And the person who deserves more credit than anyone else for that<br />

achievement is John Rogers, brilliant captain, outstanding motivator. Here is his report from<br />

the yearbook on that amazing first grade premiership in 1976-77.<br />

17


The final XI. Back: Mark Ray, Jim Robson, Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson, Greg Watson, Steve Campbell, Greg Livingstone.<br />

Front: Paddy Grattan-Smith, Chris Chapman, John Rogers (c), Jim O’Brien, Mick Watt.<br />

18


JR heads for the pavilion with the Belvedere Cup in the bag.<br />

20


The Team<br />

By Paddy Grattan-Smith<br />

Author's note: I apologise for what I have forgotten and for what is wrong. Sé seo mo scéal,<br />

'smá tá bréag ann, bíodh mar sin. (This is my story and if there is a lie in it - let it be).<br />

Mick Watt - Mick was the phlegmatic and younger redhead <strong>of</strong> the team. Opening the batting,<br />

Fiery made 330 runs at 17 in conditions that suited the many good fast bowlers in the comp. Mick<br />

saw it as his duty to get the shine <strong>of</strong>f the ball and wear down the opposition quicks. Unflinching,<br />

this was done with bat or body. From the first ball <strong>of</strong> the innings the opposition were made aware<br />

that there was going to be a fight all the way. Felled by a nasty blow to the head from a Lennie<br />

Pascoe bouncer with the new ball in the seconds innings <strong>of</strong> the semi-final, Fiery made a valuable<br />

25 in an opening stand <strong>of</strong> 43 in the final the next week.<br />

Mark Ray - Mark's performances over the season were extraordinary. He scored 608 runs at 30,<br />

took 43 wickets at 16 and held 10 catches. In the semi he scored 66 and took 2-25, and in the final<br />

35 and 2-52. In a team exalting in athletic prowess and energetic display, Mark's cricket was in<br />

contrast, geometric and minimalist. In the slips, he would stir from a reptilian slumber to take a<br />

screaming catch with the least possible movement. Deliveries from Pascoe or Roberts were met<br />

with a slight swivel and then sent hurtling under their own momentum from his eyebrows to the<br />

square leg fence. Mark bowled classic left-arm orthodox spin with confusing drift and sharp turn.<br />

His arm ball left many batsmen feeling gently violated.<br />

Jim Robson - Jungle scored 369 runs at 22 and took nine catches. His best innings was 97 on a<br />

difficult wicket at Gordon where the next highest score was 23 by his captain. Jim has long complained<br />

that his relatively low averages from that time were the result <strong>of</strong> poorly prepared pitches.<br />

The real reason was that he needed glasses but refused to wear them. Stubbornly, he turned this<br />

handicap into a strength, playing few shots from the front foot but specialising in the back-cut as<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten he didn't see the ball until it was almost past him. Under the circumstances his slip-fielding<br />

JR, far left, leads the firsts onto the field in the final at Petersham Oval.<br />

was astonishing and cannot be explained by modern scientific methods. Apparently relying on a<br />

strong sense <strong>of</strong> smell, acute hearing and instinct he would suddenly hurl himself full-length and<br />

accurately grasp the leather object that he could only sense was somewhere in his vicinity. Jim was<br />

always full <strong>of</strong> joy and did much for team morale.<br />

John Rogers - although the team was full <strong>of</strong> talent, there would have been no premiership without<br />

JR. He scored 287 runs at 19 and took 12 catches. His energy was consumed in bringing the<br />

best out <strong>of</strong> the team and to a degree this affected his batting but he scored a very useful 27 in the<br />

semi-final. JR brought a confidence that came from his four premierships with St George and his<br />

experience playing state cricket. Under his tireless encouragement, the team gradually realised it<br />

22


could take on anyone. The season before, he played an innings <strong>of</strong> great elegance in a match against<br />

Western Suburbs where he kept driving past Bobby Simpson and running four. The message was<br />

always that if we understood and enjoyed the game, we could win. A superb all-round ball player,<br />

his fielding at short-leg and in the vital positions square <strong>of</strong> the wicket set the standard for the<br />

team.<br />

Chris Chapman - <strong>of</strong> impeccable breeding, patrician bearing and the most handsome member <strong>of</strong><br />

the team, Chappo let none <strong>of</strong> these disabilities interfere with his game but approached the toughest<br />

contests with a steely resolve. He scored 428 runs at 25 and took 12 catches. In the semi-final<br />

he made 46 against a rampaging Pascoe and scored 21 in the final. When batting, Chris believed in<br />

never taking a backward step. On the cover <strong>of</strong> the 1976-77 annual report is a typical photograph <strong>of</strong><br />

him, left elbow pointing to the sky, playing a classic back foot defensive shot from the front foot.<br />

He relied on powerful drives and viewed cross-bat shots as undignified. With his speed and large<br />

safe hands, he excelled in the gully or the outfield. In the final, when Stuart Gardner dobbed Mark<br />

to square leg and Chris started moving to the ball, all knew the game was won.<br />

Jock Martel - Jock scored 183 runs at 12 and took nine catches. At his best he was one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

most dangerous batsmen in the competition. Stocky and with lightening reflexes, he scored<br />

extremely rapidly using a wide array <strong>of</strong> orthodox and unconventional shots. In an era <strong>of</strong> generally<br />

conservative batsmanship he found no problem with straight-driving a six in the opening over <strong>of</strong><br />

an innings. He took particular delight in smacking fast bowlers all over the ground but took<br />

umbrage at any suggestion he might be a slogger. He was another great fieldsman with safe hands.<br />

Extremely fast <strong>of</strong>f the mark, he had a propensity for the unexpected. His sudden change <strong>of</strong> direction<br />

and accurate throwing at speed <strong>of</strong>ten surprised the non-striker. Jock did not have his best<br />

season but his contribution over the then four-year history <strong>of</strong> the team was immeasurable.<br />

Greg Livingstone - In an inspired act <strong>of</strong> selection, Greg was promoted from fifth grade where he<br />

averaged six, to play in the last three matches <strong>of</strong> the season. He scored 42 (ro), 25 and 61 (nine<br />

fours and a six). There was a naïve freedom in his play - the short ball was there to be pulled and<br />

the over-pitched to be driven. Any suspicion that his strength was his incomprehension was disproved<br />

in the final. With the team 6-107 and his score 0, he watchfully played maiden after maiden<br />

and finally it was the hardened campaigner David Chardon who blinked. A slower ball was met<br />

on the full and sent to the fence. Brian Riley hurled his cap into the turf and Livo was away. Later<br />

in the innings, he took on Peter Maloney, a state player that year, scoring 6, 4, 4 in one over, pull<br />

shots cracking into the fence. It is stating the obvious that without the 110-run O'Brien-<br />

Livingstone partnership, the game would have ended early. Yet another athletic fielder who<br />

seemed to be able to catch anything, Greg was fast and had a strong left-arm throw.<br />

Jimmy O'Brien - the wicket-keeper. In 13 matches he took 24 catches and made one stumping.<br />

He also scored 188 runs at 21, putting him fourth in the batting averages. Nimble and with the<br />

poise and balance <strong>of</strong> a gymnast, behind the stumps he was uncomplicated efficiency. He just<br />

caught the ball with two hands whenever it was possible. There was no diving for the audience, no<br />

histrionics. His 75 (11 fours) in the final turned the game when all seemed lost and we faced the<br />

grim prospect <strong>of</strong> having to hear from Riles how well we had done to get that far. It was his highest<br />

grade score and in that setting a fabulous innings. At a time when psychological warfare was highly<br />

developed, Jimmy had an ability to counter and unsettle the tough-men and sledgers <strong>of</strong> the<br />

opposition with unexpectedly subtle asides and infuriating body language.<br />

Greg Watson - Greg scored 248 runs at 18, took 33 wickets at 17 and held seven catches. His<br />

apparently benign manner disguised a strong competitive streak that only came to notice at such<br />

times as when he was given hair tonic to drink by a fellow fast-bowler. Tall, he bowled quickly and<br />

with sustained accuracy. He mainly moved the ball in through the air and away <strong>of</strong>f the wicket.<br />

There was no relief, Gulgong was at the batsman all the time. His figures <strong>of</strong> 3-49 were the best in<br />

the final and he dismissed Ray Phillips, the top scorer for Petersham. He was a natural striker <strong>of</strong><br />

the ball who had topped the batting averages the previous year. He scored 34 against Western<br />

Suburbs in the last game before the semi-final, a ‘must-win’ game which was won by 14 runs. He<br />

was a sound yet undemonstrative fieldsman.<br />

Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson - Ge<strong>of</strong>f was in his first season in Sydney and all the signs <strong>of</strong> the greatness to come<br />

were evident. He took 26 wickets at 20, helped to win the final with his batting and held five<br />

catches. Tall but willowy with real strength to come in later seasons, Henry was fast with a dangerous<br />

outswinger and threatening bouncer. In the final, after supporting Jimmy O'Brien, he fearlessly<br />

hit David Jurd for three sixes in one over. His 38 was a decisive score in a game won by nine<br />

runs. After the earlier collapse and the O'Brien-Livingstone ‘miracle’, it gave the team tremendous<br />

momentum. When the game was in the balance, he was involved in the run-out <strong>of</strong> Greg<br />

Hartshorne and bowled Dave Chardon, eliminating two tough and experienced campaigners. As<br />

well as his cricket ability, Ge<strong>of</strong>f's commitment to the team and the club was obvious. That he has<br />

sustained this for 30 years and avoided being a ‘celebrity’ is a tribute to him as a person.<br />

23


Paul Deegan - Tacho played three matches while Jimmy was away and took five catches.<br />

Another lively and athletic country boy, he had few opportunities with the bat but was good<br />

enough to score a century in second grade during the season. A tremendous team man.<br />

Richard Pym - Dick sent down the first ball <strong>of</strong> the season and bowled Rick McCosker, setting<br />

the tone for what was to come. He took 16 wickets at 26, and top-scored against St George with<br />

35no in a total <strong>of</strong> 147. In a strong bowling attack, Dick had limited opportunities. Lacking the<br />

height <strong>of</strong> Henry and Gulgong, he possessed a natural hatred <strong>of</strong> all batsmen and was extremely belligerent,<br />

hurling bumpers and abuse at them from behind bulging baby-blue eyes. At times there<br />

was a suspicion <strong>of</strong> a method in his madness and the possibility that some <strong>of</strong> his outburst were<br />

attacks <strong>of</strong> sham-rage. In the match against Gordon with nine wickets down and four to win, the<br />

prospect <strong>of</strong> Dick's scything blade dispatching a leg-break onto the railway track seemed to intimidate<br />

Mick Falk into sending down two successive arm-balls. Both went down the leg-side past<br />

both Dick and Mitchell Cox, the keeper, for two runs and another must-win game was ours. Dick<br />

also played state baseball and had a very strong arm. Dick was <strong>of</strong>ten wild but always held the<br />

benefit <strong>of</strong> the team as his priority.<br />

Steve Campbell - Steve played the last two matches. In an outstanding debut in the semi-final<br />

he took 4-30 and delivered the coup de grace to the bemused, becalmed and bewildered<br />

Bankstown batsmen. In the final he took the catch that ended the innings <strong>of</strong> Ray Phillips and was<br />

part <strong>of</strong> the run-out <strong>of</strong> Greg Hartshorne. As against Livo, whose selection sprung from supreme<br />

optimism and a belief in his potential, Steve had the performances to justify his selection after taking<br />

45 wickets at 15 in second grade with his heavy-dipping, big-turning leg spinners. Steve was<br />

another sound fieldsman and competent batsmen who remained not out in his two innings.<br />

Paddy Grattan-Smith - accurately described by his younger brother as having no natural ability<br />

but a lot <strong>of</strong> determination, Paddy reached his personal playing peak in the last three matches, taking<br />

7-54, 3-44 and 3-63 with his brisk, accurate <strong>of</strong>f-spinners. Over the season he took 44 wickets<br />

at 16 and held six catches. His bowling <strong>of</strong> Brian Riley for 48 in the final enabled his teammates<br />

and every UNSWCC supporter to share a communal, spiritual orgasm. His batting was distinguished<br />

by being outsmarted by Len Pascoe in the semi-final and falling to a "mankad" in the<br />

final. (Not far behind Dick Pym in eccentricity and Jungle in theories. Ed.)<br />

The Semi-Final v Bankstown<br />

Village Green<br />

It's a shock to us to find banners hanging from the windows <strong>of</strong> the colleges ("Pascoe you Wog!" doesn't make us<br />

feel too good.). And it's the first time we've seen a crowd <strong>of</strong> spectators around the ground - which changes the atmosphere<br />

<strong>of</strong> the VG entirely.<br />

This turns out to be one <strong>of</strong> the best games <strong>of</strong> cricket I ever played in. The presence <strong>of</strong> Lennie Pascoe alone gives it<br />

the feeling <strong>of</strong> a Test match. Of all the genuinely quick bowlers I ever saw - and I've seen, live, all the best since<br />

Lindwall and Miller - Pascoe is the most ferocious - an assassin - the most determined to attack the batsman's head<br />

and body first before worrying about getting him out. And here he is in his prime - the scourge <strong>of</strong> batsman around<br />

the country and in that very week chosen for the 1977 Ashes tour - his first national call-up. Thommo is faster, but<br />

Pascoe is the more frightening - and I'd faced them both a few times in the preceding years.<br />

Bankstown have never won a first-grade premiership, and even though Thommo has gone to Queensland by this<br />

stage, they have another good quick in Graham Pitty, a left-armer. This is the year they reckon they will win the flag.<br />

We win the toss and bat (not without a few palpitations) and Mick Watt and Mark get us to 30 when Mick and<br />

then Jungle get out. It's crunch time for me, going in at No.4. I just have to bury a few demons with Lennie. As the<br />

only batsman with any real experience in the side, if I can't hang around I can't expect our young middle order to<br />

have much chance against Lennie in those unhelmeted days.<br />

Up the other end Mark is looking comfortable in his usual minimalist, unflustered style, nudging Lennie <strong>of</strong>f his<br />

body for ones and twos, and swerving out <strong>of</strong> the way the rest <strong>of</strong> the time. My abiding memory is that for over after<br />

over, I just camp on the back foot, fending ball after ball <strong>of</strong>f my nose. In the process I got the best sledge <strong>of</strong> my career<br />

- in the days when sledging is rare. Having seen him <strong>of</strong>f for another over from the southern end and feeling pretty<br />

pleased with myself, Lennie walks past me and says: "Rogers, you xxxx, you've got a yellow stripe painted all the way<br />

down your back!"<br />

24


A few overs later - with the score at 2-106, he bowls a short one outside <strong>of</strong>f stump that looks inviting. For the first<br />

time I launch into a backfoot drive, hit it in the middle and am stunned to see it plucked out <strong>of</strong> the air at short mid<strong>of</strong>f<br />

by Pitty. Shortly after, when Pascoe takes his first breather, Mark gets out to left-hand spinner Radanovic. Mark's<br />

66 turns out to be a match-winning innings.<br />

Then Chappo plays one <strong>of</strong> his best digs up to then, and with the young colt Livo puts on 44. At the death, Paddy,<br />

Henry and Steve Campbell guts out 20 against Pascoe with the second new ball. It seems like he's bowled all day at<br />

the same pace - the equivalent <strong>of</strong> 33 6-ball overs taking 7-76. His ferocious attitude makes for an electric atmosphere,<br />

out on the pitch and in the Cracknell. It seems like it's Pascoe v UNSWCC. It's intense pressure all day from his end -<br />

technically, physically and verbally. So for us to get to 214 is a fantastic effort.<br />

Their turn to bat. Enter Steve Small with the flashing three-pound blade, and at stumps they're 0-30 odd from<br />

about five overs. They continue the same way the next morning. Roaring along at 0-66 they look set and we're in<br />

trouble. On comes Paddy Grattan-Smith to apply the brakes and soon it's goodbye Smallie, tied down, frustrated and<br />

finally caught at slip by Jungle.<br />

Lennie Pascoe hurls another one down to JR during the semi-final at the Village Green.<br />

From then on for 60 8-ball overs, it's one <strong>of</strong> the best experiences a captain can have - three quality spinners going<br />

at less than two an over, supported by a stunning fielding effort. Henry sprints 30 metres from deepish mid-on<br />

towards mid-<strong>of</strong>f to dive and catch the keeper Andrews - breathtaking stuff. Leggie Steve Campbell takes three quick<br />

wickets, two with his flipper, and we've broken them apart. Then, right on tea, at nine down, Pascoe belts Mark high<br />

towards the practice wickets, and Livo sprints 40 metres from backward square to take it over his head as nonchalantly<br />

as you could wish to see. We're ahead on the 1st inning by 58.<br />

There's about an hour's play left in the match. All over Not on your Nellie. Some <strong>of</strong> our guys are expecting the<br />

umpires to come into the dressingroom any minute and say Bankstown have called it <strong>of</strong>f. But before Andrew<br />

'Splinter' McMaster can come in with the first case <strong>of</strong> beer, in comes Dion Bourne, Bankstown's skipper. "Lennie<br />

wants a bit more <strong>of</strong> a bowl before he goes to England, so you can have another bat," he says.<br />

If Pascoe was on fire in the first dig, he's enraged now. Soon the ball rebounds high from Mick Watt's head over<br />

the keeper and Mick has to be helped <strong>of</strong>f with blood all over the place. Jungle comes out knowing Lennie wants more<br />

blood not just more bowling. First ball Jungle ends up on the ground after ducking one that just clears the bails. In<br />

his quiet way Mark is as fired up as Lennie. He launches into the big quick - pulls, cuts, hooks - the lot. Lennie is<br />

steaming in and Mark is waiting for him on the back foot. Lennie has 0 for 35 <strong>of</strong>f five overs. When Mark gets out to<br />

Graham Thorpe in the 10th over for a quick 37, we're 110 in front and it's starting to drizzle. Bankstown call it quits -<br />

as if out <strong>of</strong> respect to Mark. He and Lennie have words as they walk <strong>of</strong>f.<br />

A footnote: Big Bob Lamaro, who went on to play second row for the Waratahs, left his mark on the Sam Cracknell<br />

with a split in the mirror <strong>of</strong> change-room no.2 - from a head-butt - so distraught was he after being caught at short<br />

backward square <strong>of</strong>f Paddy, having been rendered strokeless for a long period. On my last visit in the <strong>New</strong> Year, I was<br />

saddened to see the mirror had disappeared in the refurbishment. For a long time it was a talisman <strong>of</strong> our victory.<br />

John Rogers<br />

25


FIRST GRADE SEMI FINAL 1976-77<br />

Village Green<br />

UNIVERSITY OF NSW - 1st Innings<br />

M. WATT c K. Thorpe b Pascoe ……………………… 6<br />

M. RAY c Andrews b Radanovic ……………………… 66<br />

J. ROBSON lbw b Pascoe ……………………… 0<br />

J. ROGERS c Pitty b Pascoe ……………………… 27<br />

C. CHAPMAN c McDonald b Pascoe ……………………… 46<br />

G. LIVINGSTONE St Andrews b Thorpe ……………………… 25<br />

G. WATSON b Pitty ……………………… 12<br />

J. O'BRIEN c Small b Pascoe ……………………… 0<br />

P. GRATTAN-SMITH b Pascoe ……………………… 4<br />

G LAWSON c Small b Pascoe ……………………… 9<br />

S. CAMPBELL not out ……………………… 6<br />

Sundries ……………………… 13<br />

TOTAL ……………………… 214<br />

BOWLING PASCOE 7-76<br />

PITTY 1-56<br />

LAMARO 0-36<br />

RADANOVIC 1-24<br />

THORPE 1-9<br />

Batting Time 357 minutes; Overs 79.2<br />

BANKSTOWN - 1st Innings<br />

S. SMALL c Robson b Grattan-Smith ………………… . 46<br />

T. McDONALD b Ray ……………………… 13<br />

G. THORPE c Watt b Grattan-Smith ……………………… 8<br />

R. VIDLER lbw b Watson ……………………… 25<br />

K. THORPE lbw b Campbell ……………………… 1<br />

D. BOURNE lbw b Campbell ……………………… 12<br />

R. LAMARO c Rogers b Grattan-Smith ...…………………… 9<br />

L. ANDREWS c Lawson b Campbell ……………………… 20<br />

G. PITTY c Ray b Campbell ……………………… 9<br />

L. PASCOE c Livingstone b Ray ……………………… 0<br />

A. RADANOVIC not out ……………………… 4<br />

Sundries ……………………… 9<br />

TOTAL ……………………… 156<br />

BOWLING WATSON 1-10<br />

LAWSON 0-38<br />

RAY 2-25<br />

G-SMITH 3-44<br />

CAMPBELL 3-56<br />

Batting Time 286 minutes; Overs 74.4<br />

UNIVERSITY OF NSW - 2nd Innings<br />

M. WATT Retired hurt ……………………… 0<br />

M. RAY c McDonald b Thorpe ……………………… 37<br />

J. ROBSON Not out ……………………… 13<br />

Sundries ……………………… 3<br />

TOTAL One wicket for ……………………… 53<br />

BOWLING PASCOE 0-35<br />

PITTY 0-15<br />

G. THORPE 1-0<br />

Batting Time 50 minutes; Overs 15.1<br />

Rain stopped play at 4.09pm<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NSW won on 1st Innings<br />

26


The Final v Petersham<br />

Petersham Oval<br />

Water filling the stump holes has<br />

the <strong>Wales</strong> skipper worried as we're<br />

far more confident batting first.<br />

Hoping to lose the toss and still<br />

undecided, our call is correct and,<br />

avoiding the s<strong>of</strong>t option, we take<br />

the risk. We're batting.<br />

"Ewe Bewdy <strong>Wales</strong>" and "<strong>Wales</strong><br />

to Win" signs are prominent and a<br />

reassuring yell from Nev Jansson<br />

bellows across the ground: "I'm<br />

here boys!"<br />

Mark and Mick open against<br />

their best bowlers, Chardon and<br />

Hartshorne, and there are short<br />

balls aplenty with Mick hit on the<br />

shoulder time and again. Mark suddenly<br />

pulls Chardon for four and<br />

we settle. Mark goes with the score<br />

on 45 and Petersham get on top as<br />

our batsmen fall one by one. We<br />

lose our sixth wicket at 107 and<br />

with keeper Jim O'Brien's entry to<br />

join greenhorn Livo, we're really up<br />

against it.<br />

Opposing skipper Brian Riley is<br />

in full verbal flow, taunting Livo:<br />

"Not P-G now, Sonny. You're in the<br />

big time." He's giving every batsman<br />

a send-<strong>of</strong>f, and trying to annoy<br />

us by holding up play and changing<br />

the field all the time.<br />

Slowly, carefully, Livo and<br />

Jimmy dig in. On comes leg-spinner<br />

Maloney, and after an over or<br />

A preview <strong>of</strong> the final in the Sydney daily press.<br />

two <strong>of</strong> sighters, Livo launches into<br />

him, belting the ball through short-leg, past Riley and over mid-wicket or 6, 4, 4. Now the partnership develops further<br />

when Jim sweeps and cuts regularly, and then launches into his rarely seen, big <strong>of</strong>f-drive. The new ball arrives<br />

and runs come even more quickly. Eventually both are bowled - Livo for 61 and Jimmy for 75 - and when Paddy is<br />

amazingly "mankaded", we are nine down with a middling score <strong>of</strong> 240 with just Henry and Steve Campbell left.<br />

Off-spinner Jurd has three for but Henry decides it's time to attack. He hits Jurd for three sixes, for 28 in one<br />

over, and by the time he's bowled for 38 we've posted a good score <strong>of</strong> 284. A great recovery.<br />

Sunday dawns with pictures <strong>of</strong> Livo and Jimmy all over the papers, but out on the field Petes show what a tough<br />

side they are. Twice, as we begin to despair, Paddy breaks through to bowl first Goodman and then Sharp. But<br />

Petersham look strong and, on a hot day and a dry, placid wicket which is giving little turn to our spinners, are well<br />

on top at lunch at 2-120, with future Queensland batsman-keeper Ray Phillips and state batsman Graeme Hughes<br />

well set.<br />

As the lunchbreak draws to a close, it becomes clear that our tiring attack needs an early wicket and skipper<br />

Rogers exhorts strike bowler Watson for a big three overs after lunch. Near the end <strong>of</strong> the third over, with Gulgong<br />

just about spent, he forces Phillips to fend in the air and Steve Campbell rushes in and dives to take a fine catch.<br />

27


In comes Riley and our hopes <strong>of</strong> staying in the game are quickly deflated as he and Hughes set about our bowlers<br />

and power steadily towards 200. The fielding is good, Chappo making one spectacular save as had Henry before<br />

lunch, and runs come slowly but inexorably. Livo dislocates a finger and Paddy tries to jerk it back but without success<br />

and calls for a doctor. Pymmy comes on as a replacement.<br />

Riley is in his element, dominating proceedings<br />

as he demands cars be moved to<br />

avoid reflection, a boy be moved from under<br />

the sightscreen, twelfth man Pymmy moved<br />

from the covers because <strong>of</strong> his baseball arm.<br />

Riles shouts ‘thanks for coming’ to Chappo<br />

when he misfields and gives up a single, and<br />

adds insult to injury by patting Paddy, the<br />

bowler, on the back.<br />

The many students in the crowd are firing<br />

up at Riles and he's loving it. At 3-195,<br />

Hughes cuts at Mark and gets a thick bottom<br />

edge and the ball lodges in Jim's pad. Our<br />

hopes rise again. As Hughes marches <strong>of</strong>f, JR<br />

calls on Terry Buddin to get the new ball<br />

from his bag in the dressing room.<br />

A few minutes later, Paddy unexpectedly<br />

gets one through Riley and he is bowled! As<br />

the Uni boys celebrate, with Mark giving<br />

Riley a quiet but well-deserved send-<strong>of</strong>f,<br />

Riles storms <strong>of</strong>f. Meeting Terry on the way<br />

out with the new ball, Riles demands to<br />

know what he is doing.<br />

Brian Riley and John Rogers at the toss.<br />

'Mate, is there anything more we can do for you,' Terry politely asks the Petes captain. 'I reckon the best thing is<br />

we go to council and have the whole area rezoned.'<br />

Riles is speechless. He's never been sledged like that before. Terry finds it all very amusing. As he gets to the fence<br />

Riles brandishes his bat and slams the gate, generating a storm <strong>of</strong> booing and cat-calling. From the first-floor balcony<br />

<strong>of</strong> the pavilion, Betty Ray, Mark's mum, leans over and calls down: ‘Get <strong>of</strong>f, Riley. The game can do without your<br />

sort.' Riles waves his batting glove at her and disappears into the dressing room. What an atmosphere.<br />

Livo sends Riles scurrying for cover.<br />

Soon after we take the second new ball. Just three overs till tea. Midway through the first <strong>of</strong> those three overs<br />

Gulgong pulls up with cramp. All sorts <strong>of</strong> amateurish remedies are tried, and eventually JR sends him for a test jog<br />

down to the sightscreen and back. As he limps back, JR calls for a replacement. Gritting his teeth, Gulgong is having<br />

none <strong>of</strong> that and calls for the ball. He finishes the over and says he's right to bowl another, the last one before tea. He<br />

bowls a no-ball and on the ninth delivery he gets one to lift and move away <strong>of</strong>f the seam. John Bain, feeling the pressure,<br />

flashes at it and is caught behind. It's 6-220 - 64 needed and the match in the balance.<br />

Greg Hartshorne is a fine batsman and his long-term pace bowling colleague Dave Chardon is no mug. They start<br />

cautiously. Suddenly it is chaos as Hartshorne plays Henry to square leg and Chardon sets <strong>of</strong>f for the run but<br />

28


Hartshorne hesitates. Chardon keeps running. Steve<br />

Campbell fires it at the bower's end and Henry rushing<br />

back can't reach it. Paddy, who's racing towards the<br />

stumps, gets his body behind the bouncing ball and somehow<br />

stops it. Henry grabs it and from a couple <strong>of</strong> metres<br />

away backhands it at the stumps. Chardon has kept running<br />

down the other end then tries to return. If Henry<br />

misses, Chardon will get home. But Henry hits and<br />

Chardon starts to head for the pavilion - only to be<br />

stopped by the umpires who tell him that by going past his<br />

partner, it is Hartshorne, the senior batsman, who is out.<br />

We're ecstatic. We're into the tail and we've got them<br />

where we always liked to have the opposition - chasing a<br />

score and under pressure from our bowlers and fielders.<br />

Petersham are in disarray. Henry soon bowls Chardon<br />

and Jurd is LBW to Gulgong. They're 9-229 and suddenly<br />

victory for us is in the <strong>of</strong>fing. But, as so <strong>of</strong>ten happens<br />

when the inexperienced sense victory, we stumble.<br />

Petersham pull themselves together, and a last wicket<br />

partnership develops between Maloney and Stuart<br />

Gardner. They see out the new ball and when the spinners<br />

return, begin slogging for dear life. Time and again the<br />

ball is belted into the outfield and falls between fielders.<br />

The total climbs, and a sense <strong>of</strong> panic begins to grow.<br />

There are misfields and overthrows. The crowd noise is<br />

huge as our clubmates roar us on. With 13 to get and Mark<br />

changing sides to bowl over the wicket, JR gives Gulgong<br />

the word to warm up for one more effort. Gardner immediately<br />

cuts Mark past point for 4. Nine to win. Under<br />

instructions Mark is pushing the ball through, trying to stop any scoring. He says later that as he walks back for the<br />

last ball <strong>of</strong> the over he looks at the scoreboard - nine to win - and his knees wobble. A deep breath then he bowls a<br />

29


more flighted ball but nothing special and nothing planned. Gardner sweeps high into the outfield towards square<br />

leg. Waiting there are the safest hands in the comp - Chappo's. But he's looking straight into the afternoon sun, and<br />

for a moment our hearts are in our mouths. Sun or no sun, our finest fielder won't drop this one and he catches it<br />

above his eyes, hurling it backwards high into the air.<br />

At first, it's sheer bedlam as Livo sprints onto the field and we realise we've won a marvellous game <strong>of</strong> cricket. As<br />

we walk <strong>of</strong>f it suddenly hits us that we've won much more than that. We've beaten the champions on their home<br />

ground, and we've actually won a NSWCA first grade premiership. The reception at the gate is extraordinary and it<br />

feels like every person who has ever played for the club is there, pounding us on the back and singing and chanting.<br />

Eventually it's back to the dressing room and the champagne arrives. Suddenly you could hear a pin drop as in<br />

walks Riley. In the most gracious manner possible he congratulates us on our achievement, and the room erupts.<br />

Above: Greg Watson overcomes cramp to make a vital breakthrough, John Bain, far left, caught<br />

O'Brien.<br />

Below: The pressure takes its toll on Petersham as Greg Hartshorne watches Paddy Grattan-Smith<br />

gather the ball during the frantic run-out that took <strong>Wales</strong> closer to victory.<br />

30


As usual we join the Petersham boys for quite a few drinks. At one point he says: ‘If we couldn't win it I'm glad<br />

you have. You're not a bad bunch <strong>of</strong> blokes, except for one.’ He means it, the good and the bad. We all know the one<br />

bloke is Jimmy O'Brien, who topcored for us and returned every sledge with interest. Riles says he'll see us later for a<br />

drink. Then the convoy heads back to the Village Green where Splinter, Jill and co have the party ready.<br />

And what a party it was - made even better by two unexpected visits. The first is by the vice-chancellor, Pr<strong>of</strong><br />

Rupert Myers, who is ecstatic at our success. Several hilarious speeches are made, songs sung. The second visit, near<br />

midnight, is from Riles, Petersham captain and the comp's hard man. We'd always liked and respected Riles. He<br />

played it really hard and loved to get under people's skins but he was always fair. His arrival ensures that he'll always<br />

be part <strong>of</strong> the folklore <strong>of</strong> the club's first win.<br />

The celebrations seemed to last for some weeks, highlighted by a university reception on the library steps, and<br />

premiership dinner given by the NSW <strong>Cricket</strong> Association at which we all received our premiership caps, and finally a<br />

superb club dinner where Chancellor Gordon Samuels and legendary Labor politician Fred Daly toasted us, and<br />

Henry made the first <strong>of</strong> his Cold Gold awards to cap a memorable summer.<br />

John Rogers<br />

Celebrations continue well ino the week after the match.<br />

Back: Andrew McMaster, Jim Robson, Greg Watson, Paddy Grattan-<br />

Smith, Jill Ratcliff, Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson. Front: JimO’Brien, John Rogers.<br />

LENNIE AND CHAPPO<br />

Len Pascoe is on the rampage at the VG in the 76-77 semi. We lose a wicket and Chappo comes out.<br />

Amazingly Lennie pitches the first ball up. It's against his nature for a start and everyone knows<br />

Chappo is one <strong>of</strong> the best front-foot drivers in Sydney. He pushes forward and with minimal followthrough<br />

creams it to the extra cover fence. Magnificent shot.<br />

'So you like to drive, do you. Well, let's see how your teeth look on the pitch,' says Lennie. Chappo<br />

gets through the rest <strong>of</strong> the over and we meet for a chat.<br />

'Brutus,' says Chappo, 'I'm not sure I should've done that.'<br />

'Well, he does seem a bit upset. I'd be looking to get on the back foot if I were you,' I said.<br />

It was Lennie's last half-volley for the day.<br />

Mark Ray<br />

31


Poem by 'Aunt' Betty Chapman.<br />

32


FIRST GRADE FINAL<br />

1976-77<br />

Petersham Oval<br />

UNIVERSITY OF NSW - 1st Innings<br />

M. WATT lbw b Hartshorne …………………….….. 35<br />

M. RAY b Chardon …………………….….. 25<br />

J. ROBSON c Hughes b Hartshorne …………………….….. 8<br />

J. ROGERS c and b Jurd …………………….….. 0<br />

C. CHAPMAN c Hughes b Jurd …………………….….. 21<br />

G. LIVINGSTONE b Jurd …………………….….. 61<br />

G. WATSON b Chardon …………………….….. 9<br />

J. O'BRIEN b Hartshorne …………………….….. 75<br />

P. GRATTAN-SMITH run out …………………….….. 2<br />

G LAWSON b Chardon …………………….….. 38<br />

S. CAMPBELL not out …………………….….. 3<br />

Sundries …………………….….. 7<br />

TOTAL …………………….….. 284<br />

BOWLING CHARDON 3-65<br />

HARTSHORNE 3-52<br />

JURD 3-94<br />

GARDNER 0-22<br />

MALONEY 0-44<br />

Batting Time<br />

367 minutes<br />

PETERSHAM-MARRICKVILLE - 1st Innings<br />

G. GOODMAN b Grattan-Smith …………………….….. 24<br />

R. PHILLIPS c Campbell b Watson …………………….….. 61<br />

B. SHARP b Grattan-Smith …………………….….. 12<br />

G. HUGHES c O'Brien b Ray …………………….….. 52<br />

B. RILEY b Grattan-Smith …………………….….. 48<br />

G. HARTSHORNE run out …………………….….. 9<br />

J. BAIN c O'Brien b Watson …………………….….. 4<br />

D. CHARDON b Lawson …………………….….. 0<br />

D. JURD lbw b Watson …………………….….. 2<br />

P. MALONEY not out …………………….….. 21<br />

S. GARDNER c Chapman b Ray …………………….….. 26<br />

Sundries …………………….….. 16<br />

TOTAL …………………….….. 275<br />

BOWLING WATSON 3-49<br />

LAWSPON 1-48<br />

GRATTAN-SMITH 3-63<br />

RAY 2-62<br />

CAMPBELL 0-37<br />

Batting Time 352 minutes<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NSW won on 1st Innings by 9 runs<br />

33


FIRST GRADE STATISTICS<br />

1976-77<br />

BATTING M INN. N.O. H.S. AGG. AVE. 50s C/S<br />

M. Ray 16 21 1 81 608 30.40 4 10<br />

C. Chapman 16 20 3 72* 428 25.17 2 12<br />

J. Robson 16 21 4 97 369 21.70 2 9<br />

J. O'Brien 13 11 2 75 188 20.88 1 24/1<br />

J. Rogers 16 18 3 38 287 19.13 12<br />

G. Watson 16 17 3 40 248 17.71 7<br />

M. Watt 16 21 2 56 330 17.36 1 2<br />

J. Martel 13 16 1 27 183 12.2 9<br />

G. Lawson 16 9 3 38 71 11.83 5<br />

R Pym 14 10 3 35* 78 11.14 2<br />

P. Grattan-Smith 15 11 4 15 68 9.71 6<br />

G. Livingstone 3 3 1 61 128 64.00 1 2<br />

P. Deegan 3 2 1 12* 18 18.00 5<br />

S. Campbell 3 2 2 6* 9 - 1<br />

BOWLING OVERS MAIDENS WICKETS RUNS AVERAGE<br />

M. Ray 237.4 46 43 664 15.45<br />

P. Grattan-Smith 251.2 53 44 720 16.37<br />

G. Watson 179.7 46 33 551 16.70<br />

G. Lawson 141 24 26 510 19.62<br />

R. Pym 87.1 12 16 418 26.13<br />

S. Campbell 18 3 4 67 16.75<br />

J. Robson 8 1 0 45 -<br />

G. Livingstone 1 0 0 7 -<br />

SUMMARY<br />

Games Played = 17, Won outright = 1, Won 1st innings = 9, Lost 1st Innings = 3, Drawn = 3<br />

Runs for = 3245, Wickets Lost = 149, Average = 21.77<br />

Runs Against = 3177, Wickets taken = 175, Average = 18.15<br />

Tosses won = 4, Tosses lost = 12<br />

RESULTS<br />

RD. TOSS VEN. OPPONENT UNSW OPPOSITION RES. PTS<br />

1 L Away Sydney *5/159 dec 7/68 D 0<br />

2 L Home Manly *7/182 dec 90 W1 6<br />

3 L Home Cumberland *7/106 D 6<br />

4 L Away Waverly 9/257 *269 D 6<br />

5 W Away N. Districts *137 , 4/69 143 L1 6<br />

6 L Home Bankstown 4/78 dec, 7/138 *75, 140 WO 16<br />

7 L Away Mosman 190 *186, 3/132 W1 22<br />

8 L Away Sutherland *4/195 dec 162 W1 28<br />

9 L Away Petersham *104 & 2/83 6/105 dec L1 28<br />

10 L Home Sydney Uni. 5/144 dec, 9/142 *143, 5/171 W1 34<br />

11 L Home Nepean *203 178 W1 40<br />

12 L Home St George 147 *186, 2/73 L1 40<br />

13 W Away Gordon 9/184 dec, 5/78 *183, 5/146 W1 46<br />

14 W Home Wests *8/204 dec 190 W1 52<br />

Semi L Home Bankstown *214, 1/53 156 W1 58<br />

Final W Away Petersham *284 275 W1 64<br />

* - Denotes batted first<br />

34


WHAT IF I'D DROPPED IT …<br />

With Petersham needing nine to win the 76-77 final, all eyes turned to Chris Chapman at deep<br />

mid-wicket. A l<strong>of</strong>ted slog was heading his way and UNSWCC were a fraction <strong>of</strong> a second - a<br />

very long fraction - away from the first-grade flag. As most <strong>of</strong> us expected Chappo took the<br />

chance with typical ease. But for the past 30 years two things have worried him: what if he'd<br />

dropped it and Petersham had won, and how did such an inexperienced and unheralded team<br />

pull <strong>of</strong>f that great victory<br />

In the 30 years since March '77, I've lost my father-in-law to cancer at too young an age and my beloved brotherin-law<br />

who took his own life; I've had three children grow up on me with all the attendant joys and stresses; I've seen<br />

my wife take to surf events with gusto and blaze new paths for women in the management <strong>of</strong> surf clubs; I've travelled<br />

the world, visited all the continents and been held against my will in a remote part <strong>of</strong> Turkey. I've mixed with presidents,<br />

prime ministers, chief justices and diplomats; I've negotiated sports contracts with Mark McCormack and Dick<br />

Pound; I've been marched by Kerry Stokes and PBL's Chris Anderson; I've had character assessments pr<strong>of</strong>fered in<br />

Senate estimates hearings and been set upon by any number <strong>of</strong> unscrupulous or amoral corporate types. I've probably<br />

been momentarily clinically depressed due to work-related stress on at least two occasions, and made numerous<br />

mistakes. But I only look back and cogitate upon one comparatively obscure incident - and ponder what if ...<br />

What if I had dropped that catch at deep mid-wicket on the eastern side <strong>of</strong> Petersham Oval late in the day against<br />

the setting sun, the catch that meant the Sydney first grade premiership went to the least favoured, least likely team<br />

ever to win. Consider the team's youth, its lack <strong>of</strong> pedigree, its standings on the competition ladder in its three previous<br />

seasons, its varsity influences and, to the outside world, its shambolic, carefree administration and support team.<br />

I have but the most general recollections about catches I'd taken prior to that time: one leaning over the fence at<br />

Sydney <strong>University</strong>, a diving one at Manly Oval, any number taken near the tennis courts at the Village Green, a<br />

screamer in the gully to a full-blooded John Benaud drive. I was, for reasons that still elude me, incapable <strong>of</strong> taking a<br />

catch in slips but was competent enough in the gully. I was envious and constantly in awe <strong>of</strong> the effortlessness displayed<br />

by Mark Ray and Jim Robson in first and second slips respectively - the latter being the finest slipper I've had<br />

the pleasure <strong>of</strong> playing with and, I believe, up there with Bob Simpson and Mark Waugh as one <strong>of</strong> the greats.<br />

The truth is that I just caught that catch at Petersham, and dislocated my finger in the bargain. I still remember<br />

the sweep by the leftie, Stuart Gardner, <strong>of</strong>f Mark. It wasn't too high, no particular hang time, relatively flat and reasonably<br />

straight to me - but there was a setting sun. It was late. He and Peter Maloney had put on about 40 for the<br />

last wicket and we were under pressure. I remember being frozen, my hands harder than was sensible. But it stuck,<br />

we won and the impossible, the unthinkable, the unimaginable at season's start had become a reality.<br />

A team only four years into the toughest grade cricket competition in the world had won, and all the lore that has<br />

since followed was set in train. But notwithstanding my track record to that point, what if the sun, the pressure and<br />

the moment had conspired against me so that the usual s<strong>of</strong>t hands had hardened too much, the ball escaped, the<br />

opportunity was lost and Petersham cobbled together the remaining few runs. That prospect and the 'sliding doors'<br />

that it may have set <strong>of</strong>f sicken me to this day. The shame would have been insufferable, the disappointment palpable,<br />

the next 30 years possibly very different. All my personal and pr<strong>of</strong>essional journeys, challenges, body blows and the<br />

sharpest <strong>of</strong> 'slings and arrows' since would have been mere trifles compared to that prospect.<br />

I recently shared this obsessive anxiety with John Rogers. He seemed surprised that it still stayed with me but, as<br />

a mark <strong>of</strong> the man and the reason why I have come to regard him as the finest leader <strong>of</strong> men (whether on or <strong>of</strong>f a<br />

playing field) that I have been associated with over my subsequent 30 years, he responded matter <strong>of</strong> factly: 'We still<br />

would have won, Chappo!'<br />

Rightly or wrongly, understandably or pathetically, I <strong>of</strong>ten ponder 'what if'. For starters:<br />

- JR's unique captaining record in finals would not have been.<br />

- The <strong>Wales</strong>' momentum that rolled on for the next five or so years would not have been.<br />

- Premiership boasts by a number <strong>of</strong> young men may never have been heard.<br />

- The momentum generally that sport at UNSW experienced at that time and thereafter may never have<br />

developed. The president <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong>'s Sports Association called it 'the most significant competition ever won<br />

by any <strong>University</strong> team in (UNSW's) 24 years <strong>of</strong> existence'.<br />

And just as I ponder what if, I wonder how come. How could a team <strong>of</strong> unknowns - with limited experience,<br />

untested newcomers, no readily recognised hardness or socio-economic deprivation - firstly reach 284 after being 6-<br />

107, and dismiss an opposition (with five Shield players) for 275 when they were cruising at 3-196<br />

35


- We had an opening bat who would not have been out <strong>of</strong> place in a photoshoot with WG Grace himself …<br />

- Another opening bat, playing his first year with the club, who simply substituted heart for finesse …<br />

- A No.3 who, notwithstanding being probably the most hand-eye co-ordinated chap I've ever had the pleasure <strong>of</strong><br />

observing, was the ugly duckling when it came to style, the only explanation in my mind as to why he didn't find<br />

favour with the state selectors …<br />

- A captain who was, truth to tell, in his early 30s and whose best run-scoring years were behind him. A fieldsman<br />

who ran beautifully - but up and down on the spot …<br />

- A sometime opener, sometime middle-order batsman who batted and looked like a millionaire (to quote Mo<br />

Matthews) but was so front foot-orientated that a thinking team should have been able easily to tie him up …<br />

- A young, long-haired, leftie from the bush who was playing his third first grade game and was just too nice and<br />

quiet to look a serious contender …<br />

- A gangling country boy from Gulgong who had more bowling talent than his modern all-rounder namesake and a<br />

batting talent that was only occasionally capitalised on, and an equanimity that reflected at a young age a more tacit<br />

success in the balance between life, stress and health …<br />

- A wicket-keeper who had, like the captain, been around the traps a long time and looked just too smooth to provide<br />

any real intimidation …<br />

- An <strong>of</strong>f-spinner who stuttered in his action as badly as he staggered about 8 o'clock each Saturday night, who had a<br />

moustache that permanently manifested the after-show <strong>of</strong> a face plant into a vanilla milkshake, or worse …<br />

- A second (only) quick, another raw-boned boy from the bush, who had performed well in his inaugural season in<br />

first grade but hadn't demolished any batting line-up thereto …<br />

- And a former child prodigy leg spinner who was a recent GPS graduate with all the attendant lack <strong>of</strong> mongrel that<br />

suggested ...<br />

Chappo falls to the ground after taking that catch in the 76-77 final.<br />

The betting shops would not have been quivering on any live bets on the funny-capped Bumblebees on the eve <strong>of</strong><br />

that final. Over and above that less than flattering assessment, the raw statistics did not reveal any deeper insights:<br />

- An average age <strong>of</strong> 24 years<br />

- Seven players, 23 or under<br />

- <strong>Five</strong> country boys<br />

- Three first-season players<br />

- One former Shield player<br />

- A lop-sided bowling attack <strong>of</strong> two quicks and three spinners.<br />

Petersham had one current Shield player and four who would reach that rank, including one who made an Ashes<br />

tour and another who is the only person in the modern era (post WWII) to play cricket and rugby league for his state,<br />

a genuine quick and a tough-nut captain. Petersham were a hard, streetwise lot. They were the minor premiers, seasoned<br />

performers over many years, playing on their home ground on a track with pace in contrast to the slow-paced<br />

Village Green where shot-making was more difficult and runs across the buffalo outfield were at a premium.<br />

However, synchronicity is a beautiful word and all <strong>of</strong> the 'varsity's above-mentioned character traits, circumstances<br />

and other related factors delivered a magical, surreal, tension-charged, high-comedy outcome that played out<br />

this way:<br />

- The WG look-alike opening bat was adroit, his appearances belying the rapier that was his bat. He could pluck balls<br />

<strong>of</strong>f his hip with ease, never flinched, slippered with a minimum <strong>of</strong> fuss and with a low mistake rate, and bowled leftarm<br />

orthodox with remarkable consistency interrupted only by the loveliest <strong>of</strong> arm balls …<br />

- The other opening bat was built like granite and fielded at silly mid-on as a badge <strong>of</strong> courage, and could glare with<br />

the best <strong>of</strong> them …<br />

36


- While the final was not the No.3's strongest performance, he was as sharp a cricket brain, close-in fieldsman and<br />

general cricket commentator as you will ever find, an irreplaceable character among the mix …<br />

- The captain was without peer in the ability to lead, to inspire and to conjure; his orchestration and the confidence<br />

he exuded were the defining differences, the touchstones upon which that synchronicity played out …<br />

- The middle-order batsman got a few runs (although typically not enough), fielded with energy and contributed his<br />

part to the pressure that the team's fielding and general irrepressibility built up … and, more out <strong>of</strong> rote than perfect<br />

execution, held that catch …<br />

- The young, carefree, long-haired leftie from the bush batted with a sense <strong>of</strong> freedom that only youth unaffected by<br />

disappointment can fashion, with a purity <strong>of</strong> technique that was his DNA and a maturity that was then inconceivable.<br />

He displayed that same vitality in the field, adding to the ever-tightening pressure ...<br />

- The lad from Gulgong turned the match just before and after tea on the second day with a nonchalant tenacity and<br />

'second wind' that city folk seldom muster …<br />

- The wicket-keeper played the innings <strong>of</strong> his career, top-scoring in the match, and displaying a general coolness with<br />

bat and gloves that reflected pressure back onto the front-runners; a dynamic that, as it transpired, they were illequipped<br />

to deal with. His 'between the pads' catch <strong>of</strong> game-maker, Graeme Hughes, is a slice <strong>of</strong> luck perhaps unparalleled<br />

in the history <strong>of</strong> the contest. The wicket-keeper was unbowed when the contest was at its fiercest …<br />

- The <strong>of</strong>f-spinner bowled superbly, turning his body inside out and cursing and wailing in a way that generates<br />

momentum and pandemonium as their captain was bowled and the front-runners' fragility was exposed …<br />

- The future Test bowler played a majestic hand revealing an all-round talent with bat, ball and fielding that we later<br />

saw in the Test arena. The straight drives for six <strong>of</strong>f Jurd were textbook shots. Again, the freedom and audacity <strong>of</strong><br />

youth, our X factor …<br />

- The GPS leggie played his role in the asymmetrical attack, took a vital catch to dismiss Ray Phillips, their top-scorer,<br />

and was integrally involved in the crucial Hartshorne run-out …<br />

- The 12 was rounded out by yet another team psycho, the firebrand Dick Pym, whose piercing blue eyes, Labor Party<br />

leanings, general ravings and serendipitous fast bowling had played an important role in the team's history. Dick was<br />

fielding at the death and his own unique touch <strong>of</strong> mongrel added to that iron-fist focus, steely determination and<br />

sheer, unadulterated belief in the outcomes that follow from sustained pressure. His eternal optimism typified that<br />

team ...<br />

Synchronicity, the alignment <strong>of</strong> the planets, pure luck, arse … or all <strong>of</strong> the above The feat was repeated again several<br />

years later under WG's leadership, with many <strong>of</strong> the same players. The youngsters had matured by then and<br />

were more orthodox but the will to win had not been tempered. I <strong>of</strong>ten wonder where that will comes from; whether<br />

you have it innately, whether you develop it or you absorb it. I think we were led to it by JR, for whose friendship,<br />

collegiality and mentorship and the unrepeatable camaraderie <strong>of</strong> that unheralded group, I remain eternally grateful.<br />

‘Well caught, pal.’ JR and Chappo soon after the end <strong>of</strong> the final.<br />

37


Strength<br />

and<br />

Depth<br />

Second Grade 1977-78<br />

The second grade season had a constantly changing cast <strong>of</strong> characters and a dramatic final<br />

scene, but it all worked out in the end. This is captain Terry Buddin’s original season report.<br />

The team’s for-and-against record does not seem on its face to be particularly impressive. But as so <strong>of</strong>ten is the<br />

case, the bare figures tell but part <strong>of</strong> the story.<br />

First, by the end <strong>of</strong> November and round six we were languishing near the bottom <strong>of</strong> the table, having already<br />

been beaten four times, including two disastrous outrights. From then on we won every encounter, three <strong>of</strong> them<br />

convincing outrights, with the exception <strong>of</strong> a loss to Sutherland. Second, we played no draws at all, and that was<br />

indicative <strong>of</strong> the attacking manner in which we played. It was also in stark contrast to last year’s performance in<br />

which five out <strong>of</strong> our 14 games ended in draws, thus denying us a place in the semi-finals. Third, we were seldom able<br />

to field our strongest side and on those occasions when we did we were rarely in trouble. The team was depleted by<br />

the gaps left in the first grade side by players on Sheffield Shield duty, as well as the customary injuries and unavailability.<br />

In fact, only three players participated in every match, only six played two-thirds <strong>of</strong> the matches, and we used<br />

22 players over the season.<br />

Now is the time to indicate the indebtedness owed by all <strong>of</strong> the team to the three who did play every game. Their<br />

performances speak for themselves. Neville Jannson topped the batting aggregate with 475 runs; Roger March was<br />

easily the highest wicket-taker with 47 while Paul Deegan batted consistently and kept wickets admirably. Finally, a<br />

quick look at the averages will reveal that our real struggle lay in the bowling. The four bowlers at the top <strong>of</strong> the averages<br />

were almost totally responsible for our success in that department. And yet they played together in only three<br />

games, one <strong>of</strong> those being the final.<br />

So to that final. In fading autumnal light at the Village Green 6.10pm on March 27, UNSWCC won the premiership<br />

by beating Sydney <strong>University</strong> outright, thus avenging an earlier heavy loss inflicted by our sister university. This<br />

was the first time both Unis had met in a grade final. The semi-finals were washed out in every grade so the minor<br />

premiers and runners-up met in all finals. There’d been heavy rain in the preceding 10 days and play in our match<br />

was delayed until 1.30 on the first day. We won an important toss and Dick Pym and Greig Robinson each took an<br />

early wicket. But the pitch was slow for the pace bowlers. The introduction <strong>of</strong> Roger March’s <strong>of</strong>f-spin produced<br />

immediate results - wickets with his first two deliveries. Wickets fell regularly and Sydney Uni were eventually dismissed<br />

for 65 <strong>of</strong>f 31.5 overs. Robbo’s figures were 9-3-16-3 while Roger bowled impressively to finish with 10.5-4-17-<br />

6. We had 90 minutes to bat on the first evening and were 2-36 when bad light stopped play. Ian Smith was a valuable<br />

20 not out.<br />

There was another 90-minute delay on the Easter Monday morning because <strong>of</strong> overnight rain. Ian and Roger, the<br />

nightwatchman, stayed together until the scores were level. Ian was then out for 38, a gritty, determined innings that<br />

occupied 136 minutes and included the only two boundaries <strong>of</strong> the innings. Roger made 20 and added 40 with Ian.<br />

We slumped from 2-65 to all out 105, the only resistance coming from Ge<strong>of</strong>f Kirkwood who made six in 71 minutes.<br />

38


Back: Ge<strong>of</strong>f Kirkwood, Bruce Handley, Greig Robinson, Terry Buddin (c), Ian Smith, Roger<br />

March. Front: Peter Tout, Paul Deegan, Neville Jansson, Dick Campbell, Dick Pym.<br />

Sydney Uni sensed a chance and their batsmen went on the attack. They declared at 6-93. Dick took 3-34, Roger<br />

two wickets and Robbo one. This left us about 18 overs to survive. Ian Smith again saw us through the crucial stages<br />

after we had been 2-6. Later Peter Tout took control to finish with 30 not out. Our batsmen turned down two <strong>of</strong>fers<br />

<strong>of</strong> bad light from the umpires, and amid high tension and in almost total darkness Bruce Handley hit the winning<br />

runs from the third-last ball <strong>of</strong> the final over. After the earlier loss to Sydney Uni we were determined to win the final<br />

outright. To have taken a light appeal would have been a tame end to the match and the season.<br />

I would like to extend my thanks to a number <strong>of</strong> people. First, to John Rogers whose influence on the direction the<br />

club has taken in the last three years has been obvious for all to see. His organisation <strong>of</strong> the country week hopefully<br />

will start a new trend. That trip, together with the tour to <strong>New</strong> Zealand, developed and tightened techniques, both on<br />

and <strong>of</strong>f the field, and resulted in the discovery <strong>of</strong> hitherto unrealised linguistic talents in some <strong>of</strong> the tourists. The<br />

emergence <strong>of</strong> characters such as ‘Egg’n’ Pym, ‘Larry S’ March, ‘Steve Splinter’ McMaster is testimony to that.<br />

To Cayton Jones, for his continual support and repeated selection insights. To Jill Ratcliffe and the rest <strong>of</strong> the<br />

committee for their unfailing efforts. To the Handley ladies, Mrs Pratt and Mrs Tout for satisfying our nutritional<br />

wants by serving gastronomic delights at afternoon tea. To Vic, the assistant groundsman who enabled us to play at<br />

all in the final. Lastly and perhaps most importantly to the 10 other players who contributed to the premiership victory<br />

and to all players and supporters who have made my three-year association with the club so enjoyable.<br />

TERRY AND TOUTY TROUNCE THE TOFFS<br />

In the 77-78 second grade final against Sydney Uni we had won on the first innings but faced the<br />

temptation <strong>of</strong> scoring 55 in about 18 overs to win outright. However, by late in the day the light was<br />

fading. Even the umpires in their coats and canes were hard to see.<br />

We had lost 2-6 and, although Smith, Tout and Handley did stabilise things, Terry had already<br />

hinted to a very willing Touty to refuse bad light <strong>of</strong>fers. Terry even told his batsmen to insist on a<br />

drinks break to use up time and keep Sydney Uni out there. Robbo spat the dummy at the skipper<br />

and threw a tantrum about the foolishness <strong>of</strong> continuing the match and risking even the slightest<br />

chance <strong>of</strong> losing. ‘How many times do we have to win this f------ thing’ Robbo yelled.<br />

The club's undisputed outburst expert, ‘Egg'n’ Pym, judged this a virtuoso performance. Terry<br />

explained why he wanted to annihilate the ‘other place’, with whom had dealings earlier in life, as<br />

well as some unfinished business from earlier in the season: "It was personal!"<br />

Greig Robinson<br />

39


The Team<br />

by Greig Robinson & Roger March<br />

Terry Buddin –Terry brought utter determination, passion, humour – and a bucket <strong>of</strong> water –<br />

to his role as skipper. Always treated the opposition with disdain. Erudite and verbally skilled, he<br />

loved a sledge and usually won as the sledgee rarely fully understood what he meant. Loved the<br />

l<strong>of</strong>ted drive over cover and fulfilled his No.1 goal in life when he ensured Sydney Uni were humiliated<br />

in the final. Set the philosophy: ‘No draws. We play to win even if this means we lose occasionally.’<br />

Little wonder we won every match after Christmas to grab the minor premiership.<br />

Ian Smith - the anchor at the top <strong>of</strong> the order who, especially in the final, gave us someone to<br />

build a score around. The quiet and steady influence in a team <strong>of</strong> eccentrics. Although Smithy had<br />

the disturbing Ian Chappell trait when batting <strong>of</strong> holding up the game while he dropped his strides<br />

to readjust his ‘gear’ and flash his trademark leopard jocks.<br />

Richard Campbell – another quiet one who was always thirsty. Opening batsman and excellent<br />

team man. The choir boy smile belied the dry sarcasm about the opposition that kept pressure<br />

mounting. A good mover in the field despite not being behind the stumps in seconds.<br />

Bruce Handley – a coaching manual right-hand bat, excellent fielder (except for the glass arm<br />

flick throw) and medium pacer. Often seemed the most stable and responsible team member but<br />

intimidated the opposition by fielding at very silly short leg. Scored a memorable 137 v NDs, a<br />

record score, and was involved in two record partnerships. Hit the winning runs in the final.<br />

Peter Tout – outrageously elegant batsman, good field and sometime medium pacer – was it the<br />

genes or the schooling Played eight games for an average <strong>of</strong> 43.5. Definitely a sports car man and<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the few with the élan and lineage to challenge Chappo on the dinner party circuit. In the<br />

final ensured the second innings decimation <strong>of</strong> the ‘other place’ was done with style and panache.<br />

Neville Jansson - batsman and his brother’s keeper. The only man not to win the Barr-Turn<br />

because he wanted it too much and tried too hard – a salutary lesson. He announced with a slightly<br />

glazed wide-eyed expression late in the season that ‘we have to win because for anyone else to<br />

win they have to beat us but that won’t happen because we are the best team’. And he was right!<br />

Set a record for aggregate with 475 runs for the season. Involved in two record partnerships.<br />

Ge<strong>of</strong>f Kirkwood – Kirkie or Kirktree – a one-<strong>of</strong>f. Right-arm top spin and wrong-un bowler, a<br />

talented bat with a baseball pitcher’s arm. Loved: most people and animals; bowling his ‘bouncer’<br />

because he claimed it made him the quickest bowler in seconds; defying Chris MacRae’s bouncer<br />

attack on him in the final; enjoying mind-changing substances in liquid or fibrous form; wearing<br />

his board shorts and carrying his airways bag ‘kit’; bowling to Poms (took 5 for against touring<br />

Test side for Australian Unis); playing the piano; and his mum. He hated: singles <strong>of</strong>f his bowling;<br />

washing his gear; showering; haircuts; JR attacking his lifestyle; his neighbours complaining<br />

about the noise when his girlfriend visited; the Uni wanting him to do an arts subject to finish <strong>of</strong>f<br />

his double major science degree (absent failed every arts subject - did he ever graduate).<br />

Tragically, Kirky died in a traffic accident in 2002. One <strong>of</strong> the club’s greatest characters.<br />

Roger March – Groucho. Offie, fruit lover and mover on a dance floor. Perhaps unfairly in club<br />

folklore Groucho will always be linked with loving a celebration and a watermelon. He was also<br />

clearly the best (slow) bowler in the second grade comp, a very handy bat and top gully fielder.<br />

Took 47 wickets in the year. Dominated in the final with 6-17 <strong>of</strong>f 10 in the first innings and dug in<br />

for a very gutsy 20 on a still damp track. Delighted all again at the celebration when he re-enacted<br />

this effort on even wetter and more treacherous terrain.<br />

Paul Deegan – Tacho. Wicketkeeper and energy source. Loved: a sledge; to win, drink and gloat;<br />

his bat (‘the beast’); afternoon teas at Drummoyne and Petersham; his bike and a late night with<br />

Donny Sutherland. Proudly proclaimed in a pavilion discussion that he always threw it away on<br />

scoring 100 – then admitted he’d only ever scored one. Hated defensive batting and Kirky’s<br />

bouncer which always slid down the leg side and rebounded <strong>of</strong>f his chest to the chorus <strong>of</strong> ‘Sorry<br />

Tacko’. Set a record for dismissals - 27 catches, one stumping.<br />

Dick Pym – Egg’n or Thumper. Opening bowler who always maintained left-handers were cheats<br />

and left-arm orthodox bowlers ‘the lowest form <strong>of</strong> life’. Once suspected <strong>of</strong> rubbing Dencorub on<br />

his rapidly balding pate to fire himself up (older teammates knew that was unnecessary). Loved:<br />

outies and short-pitched bowling. Bowled one bouncer that half-volleyed into the fence over<br />

Tacho’s head because the batsman, an ex-teammate in a previous life, had once tried to white ant<br />

him with his then girlfriend (and still wife). Believed if a batsman needed unsettling a 15-yard<br />

no-ball only cost one sundry.<br />

40


Greig Robinson – One <strong>of</strong> the great clubmen <strong>of</strong> UNSW cricket, Robbo announced his arrival in<br />

second grade with a hat-trick against Waverley. Finished the season with brilliant bowling stats <strong>of</strong><br />

24 wickets at 12.1, a record which stands to this day. The yin to Dick Pym’s yang, Robbo was a<br />

clever bowler whose subtlety <strong>of</strong> swing and cut was too much for many an aspiring young batsman.<br />

Claimed to be a stylish bat but was told by Terry: ‘You bat 11 because everyone else bats better<br />

than you so your job is to stay there while they score more runs.’<br />

Mick Watt – Fiery was a determined opening bat who almost gleefully bore the brunt <strong>of</strong> many a<br />

deranged fast bowler’s short-pitched bowling. Was the ‘steel’ at the top <strong>of</strong> the order. Enigmatic,<br />

phlegmatic but in an understated way had the fire in the gut to go with the hair colour. Did take a<br />

wicket. A hard man.<br />

Jock Martel - exciting opening batsmen (No 3’s <strong>of</strong>ten called it nerve-wracking) Jocko believed in<br />

the West Indian philosophy that there is a lot <strong>of</strong> room above the fieldsmen. One <strong>of</strong> the true stalwarts<br />

<strong>of</strong> the club on and <strong>of</strong>f the field in the early grade years (along with his wife Denise). Would<br />

definitely make the final in any cricketing theories competition. Averaged a record 44.1 before<br />

being promoted.<br />

David Pratt – powerful right-hand bat. Pratty in one word: intensity. Was a selection in the first<br />

XI <strong>of</strong> the great club psychos. The Errol Flynn in Pratty meant his life was complex in a way that<br />

few <strong>of</strong> the other free (and single) spirits in the team could understand and meant he had many<br />

pressures to keep him on the edge. An outstanding fielder.<br />

Nigel Perger - Big Nige had the build <strong>of</strong> Adonis, the looks <strong>of</strong> a film star and bowled quick. A<br />

more than useful bat and good fielder. He showed the talent he had when he took a 5 for in first<br />

grade. Enthusiastic performer on the social side <strong>of</strong> things.<br />

Steve van der Sluys – huge in-dipper bowler who’d had some excellent seasons in first grade.<br />

Steve played early in the season taking 14 wickets.<br />

Also played during the season: Peter Burnett, Asoka Wijeratne, Paul Emery, John Sands,<br />

Graham McBarron, Peter Jourdain.<br />

THE INVISIBLE NO.4<br />

Dave Pratt was very intense about his cricket. He was not having a good trot with the bat in the seconds<br />

heading for the 77-78 finals and had some relationship complications to further heighten his<br />

intensity.<br />

A rough umpiring decision caused Pratty to give the umpire a huge spray. After this, Terry told him<br />

to keep out <strong>of</strong> sight in the changerooms.<br />

Terry ran into the umps late in the tea break when they asked him for details about our No. 4 batsman.<br />

With unblinking eye contact, Terry answered: ‘We don't have one.’<br />

The umpires were dumbfounded and repeated the question. Again Terry confidently replied: ‘No, we<br />

didn't bat anyone at No.4 today - we went straight from No.3 to 5.’<br />

By now the umpires were totally confused and tea had finished.<br />

At the end <strong>of</strong> the day Terry approached the umpires and said he'd been wrong and had learnt that we<br />

had had a No.4 after all. He gave them the spiel about Pratty's cricket and life problems; then gave<br />

the secret signal and a contrite Pratty was wheeled out to apologise.<br />

End result: umpires still struggling, apology accepted, Pratty not reported.<br />

Greig Robinson<br />

41


Fun In The Dark<br />

Peter Tout ended his first season with UNSWCC by batting in the gloom at the Village Green in a final - and he<br />

loved every minute <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

The second-grade premiership was very important to the club in many ways, not least because it demonstrated to<br />

the wider cricket community, the university and the players at the club that the previous year's first-grade premiership<br />

was no fluke. Here was a cricket club that had arrived, that had depth, that knew how to win at all levels. And<br />

this <strong>of</strong> course was fully demonstrated in the club championship that was to follow.<br />

The final against our Sydney <strong>University</strong> rivals was played against the backdrop <strong>of</strong> UNSW itself emerging as an<br />

academic power in its own right, a threat to Sydney Uni's century <strong>of</strong> dominance.<br />

My part in the twos' victory was limited during the season but perhaps significant in the final. I had come across<br />

from Northern Districts straight into first grade after enjoying success against UNSWCC the previous season and<br />

then touring with many <strong>of</strong> the Uni guys on the 1977 Old Collegians tour to England. Coming from a batsman's wicket<br />

at Waitara to the Village Green had been a very difficult transition for me. The ball did not come on, it turned, it kept<br />

low and strokeplay was much more difficult. So I found myself playing a few second grade games, just enough to<br />

qualify to play for the twos in the famous final against the Sydney Uni boys.<br />

The relationship between the two sides made for a fascinating study. Two teams <strong>of</strong> mad young uni students - one<br />

from the establishment full <strong>of</strong> GPS boys and one from Kenso with a mixed bunch <strong>of</strong> country guys, academics and a<br />

few eccentrics. But our side was a totally committed group <strong>of</strong> talented cricketers who knew how to play on that wicket<br />

and vast outfield. The bowlers - led by Greig Robbo, Dick Pym, Kirkie and Roger March - were outstanding.<br />

The two Uni teams got on really well and enjoyed a drink together. Led by Paul Deegan, we enjoyed a fair bit <strong>of</strong><br />

good-natured sledging <strong>of</strong> Chris MacRae, Jim Rodgers, Steve Glenday and other Sydney Uni boys. But overlaying this<br />

was a genuine conflict between the two captains, and this is what really made the relationship interesting.<br />

Terry Buddin had in an earlier life developed a problem with Damon Ridley, the Sydney Uni captain. I don't think<br />

many <strong>of</strong> us really knew why, but we were delighted to watch it and feed <strong>of</strong>f it, and it clearly served to fire us up in the<br />

final. Those who appear before Mr Justice Buddin in the NSW Supreme Court these days would be mightily surprised<br />

at the Terry Buddin <strong>of</strong> the 1970s - exotic, brilliant, enigmatic, an extraordinary human being and captain, someone<br />

you definitely wanted on your side during the game and in the following celebrations. Looking back, there was no<br />

way Terry wasn't going to win this final against his arch rival and he went about demonstrating without compromise<br />

what this emerging UNSW <strong>Cricket</strong> Club was all about.<br />

42


The <strong>Wales</strong> method at the Village Green was to win the toss, bat first and grind, scratch and fight your way to a<br />

reasonable first innings score then turn the screws in the field with a combination <strong>of</strong> tight line and length backed up<br />

by great fielding and team spirit. This was our way and it worked. On countless occasions visiting teams faced with<br />

chasing 180 or thereabouts would confidently begin the chase only to have the life squeezed out <strong>of</strong> them. What the<br />

visitors didn't know was that 180 at the VG was 250 at Waitara. Many were lucky to get to 130, and <strong>of</strong> course Roger<br />

March's quality <strong>of</strong>f spin was pivotal. In any other era he would have been a regular first grader but the presence <strong>of</strong><br />

Mark and Paddy and Steve in our firsts made that impossible.<br />

As the scores show, the final didn't play out in this way. You might remember that it once rained a lot in Sydney,<br />

bucket loads <strong>of</strong> it on a regular basis, continually adding to a batsman's difficulties in a way modern players don't<br />

appreciate. The semis and final were badly affected by rain leading to a desperately low-scoring and abbreviated<br />

final. The fact that we led on the first innings and declared was important and, as minor premiers, a draw would have<br />

been enough to secure us the premiership. So late, very late, on the final evening we were chasing down a modest target<br />

to secure outright victory when the light became so bad as to be ridiculous. I was batting with Bruce Handley, and<br />

a large group <strong>of</strong> supporters from both sides were noisily drinking and cheering from the sidelines, barely able to<br />

make out the action through the gloom.<br />

The umpires <strong>of</strong>fered us the light on several occasions. I remember Terry recounting later how Chappo's dad, John,<br />

said to him: ‘They've <strong>of</strong>fered you the premiership. You must come <strong>of</strong>f.’ I didn't hear any <strong>of</strong> this <strong>of</strong> course, being out in<br />

the middle. Apparently Robbo was very emotional as were a few others when I refused the light each time the<br />

umpires <strong>of</strong>fered it. I wasn't acting on Terry's instructions. I didn't need to ask him what to do and he knew he didn't<br />

need to tell me - we both were on the same wavelength. Besides, I was enjoying myself too much. This might sound<br />

strange but I'd always loved batting in bad light and this was a wonderful opportunity to do so in a match I'd never<br />

forget.<br />

Bruce and I knew what we really wanted, and what Terry so desperately wanted - nothing less than outright<br />

victory. Total, complete and unambiguous, with no asterix on the scoresheet saying ‘rain-affected draw’ or ‘bad light<br />

stopped play’ or ‘Sydney Uni beat us in the early rounds and they might have won if rain and bad light hadn't intervened’.<br />

No, it was a simple decision and one Bruce and I never doubted, and one I know Terry fully understood and<br />

supported. I can still see it in his eyes and in his grin as we came <strong>of</strong>f. We had batted in almost complete darkness to<br />

secure the outright victory. To the Sydney Uni players' credit I have no recollection <strong>of</strong> them being upset, even if some<br />

<strong>of</strong> their supporters were. And the after-match celebrations, involving both teams, showcased some <strong>of</strong> the extraordinary<br />

characters in our side.<br />

43


SECOND GRADE FINAL<br />

1977-78<br />

Village Green<br />

UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY- 1st Innings<br />

J. O'SULLIVAN b Robinson ………………….….…… 8<br />

S. WARD c Deegan b March ………………….….…… 17<br />

G. KEIGHRAN c March b Pym ………………….….…… 0<br />

M. LELIEVRE c Robinson b March ………………….….…… 17<br />

P. BAIRD b March ………………….….…… 0<br />

D. RIDLEY c Deegan b Robinson ………………….….…… 4<br />

M. WILSON c Smith b Robinson ………………….….…… 0<br />

P. BEALE c Buddin b March ………………….….…… 5<br />

C. McRAE not out ………………….….…… 12<br />

S. GLENDAY c Jansson b March ………………….….…… 2<br />

J. RODGERS c Handley b March ………………….….…… 0<br />

Sundries ………………….….…… 0<br />

TOTAL ………………….….…… 65<br />

BOWLING PYM 1-17<br />

ROBINSON 3-16<br />

MARCH 6-17<br />

KIRKWOOD 0-15<br />

UNIVERSITY OF NSW - 1st Innings<br />

I. SMITH c Wilson b McRae ………………….….…… 38<br />

R. CAMPBELL c O'Sullivan b Keighran ………………….….…… 5<br />

N. JANSSON c Ward b McRae ………………….….…… 3<br />

R. MARCH c Ridley b McRae ………………….….…… 20<br />

P. TOUTc Keighran b Beale ………………….….…… 6<br />

B. HANDLEY c Rodgers b McRae ………………….….…… 0<br />

G. KIRKWOOD c Ward b McRae ………………….….…… 6<br />

T. BUDDIN c Lelievre b McRae ………………….….…… 6<br />

P. DEEGAN b McRae ………………….….…… 8<br />

R. PYM c Beale b McRae ………………….….…… 0<br />

G. ROBINSON not out ………………….….…… 2<br />

Sundries ………………….….…… 11<br />

TOTAL ………………….….…… 105<br />

BOWLING BEALE 1-23<br />

GLENDAY 0-23<br />

KEIGHRAN 1-18<br />

McRAE 8-24<br />

RODGERS 0-6<br />

UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY - 2nd Innings<br />

J. O'SULLIVAN b Pym ………………….….…… 5<br />

S. WARD b Pym ………………….….…… 25<br />

M. LELIEVRE b March ………………….….…… 4<br />

P. BAIRD lbw b Pym ………………….….…… 4<br />

D. RIDLEY c Jansson b Robinson ………………….….…… 7<br />

M. WILSON not out ………………….….…… 3<br />

P. BEALE c Pym b March ………………….….…… 39<br />

Sundries ………………….….…… 6<br />

TOTAL ………………….….…… 6-93 dec.<br />

BOWLING PYM 3-34<br />

ROBINSON 1-28<br />

MARCH 2-25<br />

44


UNIVERSITY OF NSW - 2nd Innings<br />

I. SMITH c Lelievre b Rodgers ………………….….…… 4<br />

R. CAMPBELL c Lelievre b McRae ………………….….…… 1<br />

N. JANSSON c Lelievre b Rodgers ………………….….…… 5<br />

P. TOUT not out ………………….….…… 30<br />

P. DEEGAN c Ridley b Rodgers ………………….….…… 2<br />

B. HANDLEY not out ………………….….…… 12<br />

Sundries ………………….….…… 0<br />

TOTAL ………………….….…… 4-54<br />

BOWLING BEALE 0-1<br />

GLENDAY 0-5<br />

KEIGHRAN 0-4<br />

McRAE 1-7<br />

RODGERS 3-37<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NSW won outright by 6 wickets<br />

SECOND GRADE STATISTICS<br />

1977-78<br />

BATTING M INN. N.O. AGG. AVE. BEST C/S<br />

J. Martel 7 11 3 353 44.1 (R) 77*<br />

P. Tout 7 8 2 261 43.5 78<br />

B. Handley 12 13 3 323 32.3 137* (R) 7<br />

N. Jansson 15 17 2 475 (R) 31.7 92 10<br />

T. Buddin 14 13 1 344 28.7 109 6<br />

I. Smith 9 11 1 232 23.2 43 9<br />

P. Deegan 15 16 4 230 19.1 31 27/1 (R)<br />

G. Kirkwood 11 10 0 139 13.9 69 6<br />

D. Pratt 8 10 0 132 13.2 58 4<br />

M. Watt 9 10 1 118 13.1 31 5<br />

R. March 15 13 1 154 12.8 37 9<br />

P. Burnett 6 6 54<br />

A. Wijeratne 5 5 52<br />

R. Pym 8 7 29 4<br />

S. Van der Sluys 7 2 10<br />

N. Perger 2 2 31<br />

G. McBarron 1 1 0<br />

P. Jourdain 2 2 33<br />

P. Emery 1 1 2<br />

G. Robinson 8 4 10<br />

J. Sands 1 1 6<br />

R. Campbell 2 3 38<br />

BOWLING OVERS M WICKETS RUNS AVE.<br />

G. Robinson 111 21 291 24 12.1 (R) 5/27<br />

G. Kirkwood 117.5 29 294 20 14.7 5/13<br />

R. March 238.4 47 702 47 14.9 7/55<br />

R. Pym 106 14 463 28 16.5 6/62<br />

N. Perger 70.6 12 255 9 28.3 3/43<br />

S. Van der Sluys 108.4 14 412 14 29.4 5/53<br />

B. Handley 137 5 27.4<br />

P. Tout 99 3 33<br />

M. Watt 22 1 22<br />

D. Pratt 25 1 25<br />

P. Emery 48 1 48<br />

A. Wijeratne 15 0 -<br />

J. Sands 31 0 -<br />

SUMMARY<br />

Games played = 15<br />

Won 1st Innings = 7, Won Outright = 3,<br />

Lost 1st Innings = 3, Lost Outright = 2<br />

Runs scored for = 3218, Wickets lost = 144, Average = 22.3<br />

Runs scored against = 3014, Wickets taken = 163, Average = 18.5<br />

45


On Top<br />

Of The<br />

Pile<br />

Club Championship<br />

1978-79<br />

The erudite Dubliner, Clayton Jones, was the chairman <strong>of</strong> selectors for 78-79, the season we<br />

won the club championship. Here he shares a few thoughts on that momentous summer.<br />

An aged man is but a paltry thing,<br />

A tattered cloak upon a stick …<br />

- WB Yeats, Sailing to Byzantium<br />

Anniversaries, especially those held, say, 30 years after the event are wonderful occasions because we have the<br />

opportunity to rewrite the facts, the history, to embellish and diminish. Indeed the longstanding motto <strong>of</strong> The<br />

Saturday Sledge was: ‘If you didn't say it, you should have.’ We tattered cloaks leaning on our aged willow sticks will<br />

regale ourselves with real and invented memories. This grundling old stick will join in joy and reinvention.<br />

And indeed there will be time<br />

To wonder, "Do I dare" and, "Do I dare"<br />

Time to turn back ...<br />

… Do I dare<br />

To disturb the universe<br />

- TS Eliot, The Love Song <strong>of</strong> J Alfred Prufrock<br />

John Rogers taught the club to stand tall and to dare. Indeed he and the now-legends had the temerity to knock<br />

<strong>of</strong>f Petersham in sunny March days <strong>of</strong> 1977 in the first grade final, notwithstanding the salty eloquence <strong>of</strong> Brian<br />

Riley. JR taught a university cricket club there was a point to serious cricket and applied psychology on Saturdays,<br />

notwithstanding the 100% fun rule and perpetually brittle batting <strong>of</strong> hungover freshmen (a contradiction in terms).<br />

By 1978-79, JR's mantle had been taken up by many more. The young first-graders such as Henry, Gulgong, Livo,<br />

Jungle, Chappo and Paddy were developing fine reputations as cricketers while Mark Ray was seriously underestimated,<br />

perhaps because <strong>of</strong> his self-effacing nature. Indeed, many in the club underestimated his leadership capacity<br />

until season 1980-1981 but that story comes at another time. This self-confident team affected the rest <strong>of</strong> us - the<br />

grundlers and nurdlers, the military mediums, the non-turning <strong>of</strong>fies. We learned how to win.<br />

Terry Buddin and John Ingleson were fine leaders; Terry's charismatic leadership brought a second-grade premiership<br />

in 1977-78. Indeed, when I followed Terry as second-grade captain, some in the team were lacking belief in<br />

their ability to compete without his commanding presence and vast vocabulary. It took much cajoling and driving to<br />

get the team moving, but move it did - right up the table. By February, Dave Meagher was showing his vibrant batting<br />

talent (including driving and pulling before Easter, unheard <strong>of</strong> in his captain's curmudgeonly Boycottian view <strong>of</strong><br />

giving a wicket away), so I dropped myself and thus Jock Martel (how many opening batsmen do you know who have<br />

been caught on the deep extra-cover boundary in the first over at the Village Green) took over for the last couple <strong>of</strong><br />

rounds and the finals. Ingleson's thirds (including yours truly) manoeuvred through a bad light appeal to get ‘done<br />

over’ against Bankstown at Punchbowl in a rain-truncated final, 5 for 20-odd.<br />

48


Leaders and leadership throughout the club brought fine and unexpected (for many) success. To get a sense <strong>of</strong> it,<br />

look at the careers that so many <strong>of</strong> that time have developed in the 30 years since. Consider also the amazing fun at<br />

the club. The previous season, many from all grades spent a couple <strong>of</strong> weeks in January on a <strong>New</strong> Zealand tour - yes<br />

the one where Jim O'Brien woke up with Ralph Merrell's recently acquired parking meter in his bed. In the championship<br />

season, a country tour to the Riverina, the Maitland bashathon and a rain-affected inter-varsity tournament<br />

added to the joy and yarns <strong>of</strong> the season.<br />

Each grade had its psychos and eccentrics. The team lists show talented cricketers who brought great colour - Dick<br />

Pym, the late and lamented Kirkie (Ge<strong>of</strong>f Kirkwood), Jock, Neville Jansson, David Pratt, Blowfly Barford, Jungle<br />

Robson and more were regulars in the Psycho XI discussions.<br />

The 78-79 fourth grade team.<br />

When you see that Dave Meagher made second grade only in the second half <strong>of</strong> the season, that Asoka Wijeratne -<br />

a force in the '81 premiership, Peter Burnett, 'Robbo' Robinson, 'Cliff' Hanger and 'Orca' Clarke all played at least<br />

part <strong>of</strong> the season in third grade, it is easy to understand that there was lot <strong>of</strong> ability which came together well<br />

throughout the grades.<br />

Young country lads, city GPS boys (not Goulburn Public School, Jungle), old stalwarts and other blows-in melded<br />

into a strong culture that went well beyond cricket. (One or two <strong>of</strong> the first group were taught how to tie a tie by older<br />

stagers.) There were the hard-working clubmen - John Ingleson, JR, Blowfly, Ian Kellaway, Tony McKendry,<br />

'Cardinal' Epstein to name a few - whose mantle was passed right through to today's leaders.<br />

Most <strong>of</strong> us from that season and those just before and after owe the club much for friendships and the 'warm<br />

fuzzies' we all feel for the Bumblebee cap and the club. It was much more than cricket; it was a fine chapter in many<br />

happy lives. It fulfilled the dream <strong>of</strong> a fine emerging club and its finest leaders. Take a bow - from JR through Pr<strong>of</strong><br />

Ingleson, Justice Buddin, Henry, ‘Jacky’ Jourdain and more.<br />

Had I the heavens' embroidered cloths,<br />

Enwrought with golden and silver light,<br />

The blue and the dim and the dark cloths<br />

Of night and light and the half light,<br />

I would spread the cloths under your feet:<br />

But I, being poor, have only my dreams;<br />

I have spread my dreams under your feet;<br />

Tread s<strong>of</strong>tly because you tread on my dreams.<br />

- WB Yeats, Aedh Wishes For The Cloths Of Heaven.<br />

Yeats might have been writing for JR in that championship year.<br />

49


SOME CLUB<br />

CHAMPIONS<br />

By Andrew McMaster & John Rogers<br />

Tony Epstein - teams secretary and lower grade captain in the early 70s, Tony was stunned to be<br />

parachuted into the presidency in 76. An architect and a gentle guy, he did a superb job. He<br />

described his fourths team in that club championship year as the best he had played with. A solid<br />

performer in every sense <strong>of</strong> the word - he was never a lover <strong>of</strong> the short single, and the next allrun<br />

four will be his first. He and Ralph Merrell were a formidable opening pair - Tony opened the<br />

batting and Ralph opened the umpiring. Tony had a very safe pair <strong>of</strong> hands - never dropped a<br />

catch and never dropped a glass.<br />

Ralph Merrell - multi-personality Merrell played a huge role in the club. A jokester, life bubbled<br />

wherever he went - until it was down to business. As self-proclaimed stock bowler in 5As or 5Bs,<br />

his <strong>of</strong>fies were serious business, and there were few better sights than ballerina Ralph kicking his<br />

heels and shouting with joy at another wicket. A very thorough club treasurer, he was full <strong>of</strong> sound<br />

advice, and inside that jelly, he had a backbone <strong>of</strong> steel when the club's interests were at stake.<br />

Spider Mullins writing on the 5Bs in the 76-77 yearbook: ‘The spearhead <strong>of</strong> our attack was Ralph<br />

‘Cuddles’ Merrell, top wicket-taker (32 @ 15.2) and notable personality both on and <strong>of</strong>f the field.<br />

He was always on hand to <strong>of</strong>fer assistance, would never apologise when it was wrong, and would<br />

always remind me when it was right. Ralph is a competitor in the true sense <strong>of</strong> the word.’<br />

Peter James - Jamesy was the one constant captain throughout these five years - 5As every year<br />

bar 77-78 when he swapped with Tony Epstein and captained the 4s.<br />

In his late 30s at the time and married with a couple <strong>of</strong> kids, Peter was was a great mentor for<br />

young guys coming through. He had a happy, positive demeanour that rubbed <strong>of</strong>f on all his players.<br />

A solid left-handed middle-order batsman, he was not a lover <strong>of</strong> the short single except on one<br />

special day at Mascot Oval when he dropped the ball at his feet and called a single - to run out<br />

Tony Epstein by 15 metres.<br />

Ge<strong>of</strong>f Garland - the club's No.1 cap holder, and chief lobbyist for our promotion to grade, G<br />

Squared has been omnipresent. Club secretary in the early 60s, and, after a stint at grade with that<br />

other university, was UNSWCC's long-term Mr Fix-it at the NSWCA and inaugural club captain in<br />

73-74. Went on to captain thirds and fourths. A fine left-arm spinner and, later, a non-bowling,<br />

left-hand opening bat. Never short <strong>of</strong> an opinion, he eventually became an umpire. Ge<strong>of</strong>f's determination<br />

to stick up for the club and its players has symbolised its egalitarian spirit.<br />

Jill Ratcliffe - appeared as if from nowhere to become a ground-breaking figure in Sydney grade<br />

cricket administration. Jill was the first woman to attend a meeting <strong>of</strong> the NSWCA as a club delegate,<br />

and was a fantastic supporter and worker for UNSWCC. The parties at International House<br />

will long be remembered. Jill was also crucial to the success <strong>of</strong> the Uni Baseball Club and was<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten last at the bar with Kirktree or Tacko.<br />

Ian Kellaway - without doubt, Kell was one <strong>of</strong> the hardest-working, most committed clubmen<br />

UNSWCC has seen. His work rate as assistant secretary for many years was outstanding and<br />

ensured we were seen as one <strong>of</strong> the best administered clubs.<br />

John MacFarlane - <strong>of</strong> all the jobs at a grade club, teams secretary is undoubtedly the most difficult<br />

and time consuming, particularly presiding over the various egos that participate in selection<br />

meetings. His work around the club was so immense and his endeavour to raise finance so strong<br />

that Gulgong labelled him 'Chook Raffle Macca'. Johnny Mac was constantly available and a tower<br />

<strong>of</strong> strength in many ways for many years.<br />

Mark ‘Random’ Sample - it's unlikely that there has been or will be a more frugal and thorough<br />

person in the treasurer's role throughout the life <strong>of</strong> the UNSWCC. Random elevated the concepts<br />

<strong>of</strong> accountability and corporate governance to unparalleled heights and ensured the financial<br />

fruits <strong>of</strong> a golden era were protected. While a useful medium-pacer and lower-order slogger, he<br />

will best be remembered for his ability to collect annual subscriptions and his care with the club's<br />

money. He was a very talented golfer who regularly took out the Stableford award at the Uni golf<br />

day.<br />

John Barford - Central casting would have struggled to come up with as eccentric a character<br />

for a cricket club as the Blowfly, the bouncing, electric-haired lower-grade keeper-batsman, whose<br />

bubbling personality, good humour and left-field wit ensured no club member ever took himself<br />

50


too seriously. While his keeping was unconventional, in the first three years <strong>of</strong> this five-year span<br />

he broke fourth and fifth grade keeping records, topping this <strong>of</strong>f in our club championship year by<br />

winning the club's fielding trophy for his efforts in the fourths. As a batsman, his hair might have<br />

matched Andrew Symonds's, but not his style, yet he had the distinction <strong>of</strong> being runner-up in<br />

that same year in the fourth grade averages. JB put in when it counted, as shown by his three-year<br />

stint as club secretary in the early 70s. But JB’s enduring legacy will always be that there was<br />

never a dull moment when he was about.<br />

Jack Skiller - was for years known as ‘JR's uncle’ before we actually got to know his name. A<br />

truly remarkable man, he was a renowned figure in cricket for the depth and quality <strong>of</strong> his statistics,<br />

and also for his unsurpassed collection and knowledge <strong>of</strong> birdlife. A man <strong>of</strong> impeccable manners<br />

and a mild, unassuming charm, he was a regular at the VG and the first port <strong>of</strong> call when<br />

researching the figures <strong>of</strong> any player from any club. Much <strong>of</strong> his work is admired in the archives at<br />

<strong>Cricket</strong> NSW. A favourite <strong>of</strong> every cricketer who got to know him.<br />

Peter Jourdain - ‘Jacky’ was part <strong>of</strong> the <strong>South</strong>ern Riverina mafia that invaded the club in the<br />

mid to late 70s. A seriously good middle-order batsman, who honed his financial skills during a<br />

period as club treasurer before continuing this in his career as the ‘fix-it’ man for various accounting<br />

firms and international media barons. Nicknamed ‘Jacky’ after a Pot Black personality, many<br />

<strong>of</strong> his wayward Uni days were spent in snooker halls all over Sydney.<br />

Dave ‘Death-Warmed-Up’ Meagher - a very apt nickname due to Dave's inability to appear<br />

healthy after long festivities following a day's play. A prolific scorer <strong>of</strong> centuries in first grade,<br />

Dave was a very popular clubman, particularly when accompanied by his sister. The inaugural<br />

winner <strong>of</strong> the ‘Fastest Man in Grade <strong>Cricket</strong>’ sprint at the SCG, much to the delight <strong>of</strong> his financial<br />

backers. Once sprinted along the tables in the main auditorium <strong>of</strong> Goulburn Workers Club.<br />

Glen Clarke - the supreme net bowler, he shot to fame on the club's celebrated tour <strong>of</strong> <strong>New</strong><br />

Zealand in the late 70s when he acquired the nickname <strong>of</strong> ‘Orca’ (something about late nights and<br />

swimming pools). For a decade was considered the best net bowler in the world - which nearly led<br />

to a county contract with Kent.<br />

John Ingleson - a long-term club figure who remains involved with UNSW at the highest levels<br />

<strong>of</strong> administration. John was president for a long period, almost as long as his bowling spells. An<br />

expert in Indonesian affairs and politics, these skills were <strong>of</strong>ten required during his tenure as club<br />

leader. The only captain the club has had to leave the ball in the freezer on a Friday night to<br />

ensure its hardness the following day.<br />

Bob Patterson - universally known as ‘Snake’. Bob was a cult figure around the club due to his<br />

undying commitment to cricket and, in particular, leg-spin bowling, particularly his own. Also<br />

known for his performances on country tours, where he once took three catches at Inverell without<br />

moving.<br />

Al Goodwin - a scorer for first grade, ‘'Large Al’ had a system <strong>of</strong> scoring that could best be<br />

described as alternative but at least it ensured he got to call the card at the end <strong>of</strong> the day's play<br />

(nobody else could understand it!). Al had the misfortune to live for a while in Coogee Bay Road<br />

near the infamous regular watering hole, the Randwick Royal. As a result he and his apartment<br />

block were <strong>of</strong>ten aware <strong>of</strong> nearby club stalwarts retiring from the Royal after a big innings.<br />

David Lemon - Without doubt the most gentlemanly person ever to be associated with the club,<br />

although he did ultimately get a little testy when first grade failed to win another 15 in a row after<br />

1980-81. Showed enormous patience and generosity to put up with all us hoons. An excellent<br />

golfer who had trouble finding partners in the Uni ranks due to their lack <strong>of</strong> golf etiquette - cheating<br />

by throwing the sand and the ball did not go down well with David or other members <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Australian Club.<br />

Tom Boyce - Tommy was a first-grade scorer in the same sensible mould as Dave Lemon though<br />

he could fire up at times. Firsts always knew they had a very committed, competitive scorer in<br />

T Boyce. Like all good scorers he was very much a part <strong>of</strong> the side while having the good sense to<br />

watch our sillier antics from a close but safe distance.<br />

Andrew McMaster - Splinter was a key figure in various roles. Treasurer, secretary, manager <strong>of</strong><br />

various teams, especially on country tours, and the club's leading <strong>of</strong>f-field sledger. Had a wicked<br />

wit and as sharp a tongue as Terry Buddin, and in sledging terms there is no higher praise.<br />

Splinter was a left-arm very medium-paced bowler from Temora and an important part <strong>of</strong> the<br />

country invasion and someone who helped give the club its unique, smart, larrikin personality.<br />

Could have managed the Australian team on Ashes tours but for his devotion to the Swans. His<br />

experiences in the Uni dressingroom have surely helped when he has his arms locked around<br />

'Roosy' singing 'Cheer, Cheer the Red and the White ...'<br />

51


The Ultimate Prize<br />

John Rogers knew that the club championship proved that UNSWCC had become a fully<br />

fledged member <strong>of</strong> the Sydney scene.<br />

Lots <strong>of</strong> people wonder about the relative value <strong>of</strong> a first grade premiership as against a club championship. If you<br />

were to ask players from other clubs in the 70s & 80s whether UNSWCC had ever won a club championship, their<br />

answer would probably have been ‘no idea’. But if you ask them if we'd won any first grade premierships and they'd<br />

probably have said ‘one or two’.<br />

Yet the 50-plus people who earn a club championship cap will remember it very clearly indeed. To them it is the<br />

ultimate - they have made a contribution to what must have been the best club in the competition.<br />

My first club in Sydney grade was the lowly Paddington which was finishing close to the bottom in every grade in<br />

the two years before it was expelled from the competition to be replaced by Sutherland. I'm not sure that the concept<br />

<strong>of</strong> club championship ever crossed my radar in those two years.<br />

Having lost a quarter <strong>of</strong> their players to Sutherland, St George were quite happy to have me, and to everyone's<br />

surprise Saints then won not only first grade but also the club championship. The celebrations throughout the club<br />

rammed home to me the importance <strong>of</strong> third, fourth and fifth grades to a successful club. St George had former first<br />

grade players captaining in lower grades who saw their role as bringing through the youngsters, and they were there<br />

aplenty - not least a 15-year-old spinner named Kerry O'Keeffe playing third grade who within a year would be one <strong>of</strong><br />

the leading wicket-takers in first grade.<br />

The 1978-79 club championship decider was to be semi-final weekend, and as seconds, thirds and fourths had all<br />

finished in second place, UNSWCC was hosting semis in each <strong>of</strong> these grades at the VG and both the DP ovals. Firsts<br />

were eighth at this point and forced to play a redraw away against Wests. I read with interest in the yearbook where<br />

I've written that: ‘From Round 6 we played like premiers, but the price <strong>of</strong> being the most feared side was that this<br />

time the breaks didn't come and premiers we were not to be.’ In fact we were missing Watson and Lawson for half<br />

our games and had had the usual awful pre-Christmas start when our batting was ‘spineless, sloppy and reckless’.<br />

Well we absolutely belted Wests in a one-dayer that finished before tea, having raced to 201 and declaring after<br />

just 42 overs and then letting Henry loose. He took 4-33 as we routed Wests for 94. Twenty-five years later at the<br />

annual Wests/UNSW Test match breakfast, I was staggered to be accused <strong>of</strong> brutality for the way I'd sooled Henry<br />

onto the Wests youngsters. Sounds like none <strong>of</strong> them had to face Pascoe in full flight.<br />

For perhaps the only time in my grade career - which as it turned out finished that day - I got the boys to pack up<br />

and disappear so we could see the last session <strong>of</strong> the three semis our other grades were involved in.<br />

At the VG, seconds had it wrapped up after batted into the second day to get 471, <strong>of</strong> which Mick Watt made a<br />

superb 166. Balmain were being routed, so <strong>of</strong>f we went to DP.<br />

First graders rarely see thirds and fourths outside the nets and we came in on the end <strong>of</strong> two extraordinary battles.<br />

Standing between the two fields we had a great view <strong>of</strong> each match. On DP1 all thirds needed was the batsmen to<br />

hang on for a draw - but we were in desperate trouble with Cliffy Hanger blocking with grim determination that was<br />

to earn him cult status. On DP2 fourths had looked pretty safe after their 302 but Randwick began to chase it down<br />

in fine style. It came down to the last over with Randwick nine wickets down and needing only four runs. One wicket<br />

to us and we were through to the final and would win the club championship. Four dot balls had tensions rising, but<br />

on the fifth Randwick got the four they needed.<br />

All eyes switched back to the thirds where our last two batsmen were holding on in the gathering gloom. Not <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

do batting teams rejoice at an umpire's decision but when they decided to <strong>of</strong>fer the light to our batsmen they were<br />

friends for life. The thirds were through to the semis and the club championship was ours.<br />

For the first graders, it was a real eye-opener. The spirit and determination shown made everyone understand that<br />

winning a club championship involves much more than just turning up to play the game.<br />

The photo <strong>of</strong> all four grades standing behind the club championship banner <strong>of</strong> 1978-79 is one to savour.<br />

53


NSWCA president Alan Davidson with some <strong>of</strong> the troops after presenting the club championship penant.<br />

The Results<br />

First Grade - eighth - John Rogers captain<br />

Second Grade - second - Jock Martel, Clayton Jones captains<br />

Third Grade - second - John Ingleson captain<br />

Fourth Grade - third - Tony Epstein captain<br />

A PSYCHO THEORY<br />

l recall a time around 80-81 playing lower grades with Robbo and a few others down at DP. Someone<br />

was explaining how great it was that the club had so many psychos and people were retelling stories<br />

we'd all heard a thousand times about watermelons and Jungle parties. A couple <strong>of</strong> the quieter types<br />

(perhaps Michael Clark, myself and one or two other introverts) were saying we might get together as<br />

anti-psychos because we felt the focus on being outrageous might be detracting from performances on<br />

Saturdays. Robbo quickly put the views <strong>of</strong> the anti-psychos in context: ‘Show me an anti-psycho and<br />

I'll show you an underachiever.’<br />

That thought has stuck with me ever since.<br />

Martin Palin<br />

54


Proving<br />

The<br />

Point<br />

First Grade<br />

1980-81<br />

Four years after the fairytale <strong>of</strong> the 76-77 premierships, the country boys had grown up. One<br />

was a Test player, another a county pro in England. The rest, with some talented newcomers,<br />

formed another powerful, disciplined team. Mark Ray shares some thoughts.<br />

The 80-81 firsts led the competition from the start and were never headed. I remember a well-drilled, toughminded<br />

team - gutsy batting, tight bowling and outstanding fielding. If we got 160 batting first, we expected to win,<br />

especially at home. Compared to the 76-77 firsts, whose win has <strong>of</strong>ten been described as a surprise 'fairytale' effort,<br />

the 80-81 side was a hardened, disciplined team that took all before them. More a well-oiled machine than the highspirited<br />

adventurers <strong>of</strong> 76-77.<br />

As Livo says in the following pages, the 80-81 side always expected to win. However a look at the results suggests<br />

we had a few tense moments when our spot at the top <strong>of</strong> the table was threatened. We didn't do it as easily as it<br />

seems. We won two matches by 13 and 7 runs and tied against St George in the second-last round, a brilliant save by<br />

Chappo turning a likely four into a three and getting us three vital points. That result meant we went into the final<br />

round, against Randwick, needing to win to secure the minor premiership - and home ground advantage. Randwick's<br />

strong line-up included Alan Turner, John Dyson, Peter Clifford, Gary Bensley, Allan Campbell and Mike Whitney.<br />

Jungle and Livo fought hard with the bat and we took all <strong>of</strong> the first day to scrape to 153. On the second morning<br />

Randwick began confident <strong>of</strong> a win. But then we turned it on in the field again, Henry bowling fast and Disco applying<br />

pressure at the other end, supported by excellent fielding. Randwick could only manage only 93. This was a powerful<br />

performance which gave us confidence going into the semi-final against North Sydney.<br />

Our only loss was really good for us. After the first day's play in round 8 we had dismissed Sutherland for 148 but<br />

were a little casual with the bat and went to stumps three down for not many. I was one <strong>of</strong> the three out and was furious.<br />

I couldn't speak in the rooms afterwards. It was a silly reaction but we'd all set our standards high. The next<br />

week we were all out for 135, knocked Sutherland over for 106 and were 5-116 at stumps, only four short <strong>of</strong> an outright<br />

win. We'd turned our form around very quickly.<br />

John Rogers's influence was still a major factor in 80-81. From his coaching, we knew that if we were the best<br />

fielding side in the comp we'd make the semis. We quickly earned that reputation. As the season headed towards the<br />

business end we took to having Friday evening fielding sessions, as we had in 76-77. A sharp hour's workout and we<br />

were primed. The one innovation we developed in 80-81, something that set us apart, was that we concentrated more<br />

on fielding than batting and bowling during our pre-game warm-ups. Over weeks we developed a set <strong>of</strong> fielding drills<br />

that eventually became a sort <strong>of</strong> exhibition. Everyone responded to the drills; everyone took turns leading them. We<br />

all came to realise that the other sides were watching us. We were doing something different and the buzz from that -<br />

it was a lot <strong>of</strong> fun showing <strong>of</strong>f our skills - fired us up for the start <strong>of</strong> play. This was typical <strong>of</strong> how the team operated.<br />

Of the 15 players, 13 had played in either the 76-77 P-G team, the 76-77 firsts or the 77-78 seconds - all premiershipwinning<br />

teams. The two 'new' boys - Disco and Chris Hanger - were high-quality players who needed only encourage-<br />

55


ment. This core <strong>of</strong> experienced players meant that it was a team that needed minimal leadership from the captain.<br />

One suggestion from anyone at practice and Jungle or Toutie or someone else would say: 'Good idea. Come on, let's<br />

do it.'<br />

Livo mentions the fielding effort against Balmain as our best. No doubt. After play, Wayne Seabrook, who'd topscored<br />

for Balmain and looked to be about to win the match for them, came up to me and asked: 'Mate, how the hell<br />

did you win that game We had it won.' All I could say was that we were not going to give up. All we could do was<br />

bowl tight and field like demons, and hope his side cracked. Later, outside the Cracknell, a man in his 80s came up to<br />

me. 'Mark,' he said, 'I've been following Balmain first grade for 60 years and that is the best fielding performance I've<br />

ever seen. Congratulations.'<br />

Jungle discusses the semi against Norths in the following pages. Suffice to say here that it was our best match. At<br />

3-4 a season's great work was in the balance. In 76-77 we made our biggest total <strong>of</strong> the season in the final, thanks to<br />

the middle and lower order responding to the big occasion. It was the same in this semi, except that at the top <strong>of</strong> the<br />

order Chappo and Neville Jansson kept us from total collapse. Chappo's 90 is one <strong>of</strong> the club's greatest innings. Then<br />

the middle order <strong>of</strong> Disco, Bruce Handley and Steve Campbell took us to 293, our best total <strong>of</strong> the summer. After that<br />

effort under intense pressure, we walked out for the final against Northern Districts utterly convinced that we would<br />

win. I didn't have to say much before play: ‘One more game, boys. If we just do what we've done all season we'll win.’<br />

And that is exactly how that final went. We were in control throughout and the near-disaster <strong>of</strong> the semi was already<br />

a distant memory.<br />

Perhaps the slightly mistaken image <strong>of</strong> the 80-81 side had to do with the fact that some <strong>of</strong> us had had haircuts<br />

since 77. We even wore the occasional shirt with a collar. Young Livo was a mature cricketer, as were all the players<br />

left over from that initial first grade flag. And the one 'kid' in 80-81, Disco, was a cleancut unit with heaps <strong>of</strong> talent.<br />

We looked more predictable than the 76-77 side, and in many respects we were. But it wasn't all smooth sailing.<br />

Back: Asoka Wijeratne, Nigel Perger, Neviile Jansson, Bruce Handley, Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson, Steve Campbell, Terry<br />

Buddin, Peter Tout, David Lemon.<br />

Front: Greg Livingstone, Chris Chapman, Mark Ray, Jim Robson, Chris Hanger, Jim Dixon.<br />

56


The Team<br />

By mark Ray<br />

Greg Livingstone - responded really well to the opening batting spot and gave us stability at the<br />

top. Livo won selection in the NSW Colts that season and was, as always, outstanding in the field.<br />

Remarkably he was given an over at one stage; even more remarkably it was a maiden.<br />

Neville Jansson - Nev was a great team, full <strong>of</strong> enthusiasm, jokes and spirit. He batted most <strong>of</strong><br />

the season at No.6 where he gave us solidity. Towards the end he readily agreed to move up to<br />

No.3, a big challenge which he took on with typical determination. His stats don't reflect the quality<br />

<strong>of</strong> his work. His 15 run out in the semi-final helped save our season. He stuck it out under<br />

intense pressure after seeing three <strong>of</strong> us back in the pavilion with only 4 on the board. His support<br />

helped Chappo gain some touch and go on to his match-saving 90.<br />

Jim Robson - Jungle's season had some high and lows, no lower than his conversation with the<br />

Spit Bridge on the way to Manly Oval one Sunday morning, none higher than his excellent 52 in<br />

the final. Skilful enough to late cut on a very slow wicket, infuriating bowlers and opposing captains<br />

by scoring runs behind point when no one else could. A superb slips fieldsman to any bowler,<br />

he always <strong>of</strong>fered great advice to Mark during those hours in the slips.<br />

Chris Chapman - forced yet again to cope with the slow VG wicket, Chappo made five scores in<br />

the 40s. In better conditions at least two <strong>of</strong> those would have been hundreds. He was our leading<br />

run-scorer and his 90 in the semi is a legendary innings. It came after a run <strong>of</strong> 0, 0, 0, 2 but class<br />

comes out under real pressure and Chappo delivered right on cue. He was always excellent support<br />

as vice-captain.<br />

Asoka Wijeratne - played two early games then made heaps <strong>of</strong> runs in seconds and forced his<br />

way back into the side for round 13 when he made 59 not out after going in at 4-15 on a wet track.<br />

Deserved a spot in a first-grade premiership team.<br />

Peter Tout - like Chappo, Toutie's elegant batting style was frustrated by conditions at the VG.<br />

He played some excellent innings early in the season but came under pressure from batsmen in<br />

seconds. He took on a leadership role in fielding drills which helped maintain our enthusiasm<br />

throughout the season. Committed team man, full <strong>of</strong> common sense advice.<br />

Bruce Handley - the most intimidating short-leg fieldsman since Brian Close in the 60s.<br />

Possibly a bit psycho as he was happy to stand his ground when batsmen opened their shoulders,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten taking the ball on his legs or shoulders and never flinching. That deadpan look after a blow<br />

must have unnerved many a batsman. Bruce batted at No.7, a tough spot for a specialist batsman<br />

but he handled it well, especially in the semi when he and Disco built on Chappo's 90 and took<br />

control <strong>of</strong> the match on the first afternoon.<br />

Terry Buddin - started the season in good from with the bat but came down with glandular fever<br />

and was forced to miss the rest <strong>of</strong> the summer. A premiership-winning captain in seconds he was<br />

a big loss but he kept close to the team and always had excellent advice for the senior players. Also<br />

served as club delegate to NSWCA.<br />

Steve Campbell - Klinger had an excellent season, saving us several times with the bat and taking<br />

33 wickets at 14.6 with his leggies. They were the best figures for a wrist spinner in the comp.<br />

Steve's fielding was top class all through, and he managed some memorable catches and run outs.<br />

Jim Dixon - Disco's season had the lot - wickets, catches, media exposure, glandular fever and<br />

runs in the semi. That 52 against NDs was elegant to the point <strong>of</strong> arrogance. With Henry away a<br />

lot, Disco was our rock with the ball. His accuracy and our fielding meant we could apply pressure<br />

for long periods, enough to break most teams. A smart cricketer who responded to all challenges.<br />

Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson - we all received a boost knowing that H had become a Test player and there's no<br />

better feeling than having an Australian fast bowler taking the new ball for you. Henry's 24 wickets<br />

at 9.6 speak for themselves. Having him there for the semi and final meant we were close to<br />

unbeatable. But it wasn't just his presence, it was his typically total commitment to the team and<br />

the club that counted.<br />

Nigel Perger - Big Nige suffered for being the third paceman behind Henry and Disco, not a<br />

great role at the spinner-friendly VG. That we could omit a quality bowler like Nige showed our<br />

depth. His 4-23 against Sutherland gave us the chance <strong>of</strong> an outright and his brilliant catch at<br />

deep square during the tense Balmain game typified the best fielding performance <strong>of</strong> the season.<br />

Outstanding in post-season celebrations.<br />

57


Chris Hanger - as the keeper Cliffie had to be the leader in the field, a job he did superbly, a<br />

worthy successor to Jim O'Brien. A modest, delightful bloke, Cliffie had real steel in his game. He<br />

was faultless with the gloves and tireless in his enthusiasm, urging us all the way to maintain our<br />

high fielding standards. He batted with great determination and courage in the final.<br />

Dave Meagher - played in two limited-overs games. Also won the 'Fastest Man in Grade' sprint.<br />

He showed he would go on to play many more first grade games for the club.<br />

Mark Ray - somewhat surprised to find himself captain at the start <strong>of</strong> the summer, he enjoyed<br />

leading a smart, motivated team. Had a reasonable year with the bat, a better one with the ball.<br />

Appreciated everyone's support and enthusiasm.<br />

Dave Lemon - Dave's only appearances on the field were at drinks breaks, but our scorer was an<br />

integral part <strong>of</strong> the team. The quiet man in a team <strong>of</strong> chronic statement-makers, Dave still <strong>of</strong>fered<br />

an opinion when he felt it necessary - and we always listened. He took on more duties after team<br />

manager Splinter McMaster scarpered to <strong>New</strong> York, Dave supporting his replacement, John<br />

Gallagher. Being on the sidelines watching probably aged Dave a little as the season wore on but<br />

in the end he cruised over the line’<br />

Livo Looks Back<br />

The teenage star from the 76-77 first grade side was<br />

one <strong>of</strong> many tough nuts in the 80-81 team. A strong<br />

opening batsman and an oustanding fieldsman,<br />

Greg Livingstone typified this side. Here he<br />

recalls a golden summer.<br />

The main thing that sticks in my mind about the 1980-81<br />

season was that we were clearly the best side in the competition<br />

and we knew it - and so did all the other teams. This is reflected<br />

in the results: 17 games played (including finals), 13 wins, one<br />

tie, two draws (both due to wet weather) and one loss by 13 runs<br />

(we were four runs short <strong>of</strong> an outright when time beat us). We<br />

were supremely confident and did not expect to lose any game.<br />

The strength was undoubtedly the bowling which featured<br />

the three best bowlers in the competition - Henry, Mark and<br />

Disco - and two exceptional backups in Nigel Perger and Steve<br />

Campbell. Three quicks, a left-arm orthodox and a leggie. Each<br />

one averaged less than 15 runs per wicket. Outstanding.<br />

The batting was less impressive statistically but as you will<br />

notice elsewhere in this booklet the quality <strong>of</strong> the wicket and the<br />

slowness <strong>of</strong> the outfield contributed to the seemingly low numbers. But we were all very determined and disciplined<br />

and did everything we could to graft out enough runs to defend in the field. Mark and Chappo were the major contributors<br />

throughout the season, with both playing crucial innings in the final and semi respectively. Jungle played a<br />

great innings in the final as did Bruce Handley and Disco in the semi when we were in significant early trouble.<br />

One thing that really stood us apart from the other teams was our fielding. We were head and shoulders above the<br />

rest and it showed in the number <strong>of</strong> close games we won through the ability to shut down the scoring <strong>of</strong> our opponents.<br />

The best example was the restriction <strong>of</strong> a Balmain team containing Greg Geise and Wayne Seabrook, both<br />

budding state players, to 160 chasing 167. We stopped everything and basically worried them out <strong>of</strong> it. Geisey still<br />

talks about that day when we meet.<br />

My recollections <strong>of</strong> the games are somewhat hazy. Maybe because the Racecourse Hotel became our major sponsor<br />

and we did our best to return their support.<br />

58


A few things that stand out for me are;<br />

- Mark Ray's dominance <strong>of</strong> the entire competition - easily the best player - won the Herald player <strong>of</strong> the year, captained<br />

the winning first grade team, got 60 and 5 for in the final - but couldn't crack the state team - ridiculous.<br />

- Disco's 46 wickets and his uncanny ability to swing the ball both ways, a lot.<br />

- Henry being picked for his first Test - he was at the top <strong>of</strong> his game and scared the shit out <strong>of</strong> them all year but particularly<br />

in the finals - I can still remember the look on Jack Moran's face (ND's opener) when he was LBW. I think it<br />

was as much relief as surprise.<br />

- Chappo's batting in the semi. After we were 3-4 against a very good North Sydney attack, he got 90 under extreme<br />

pressure and combined with Neville, Bruce Handley, Disco and the tail to get us to 293, our highest score all year.<br />

- The outstanding fielding, catching and throwing skills <strong>of</strong> all players - the display against Balmain was the highlight<br />

for me.<br />

- Jungle's legendary effort during the Saturday-Sunday game against Manly - we were 0-100 overnight chasing 118 so<br />

we decided to have a drink at the Manly Rugby Club. Needless to say we overindulged resulting in some sore heads<br />

but, more significantly, Jungle's ‘spit at the Spit Bridge’, late arrival and subsequent stumping by six metres were<br />

unforgettable.<br />

- The doomed pursuit <strong>of</strong> Nigel by Mrs Racecourse - it was doomed wasn't it, Joel<br />

FIRST GRADE SEMI-FINAL<br />

1980 - 81<br />

Village Green<br />

UNIVERSITY OF NSW - 1st Innings<br />

M. RAY c Rodgie b Spring ………………….….. 0<br />

G. LIVINGSTONE b Wiesner ………………….….. 4<br />

N. JANSSON run out ………………….….. 15<br />

J. ROBSON c Fitzgerald b Wiesner ………………….….. 0<br />

C. CHAPMAN c Fitzgerald b Wiesner ………………….….. 90<br />

A. WIJERATNE lbw b Shelton ………………….….. 14<br />

B. HANDLEY lbw b Wiensner ………………….….. 58<br />

J. DIXON c and b Wooster ………………….….. 52<br />

S. CAMPBELL c JohnstonE b Wooster ………………….….. 28<br />

G LAWSON b Wiesner ………………….….. 13<br />

C. HANGER not out ………………….….. 0<br />

Sundries ………………….….. 19<br />

TOTAL ………………….….. 293<br />

BOWLING WIESNER 5-72<br />

SPRING 1-41<br />

BAIRD 0-50<br />

WOOSTER 2-45<br />

SHELTON 1-56<br />

CRANE 0-10<br />

NORTH SYDNEY - 1st Innings<br />

W. CRANE c Ray b Lawson ………………….….. 3<br />

D. RODGIE b Dixon ………………….….. 9<br />

R. CHAPMAN c Dixon b Lawson ………………….….. 28<br />

D. JOHNSTONE c Dixon b Ray ………………….….. 28<br />

G. SPRING b Dixon ………………….….. 65<br />

R. SHELTON c Dixon b Ray ………………….….. 1<br />

M. VAN RHOON c Robson b Campbell ………………….….. 30<br />

T. WOOSTER c Ray b Campbell ………………….….. 4<br />

P. FITZGERALD c Hanger b Campbell ………………….….. 0<br />

J. BAIRD c Chapman b Dixon ………………….….. 16<br />

S. WIESNER not out ………………….….. 4<br />

Sundries ………………….….. 6<br />

TOTAL ………………….….. 194<br />

BOWLING LAWSON 2-50<br />

DIXON 3-32<br />

RAY 2-50<br />

CAMPBELL 3-56<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NSW won on 1st Innings<br />

59


FIRST GRADE FINAL<br />

1980 - 81<br />

Village Green<br />

UNIVERSITY OF NSW - 1st Innings<br />

M. RAY b Taylor ………………….….. 64<br />

G. LIVINGSTONE c Price b Taylor ………………….….. 28<br />

N. JANSSON c Oakley b Clews ………………….….. 1<br />

J. ROBSON lbw b Clews ………………….….. 52<br />

C. CHAPMAN c Howlett b Grimble ………………….….. 11<br />

A. WIJERATNE c Clews b Grimble ………………….….. 7<br />

B. HANDLEY c Howlett b Mackay ………………….….. 27<br />

J. DIXON lbw b Mackay ………………….….. 11<br />

S. CAMPBELL c and b Whitfield ………………….….. 17<br />

G LAWSON c Taylor b Mackay ………………….….. 0<br />

C. HANGER not out ………………….….. 4<br />

Sundries ………………….….. 14<br />

TOTAL ………………….….. 236<br />

BOWLING CLEWS 2-73<br />

COOTE 0-32<br />

TAYLOR 2-27<br />

MACKAY 3-35<br />

WHITFIELD 1-32<br />

GRIMBLE 2-24<br />

NORTHERN DISTRICT - 1st Innings<br />

N. HOWLETT c Ray b Dixon ………………….….. 33<br />

J. MORAN lbw b Lawson ………………….….. 3<br />

P. PRICE b Lawson ………………….….. 9<br />

R. EDWARDS c and b Ray ………………….….. 14<br />

K. MACKAY c Hanger b Ray ………………….….. 6<br />

M. CLEWS c Robson b Ray ………………….….. 12<br />

P. TAYLOR lbw b Ray ………………….….. 10<br />

R. OAKLEY not out ………………….….. 12<br />

M. COOTE c Jansson b Ray ………………….….. 1<br />

P. GRIMBLE b Campbell ………………….….. 0<br />

S. WHITFIELD c and b Campbell ………………….….. 0<br />

Sundries ………………….….. 3<br />

TOTAL ………………….….. 103<br />

BOWLING LAWSON 2-30<br />

DIXON 1-46<br />

RAY 5-23<br />

CAMPBELL 2-1<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> NSW won on 1st Innings<br />

60


FIRST GRADE STATISTICS<br />

1980-81<br />

BATTING INN. N.O. H.S. AGG. AVE. C/S<br />

A Wijeratne 7 1 59* 162 27.0 0<br />

C. Chapman 19 1 90 476 26.4 5<br />

B. Handley 15 5 58 264 26.4 8<br />

M. Ray 18 0 64 465 25.8 13<br />

G. Livingstone 18 0 80 390 21.6 5<br />

N. Jansson 17 3 61* 283 20.2 6<br />

P. Tout 14 1 68 248 19.0 4<br />

J. Robson 18 0 54 342 19.0 15<br />

T. Buddin 3 1 19* 31 15.5 0<br />

S. Campbell 14 3 28 147 13.3 9<br />

J. Dixon 17 3 52 165 11.7 11<br />

N. Perger 7 3 16* 42 10.5 4<br />

G. Lawson 8 0 33 76 9.5 1<br />

C. Hanger 11 4 7* 22 3.1 21+4<br />

D. Meagher 2 2 9* 10 - 1<br />

BOWLING OVERS MAIDENS WICKETS RUNS AVERAGE<br />

G. Lawson 129.1 41 24 224 9.3 (R)<br />

M. Ray 447.1 179 55 (R) 784 14.2<br />

J. Dixon 327.2 97 46 671 14.5<br />

N. Perger 94 27 15 220 14.6<br />

S. Campbell 195.2 54 33 486 14.7<br />

J. Robson 4 0 1 35 35<br />

SUMMARY<br />

Games Played = 17, Won = 13, Lost 1st Innings = 1, Drawn = 2, Tied = 1<br />

Runs for = 3423, Wickets Lost = 161, Average = 21.26<br />

BRIAN RILEY THE SPECTATOR<br />

Village Green. The first grade final against Northern Districts in 80-81. I'm in the slips next to Jungle, as<br />

always, when I look to the eastern side <strong>of</strong> the ground and see a couple <strong>of</strong> blokes settling down on the grass,<br />

an esky between them. It's Brian Riley, the captain <strong>of</strong> Petersham in the 76-77 final - a legendary sledger.<br />

'Jungle, look who's just arrived,' I say. Naturally Jungle didn't have a clue as he was half-blind back then.<br />

'It's Riles. This'll be interesting.'<br />

Soon after we get a wicket and out comes ND's captain, the former Test player Ross Edwards. Ross had said<br />

in the press at the start <strong>of</strong> the season that a lot <strong>of</strong> ordinary players were making 500 runs a season and he'd<br />

be disappointed if he didn't make 700. His tally to that day was about 380. I brought Henry straight on<br />

from the racecourse end and as he marked out his run, that familiar voice rang out.<br />

'Hey Rosco, how's that 700 lookin' Only 320 to go.'<br />

Mark Ray<br />

61


The Joys <strong>of</strong><br />

Batting<br />

at the Village Green<br />

Fellow batsman John Rogers follows up on Jim Robson's theories about the Village Green<br />

in the 70s and 80s.<br />

In writing about the stunning 80-81 semi-final win after UNSWCC being 3-4 after 10 minutes, Jungle diverted<br />

into an analysis <strong>of</strong> batting stats at the Village Green. Essentially he was extolling the partnership <strong>of</strong> Chappo and Nev<br />

Jansson, but he came up with the following figures:<br />

- Over 300 has been scored only once in six seasons at the VG - most other grounds have that score two to three<br />

times a year,<br />

- Not one century was scored at the V-G in 80-81 (nor in the 76-77)<br />

- The highest batting average for UNSWCC was 27. This is extremely low considering the strength <strong>of</strong> the team - only<br />

one loss in the last 20 matches. (In 76-77 the highest average was 30, next 25 and then four around 20).<br />

- Every recognised Uni bowler averaged less than 15. Most other teams had two at the most with that average. (In 76-<br />

77 the four main bowlers averaged between 15 and 20)<br />

- In the last six seasons, only nine out <strong>of</strong> the 49 Uni batsmen have a career average over 20. Only 10 <strong>of</strong> the 49<br />

exceeded 500 runs a season for Uni in first grade.<br />

- By comparison, <strong>of</strong> the 31 bowlers used, 10 have a career average under 20 while 15 average between 20 and 30.<br />

A few stats from the 76-77 first-grade season at the VG:<br />

- Test players' scores: Peter Toohey 98, Doug Walters 47, John Benaud 36, Brian Booth 29<br />

- Best scores <strong>of</strong> other state and prominent players: Steve Small 15, 6 & 46; Ge<strong>of</strong>f Davies 40, Jon Jobson 35, Ian<br />

Fisher 30.<br />

- Our top scorers at home were: v Manly, Watt 56; v Bankstown, Ray 36, Rogers 38 in second innings run-chase; v<br />

Syd Uni, Ray 36; Chappo 62 in second innings run-chase; v Nepean, Ray 44; v St George, Pym 35#; v Wests, Robson<br />

45, Livingstone 42*; v Bankstown (semi), Ray 66 & 37, Chapman 46.<br />

- In summary, we scored just three half-centuries to one against - by a future Test player.<br />

- At both the VG and away, we averaged 21 per innings. The opposition averaged 16 at the VG and 20 at home.<br />

- Of our eight away games, five were on very dodgy or rain-affected tracks, while on the three reasonable tracks we<br />

scored 9/257 (SCG2), 4/195 (Caringbah) and 284 Petersham (final) - an average <strong>of</strong> 32 per wicket. In these games<br />

Mark averaged 44, Chappo 42, Jungle 33.<br />

An interesting stat is that my own career average at St George was 30 from 10 seasons, but at UNSW when aged<br />

32-35 (and as fit as I'd ever been), it was just under 20. Age might have been a factor (not so in the current Test players),<br />

or even a decline through captaincy responsibilities. Assuming not, then perhaps it's plausible to add 50% to my<br />

UNSW figures to bring them up to those at St George.<br />

In 1980-81 that formula would have Chappo, Mark, Bruce Handley and Asoka averaging around 40. And in 76-77<br />

that formula would take Mark's average to 45, Chappo's to 38, and Jungle's to 33 - much more in line with their<br />

efforts on the three decent batting tracks we played on - and much closer to the ones I was used to seeing in my St<br />

George teams. I'm not so sure our bowlers would think much <strong>of</strong> this particular theory.<br />

garry sobers becomes a wales boy<br />

One <strong>of</strong> the perks <strong>of</strong> winning the first grade flag was that some <strong>of</strong> our players were invited to play in a charity at<br />

Gosford that featured many former Test players. It had been arranged that Dave Lemon would pick up me and<br />

the greatest all-rounder <strong>of</strong> them all, Garry Sobers. But on the way north from Sydney Dave’s car broke down.<br />

The boys limped into a service station and when the owner saw Sobers he said he’d drive them to the match.<br />

All he had was a ute so Dave sat on Sobers’ lap next to Jungle and the driver. They arrived late but the match<br />

was a great day and Garry Sobers excellent company, especially after play when he stood with the <strong>Wales</strong> players<br />

and chatted about his days as a Test player. A memorable day indeed.<br />

Jim Robson.<br />

63


The Semi-Final<br />

v North Sydney<br />

Village Green<br />

A close call for Neville during his crucial fighting innings on the first day.<br />

Classic Chappo during his brilliant counterattacking 90.<br />

65


The Final<br />

v Northern Districts<br />

Village Green<br />

67


A Rookie's Impressions<br />

In a team <strong>of</strong> experienced players, Jim Dixon was the 'kid' in the 80-81 first grade side. Here he<br />

recalls what it was like to win a flag in only his second season with <strong>Wales</strong>.<br />

My first season with the club was 1979-80. I came to the UNSWCC at the back end <strong>of</strong> these golden five years and<br />

still play today. I saw and participated in some <strong>of</strong> this success which includes being a very strong runner-up in firsts<br />

in81-82 … and being a very competitive club (though "unsuccessful" in terms <strong>of</strong> flags) for the next eight years.<br />

I have seen us at the very top and also very near the bottom. And I think my impressions are pretty informative,<br />

particularly in any analysis <strong>of</strong> what might be missing at the club these days. What does it take to be the top club in<br />

Sydney with the most-feared first grade line-up.<br />

That is what UNSWCC was in 1979.<br />

Many years have passed and I don't pr<strong>of</strong>ess to an acute awareness now <strong>of</strong> what I saw, heard and otherwise experienced<br />

back then. But those who knew me would undoubtedly agree that I was an immature, naive and reasonably<br />

insular individual. I had little knowledge <strong>of</strong> the club's previous exploits when I arrived. Though those successes and<br />

the myriad stories I have heard since tallied with my initial impressions <strong>of</strong> the club. To digress briefly - the story<br />

Jungle tells about Dave Colley shitting himself about playing <strong>Wales</strong> in a semi in 77-78 - when he saw Henry, Gulgong<br />

and Big Nige parading around in shorts before the match like the hormones they were - a totally intimidating presence<br />

about the team - rings true to this day. The club's atmosphere filled this shy ‘kid’ with confidence. An atmosphere<br />

that was almost the antithesis <strong>of</strong> the bald-faced arrogance that I so <strong>of</strong>ten see in ‘winners’ these days. This<br />

brings to mind a recent comment from Henry that nearly everyone used to play for the camaraderie more than the<br />

runs and wickets, though the two were obviously not mutually exclusive.<br />

So what about my first impressions, that first practice session<br />

There were the first graders who'd been pointed out to me.<br />

- Jungle … chatting to everyone, joking with everyone, snaffling these unbelievable slips catches and late cutting<br />

every ball bowled to him without missing the middle <strong>of</strong> the bat once. (I'll never forgive him, though, for failing to tell<br />

me full creams/whites were not required for UNSWCC practices).<br />

- Touty imperiously stroking the ball to all parts in the nets, chatting to me and encouraging me even though he<br />

didn't know me from a bar <strong>of</strong> soap.<br />

- Big Nige Perger steaming in bowling 90 miles an hour without a hair <strong>of</strong> that black mane being disturbed. How<br />

could this film star bowl like that<br />

- Chappo's faultless strokeplay, polished conversation and panther-like movements in the fielding sessions.<br />

- Klinger turning them sideways.<br />

- Cliffy Hanger (at last someone <strong>of</strong> my tender years) with a smile on his face every single second <strong>of</strong> every single practice<br />

(at least when he wasn't concentrating on some keeping work he might be doing). No one could possibly be as<br />

nice as this bloke.<br />

- Livo just slogged a few full bungers and Harbour Bridged everything in the fielding sessions.<br />

Alan Davidson brings the fifth flag to the Village Green.<br />

68


You knew these blokes could play way better than you ever had. You knew they knew they could play - but none <strong>of</strong><br />

this was allowed to become arrogance. None <strong>of</strong> it was intimidating to me, just a scene that seemed to encourage me<br />

to really have a crack. Really good blokes who genuinely wanted to be there and who could play extremely well.<br />

Gulgong's absence gave me a lucky start in first grade and we were playing Bankstown who had current Test players<br />

in Lennie Pascoe and Ian Davis. I approached this game with real trepidation about the occasion but virtually<br />

none about the very formidable opposition. Admittedly, seeing Lennie's first over resurrected some concern, as did<br />

Ian Davis when he sent my first two balls rocketing respectively into the point and mid-wicket fences. But I will<br />

always remember Neville Jansson swishing at Lennie's first bouncer then smashing the second one (or maybe third,<br />

perhaps fourth or fifth or sixth … Lennie didn't pitch many up) through mid-wicket with the most awesome pull shot<br />

- it all seemed to happen just as the ball was bowled. I had never seen anything like it. And in the field there was<br />

Henry up the other end leading me in this opening bowling partnership. This was shit-hot cricket, and we knew we<br />

were prepared and we wanted to have a crack at anyone.<br />

Then we played Cumberland at Old Kings and Henry<br />

had just heard he had been picked to tour Pakistan. We<br />

then saw a spell <strong>of</strong> bowling that I doubt could have been<br />

seen in grade cricket before or since. He took 8-28 (I,<br />

proudly, prevented him from securing all 10), had fields <strong>of</strong><br />

five slips, a gully, cover point, short leg and leg slip. I was<br />

at leg slip and the last thing I wanted coming near me was<br />

a snick. This was serious "heat". Not even Dougie Walters<br />

had any answers though he was only slightly less scared<br />

than I was fielding 45 metres away from where the ball was<br />

being delivered. We smashed them - I think Livo and<br />

Neville got them none or one down.<br />

And the season just continued in that vein. We only ran<br />

just above middle <strong>of</strong> the table but this was hardly unexpected<br />

when you consider JR had gone, Mark Ray only got<br />

back for the last few games, Paddy and Gulgong were both<br />

gone - each player almost irreplaceable. All this young<br />

punk thought was: ‘'well done’. At worst in a given match<br />

we were competitive and at best we smashed teams with<br />

Test players. But it wasn't quite good enough for those who<br />

had experienced the successes <strong>of</strong> the previous few years.<br />

My recollection is that the pre-season <strong>of</strong> 80-81 virtually<br />

started with the first grade squad called into the Sam Crack<br />

dressingroom to sort out captaincy issues and who we<br />

needed to lead us to our second premiership. As far as this<br />

young bloke was concerned, I had learned a lot from Terry<br />

Buddin the year before and thought he was the best captain<br />

Neville organised the champagne delivery to our<br />

celebratory lunch on the day after the final.<br />

I had ever played with. But in hindsight I could see that Mark was now back on board full-time and Chappo was keen<br />

to lead - a change was always going to happen and, in all likelihood, events suggested it was the right call.<br />

Then, as Mark has described elsewhere, we clinically disposed <strong>of</strong> any and all opponents that year (bar a tie vs St<br />

George in a one-dayer, and a below-par game against Sutherland). We were a quality outfit that could, and did, field<br />

the pants <strong>of</strong>f every other team. To me that is, and nearly always will be, the key distinguishing feature in premiership-winning<br />

teams. You need good players batting and bowling well - but many teams will produce that in any given<br />

year; it is the sides that can win matches on the back <strong>of</strong> their fielding that will win those highly charged finals<br />

matches. 80-81 was pro<strong>of</strong> positive and the match against Balmain stands out.<br />

I remember having to toil away on such a low slow deck (and it wasn't turning like it normally did for Mark and<br />

Klinger either that day) against the likes <strong>of</strong> Wayne Seabrook, Greg Geise etc. Nothing looked like getting past the bat<br />

but we ringed them and, even with their power and timing, they could not pierce the field with everyone diving and<br />

catching like no other team had done before. That game taught me as much about cricket as I have learned over<br />

many seasons.<br />

I had glandular fever pretty badly during the weekend <strong>of</strong> the final against NDs and I was in bed from about 7pm<br />

the night we won so I have major regrets in not being able to participate in the immediate celebrations with a wonderful<br />

bunch <strong>of</strong> blokes, blokes who fed me the confidence to play well at this level; blokes who welcomed me into the<br />

club and showed me what commitment was required for success; blokes who valued their cricket experiences, and<br />

particularly the social interactions that were at the core <strong>of</strong> the club's successes.<br />

69


So much for my initial playing memories. But it was the social interactions that lay at the heart <strong>of</strong> this wonderfully<br />

successful club - and, as you might expect, it was the personalities and the social occasions that have the greater, lasting<br />

memories for me as the young punk up from Goulburn to play with the best club in Sydney.<br />

There was Jungle wandering into my Warrane College room to introduce himself and check that I was playing for<br />

the club and would be at pre-season training in two weeks - or at least that was what I deciphered from the typical<br />

Jungle conversation we have all grown to love - heading in five different directions, the animated gestures, the slobbering.<br />

In many ways (and this is scary) he took me and some <strong>of</strong> my Warrane mates under his wing, away from the<br />

seediest parties back to the Sam Crack every Saturday, introducing us to such luminaries on the social scene as<br />

Wolfman, Splinter and Kirkie. Life could not get<br />

any better than this and I will be eternally grateful<br />

to Jungle for transforming me from an<br />

almost 100% attendance record at Uni lectures,<br />

to my average over the next four years <strong>of</strong> about<br />

5% attendance. I could have wasted my Uni<br />

experience except for this man - undoubtedly<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the all-time great blokes.<br />

Asoka’s menu card from the NSWCA premiership dinner.<br />

And Kirkie. Somehow, no matter where you<br />

(or he) were playing that day, the first thing you<br />

saw walking into the Sam Crack was Kirkie sitting<br />

(or lying) on the high jump mat with a can<br />

<strong>of</strong> Tooheys in his hand (<strong>of</strong>ten one in each hand).<br />

He was always there, celebrating playing some<br />

very hard cricket that day, and that dopey smile<br />

never left his face. If I could manage to spend<br />

my drinking time in those early days with Kirkie<br />

and Jungle I was a very happy little chappy.<br />

Or with Neville. Now this bloke oozed confidence<br />

and could (as far as this young pup could<br />

tell) drink like a fish. I couldn't get enough <strong>of</strong><br />

these blokes - the cricket banter and the genuinely<br />

warm camaraderie.<br />

There was also, <strong>of</strong> course, Splinter. That longhaired<br />

larrikin with the non-stop laugh and<br />

back-slapping personality who didn't play cricket<br />

at all (it seemed). But he was always talking<br />

cricket and he was always talking success. He<br />

didn't seem that smart (just a pisshead like the<br />

rest <strong>of</strong> us) but first impressions are nearly<br />

always deceptive.<br />

The rest <strong>of</strong> the first graders, plus Robbo, Tacho, Orca, Dick Campbell, Mick Clark, Kell, Pymy, Jock, Johnny Mac,<br />

Jack Chemical, Dave Meagher and so many others there in my first year were always there. Back at the Crack to<br />

socialise after virtually every day's play then <strong>of</strong>f to a party or whatever. It was a scene <strong>of</strong> ‘social harmony’ - for want <strong>of</strong><br />

a better phrase. People truly loved their cricket - playing it, practising it, talking about it and socialising around it.<br />

We probably haven't had the same player strength since about '84 so our lack <strong>of</strong> premierships (until two seasons<br />

ago) could be put down to various factors. But we have had very good teams (and here I am thinking <strong>of</strong> the early '90s<br />

and the past few years) but only fleeting success. And I think it is a lack <strong>of</strong> ‘social harmony’ that is so important in<br />

any analysis <strong>of</strong> the performance <strong>of</strong> grade cricket. It hasn't been quite there and at times has been a long way <strong>of</strong>f. And<br />

certainly a long way <strong>of</strong>f the scene that existed when I came to the club. As I leave the club (as an active member anyway),<br />

I would love to know how I could take those impressions <strong>of</strong> my initial years at UNSWCC and plant them now in<br />

the hope <strong>of</strong> ensuring a rosy future for this unique club.<br />

70


The<br />

Last<br />

Word<br />

There has been no better cricketer and no better club man at UNSWCC than Ge<strong>of</strong>f Lawson,<br />

and no one better qualified to sum up this era. Besides, fast bowlers always demand the last<br />

word, and if you’re as good as H you get it.<br />

The celebration <strong>of</strong> 150 years <strong>of</strong> NSW first-class cricket at Parliament House in January <strong>of</strong> this year contained an<br />

invitation list all former first-class players, umpires, administrators (James George Robson attended as an NSWCA<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficial) - and bugger me if I didn't bump into Peter Maloney. He <strong>of</strong> a single game for the Blues in which he neither<br />

batted nor bowled. It was terrific to see him, like the aforementioned James George, he had changed little since I last<br />

saw him, traipsing <strong>of</strong>f Petersham Oval, last man out Stuart Gardiner next to him, bat dragging, despondent, beaten,<br />

oblivious to the mayhem behind them but feeling similar disbelief to that felt by the UNSWCC boys. Disbelief at the<br />

result, the margin, the final catch taken - with the certainty born <strong>of</strong> hours <strong>of</strong> practice and expectation - on the midwicket<br />

boundary by a law student from a private school, <strong>of</strong> all people. Two very different senses <strong>of</strong> disbelief however -<br />

one in horror, the other in wonder. A sense <strong>of</strong> wonder that would carry <strong>Wales</strong> cricket through four more golden<br />

years.<br />

Disbelief Did we really believe back in September 1976 that we could beat everyone else in the competition<br />

Could a team three years out <strong>of</strong> shires be too good for others full <strong>of</strong> state and Test cricketers When W J Rogers -<br />

Paddington, St George, NSW and UNSW, senior player, captain and guiding light - addressed pre-season training in<br />

August did we have, individually or collectively, the goal <strong>of</strong> winning the premiership I can honestly say that my personal<br />

goals were just that - personal, self-centered, private. The goal <strong>of</strong> doing the best I could each week, the goal <strong>of</strong><br />

getting into second grade maybe and working hard at being good at that standard; <strong>of</strong> enjoying playing a game with<br />

new friends. I certainly did not expect to be in first grade. This was Sydney grade cricket, not Lake Albert versus RSL<br />

or a Wagga versus Griffith O'Farrell Cup clash. Test cricketers played this stuff and they were people I had only seen<br />

from afar. I'd never shared a pitch with one. My expectations, as always, were unlimited but realistic. I am not sure<br />

that JR had any limits on his ambitions for the team or each individual.<br />

Chanelled enthusiasm can make up for many flaws; inexperience can be both a handbrake and a release. It's<br />

amazing what doesn't worry you when you don't know what to worry about. Things like sledging and reputations<br />

worried those unsure <strong>of</strong> their place at the crease, or those who worried about egos rather than substance, or who<br />

thought words and aggro brought you closer to victory than runs or wickets. The closest we got to an ego problem<br />

was a player's Corolla with personalised number plates. We only had a couple <strong>of</strong> cars between us in any case.<br />

Maybe privately, subconsciously, we had doubts about our individual places in the show, but I don't recall anyone<br />

ever verbalising them. JR would have either squashed the thought in an instant or simply passed on without ever<br />

acknowledging such negativity. Negative thoughts were limited to assignment deadlines, mid-session exams, the<br />

state <strong>of</strong> Ted Goodwin's sidestep or the price <strong>of</strong> a schooner, but not about cricket. <strong>Cricket</strong> was, quite simply, first and<br />

foremost, fun. We just needed some wise old heads to gel the ingredients that make fun lead to success.<br />

UNSWCC has been incredibly fortunate to have two mentors with drive, belief and uncompromising attitudes.<br />

They did not accept second best. The two red heads - Warren Smith in recent years, and John Rogers way back then -<br />

injected several truck loads <strong>of</strong> willingness, joy, skill and desire into the first grade team and the club, with a particular<br />

focus on the younger players.<br />

71


There is no doubt that the progress <strong>of</strong> the Poidevin-Gray team in 1976-77 was a direct result <strong>of</strong> the performances<br />

<strong>of</strong> first grade, and the progress <strong>of</strong> the firsts could be attributed in part to the winning ways <strong>of</strong> the P-G XI. It would be<br />

rare to find a successful first-grade cricket team in the major cities that had nine undergraduate students. But the<br />

experience <strong>of</strong> winning the under-21 competition led directly to a first-grade premiership. We could ignore the adage:<br />

‘you have to lose a grand final before you win one’ because four <strong>of</strong> us had had our grand final at the SCG No.2 earlier<br />

in the summer. Nerves that may have overwhelmed us at crucial moments, particularly in the final, had already been<br />

met, experienced and dismissed.<br />

Sometimes this came through a lack <strong>of</strong> intensity, as in Jungle's famous<br />

speech in the SCG No.2 dressingrooms before we took the field on day two <strong>of</strong><br />

the P-G final when we needed 10 wickets to win UNSWCC's initial grade title.<br />

This was when the fear <strong>of</strong> failure might have overcome such a young team.<br />

But our fearless leader had the perfect motivating speech. We huddled close,<br />

expectant, breathless in expectation <strong>of</strong> the pearls <strong>of</strong> wisdom.<br />

‘Now lads, we have a reasonable score on the board <strong>of</strong> 250, but this is a<br />

small, fast ground with a very good batting pitch and they have some wellperformed<br />

first graders. (Now I was starting to get jittery) So all we have to<br />

do is move up in one straight line in defence, don't miss a tackle just like the<br />

great St George teams <strong>of</strong> the '60s, and we will win for sure.’ Jungle then<br />

turned on his heel and walked out into the sunlight, tugging on the bumble<br />

bee cap. Nerves gone. It did help that he had batted for 2 ½ hours for 20 not<br />

out in the semi-final against the much-fancied St George for a draw eight<br />

down that got us into the final. We knew he had the stomach for a battle.<br />

Perhaps the country boys were undaunted because they didn't know any<br />

better. Opponents turned up in creams and put their trousers on one leg at a<br />

JR plays Jungle’s favourite shot. time in Goulburn, Tamworth and Albury just as they did in Chatswood,<br />

Hurstville and Waverly. The club was galvanized by the P-G win, galvanized<br />

by the margin <strong>of</strong> victory and its ruthlessness. Everyone knew that bigger things were possible. The undefeated run <strong>of</strong><br />

the P-Gs helped hugely.<br />

The combination <strong>of</strong> the first grade team came about through accident and planning. It was Pymmy who dismantled<br />

Rick McCosker's middle stump first ball <strong>of</strong> the season yet he wouldn't make the finals team. Veteran Jock Martel<br />

likewise would be replaced by the 'fiery' Mick Watt. A braver opening batsman has not donned a peak cap.<br />

To play on the VG in the 1970s and early '80s was a test <strong>of</strong> patience, because you batted on a slow turner and an<br />

even slower outfield. Two hundred was a winning score; three boundaries a day was not uncommon. Home ground<br />

advantage was important, and we had the spinners and batsmen who knew how to play on those surfaces. Visitors<br />

rarely had the patience to bat the day through or the skill to win battles <strong>of</strong> guile with our spinners - Ray, Grattan-<br />

Smith and Campbell. It helped that the opening bowlers usually got breakthroughs and it helped that we batted all<br />

the way down. And we could field like no other team. Test-quality slippers such as Jungle and X Ray come along<br />

rarely; outfielders like Chappo and Livo (before the arm went with all that baseball pitching) created uncertainty that<br />

led to run outs. We rarely missed a chance and <strong>of</strong>ten took the impossible catch.<br />

The wise old heads were leading from the front, the side, the rear and sometimes from above. Jimmy O'Brien kept<br />

wickets. Keepers are a strange lot, but Peardy was a steadying influence behind the sticks - catching, stumping, stopping<br />

and sledging. Simply brilliant. Livo's elevation from his original selection as the fifth grade left-arm spinner to<br />

first grade finals saviour is legendary, but it was no accident. His promotion was based on the club's selection policy.<br />

No favourites played or best mates selected, just runs and wickets as the criteria, and, once again, the P-G win.<br />

Success breeding success. Those <strong>of</strong> us who played with Greg in the P-G team had no doubts he could handle first<br />

grade. And since I had bounced the crap out <strong>of</strong> him in the Wagga v Albury O'Farrell Cup game earlier in the year I<br />

knew he could handle the short stuff.<br />

A left-arm orthodox, a right-arm <strong>of</strong>fie, a big-spinning leggie with a surprising flipper and some decent quicks.<br />

What else do you need It should have been obvious really. We won on hard wickets and on wet ones, batting first or<br />

chasing, and when we did lose JR did not let the events pass without criticism, always constructive, always teaching<br />

but always demanding a better effort next time. I recall the St George game at the VG in which we bowled them out<br />

for around 190 and fancied ourselves knocking over one <strong>of</strong> the competition favourites (and JR's former team which<br />

may have added some spice with the opposing captain). We struggled with the bat and I came in at No.11 with 30 to<br />

win. Paddy and I got to within single figures after an hour's careful batting before I went for a big hit <strong>of</strong>f Murray<br />

Bennett and skied one to mid-<strong>of</strong>f. We lost by a few. Thinking I had done a pretty good job and just got a tad unlucky I<br />

was naturally disappointed but would accept the top order taking the blame for the loss. Not so. JR got stuck into me<br />

for such a reckless shot. No excuses for the No.11. I should have done better. I should never do that again.<br />

72


Come the semi-final we had plenty <strong>of</strong> confidence at the Village Green against a Test terror. Lennie Pascoe took<br />

wickets but we got our usual 200-odd, fielded our rings <strong>of</strong>f and watched as the spinners wove a web that would have<br />

made Tiger O'Reilly and Clarrie Grimmett proud. Bankstown filed <strong>of</strong>f the green in disbelief. How could a team that<br />

had blokes with beards and others who didn't need to shave at all beat the tough nuts from Canterbury I thought the<br />

semi was a huge victory for intellect, for smart cricket, for those who understand that a variety <strong>of</strong> skills are needed to<br />

win. Although we might not have grasped that at the time, it didn't matter because JR knew exactly what he was<br />

doing and how to get the absolute best out <strong>of</strong> us.<br />

The events <strong>of</strong> the final are well documented but perhaps are summed up by our lack <strong>of</strong> inhibition. Livo did the<br />

business with the bat under pressure. We cobbled together a good total and bowled with control even when the<br />

scoreboard favoured Petersham. When it mattered, when the game was on the line, we did the business despite our<br />

lack <strong>of</strong> experience. That game, that win, that season, that premiership still remains on the top shelf <strong>of</strong> my finest<br />

memories in cricket. A team performance par excellence by a most unlikely and unfancied team.<br />

At a charity match in March 81, Chappo, Jungle and Mark chat with the great Garry Sobers.<br />

After the double <strong>of</strong> 1976-77, the second-grade premiership and the club championship seemed to be natural progressions.<br />

The club expected all teams to be competing for titles even though history shows just how difficult that is. Rain<br />

robbed first grade <strong>of</strong> a 'back to back' the next season when we were really on a roll coming into the semis, but the<br />

twos were easily the best team in the competition. There was no disbelief after 1976-77, just high expectations.<br />

The victories by each team were celebrated by the entire club. If ever good old Aussie egalitarianism existed in a<br />

showroom, UNSW cricket was the shopfront. Every first grader knew every fifth grader; practices were inclusive;<br />

drinking sessions a matter for all those who drank, not those from a particular team or private schooling establishment<br />

or faculty. This kind <strong>of</strong> inclusiveness makes for a wonderful sporting environment. Practice sessions were<br />

sometimes a little loose around the edges but never boring. How could you bored with 30 or 40 <strong>of</strong> your best mates<br />

Enjoyment leads so <strong>of</strong>ten to success.<br />

The final day <strong>of</strong> the club championship victory was a classic example <strong>of</strong> the closeness <strong>of</strong> all grades. Played out to<br />

the final over <strong>of</strong> the season at David Phillips, thirds and fourths were cheered on by firsts and seconds as if the Ashes<br />

were at stake.<br />

The 1980-81 title was played out with much <strong>of</strong> the naivety <strong>of</strong> 76-77 gone. Just very good cricketers playing like<br />

they knew how to win. Opponents had become wary <strong>of</strong> the Bees. They knew that come Saturday they would have the<br />

crap bounced out <strong>of</strong> them before the spinners turned them in knots, and don't edge the ball behind because there'd<br />

be few second chances. Our batsmen were confident and skilled; the team again had a terrific balance with all bases<br />

covered. In the last week <strong>of</strong> September we expected to win the title, and the next best thing was that our opposition<br />

expected us to win as well. Yet for all that cricketing toughness we were the same social, club-oriented group. Some<br />

were still undergraduates.<br />

73


The fortunes <strong>of</strong> the club were closely followed by those from the 'top <strong>of</strong> the hill'. To have the distinguished personage<br />

<strong>of</strong> the chancellor, Justice Gordon Samuels, attend matches and never miss an annual dinner lent prestige to the<br />

on-field efforts. Undergraduates could impress Justice Samuels or vice-chancellor Birt with boat races in the<br />

Cracknell or simply lobby them for some academic assistance. Bragging rights extended well past the players. The<br />

dons were quite pleased to have one up on their sandstone cousins from Broadway. What a pity the current patrons<br />

are not <strong>of</strong> the same ilk.<br />

By 1980-81 UNSWCC had the respect <strong>of</strong> all Sydney cricket. This respect may have been tainted by a residue <strong>of</strong> disbelief<br />

and a smidgeon <strong>of</strong> sneer from those who could not separate athletics and academics. A portion <strong>of</strong> that residue<br />

would remain into the '90s with attempts to purge both university clubs. The notion <strong>of</strong> another person/group/organisation<br />

being smarter and better at cricket has still not been accepted by some clubs.<br />

Henry in 80-81, above, and in 77 the club gets its first Sheffield Shield player, Greg ‘Gulgong’ Watson.<br />

We were the trendsetters, the team to be copied, the club to be envied. We had the best spinners, the best quicks,<br />

the best catchers and the best sledgers (T Buddin the undisputed king <strong>of</strong> the cutting, pertinent remark). And we even<br />

looked like we were having fun on the field. Others still sniggered at our distinctive cap, but not in public and not to<br />

our faces. The payback on the park may have been too embarrassing to endure.<br />

Among all this success we never took ourselves too seriously. Sure we played pretty hard, but not in a nasty way.<br />

We respected opponents when they beat us while hatching some scheme to beat them next time. We respected them<br />

just the same when we won. We were happy to drink with our opponents because we had a firm notion <strong>of</strong> why we<br />

played the game. The much spruiked 'spirit <strong>of</strong> cricket' is a rubbery ideal but I'm fairly sure we all carried it with us in<br />

the peculiar varsity version <strong>of</strong> the Australian way, on and <strong>of</strong>f the field, in those golden years.<br />

In this vast, dry and dusty continent there is one delightful irony for me: it takes only four minutes to drive from<br />

the SCG to the Village Green. Only a couple <strong>of</strong> miles from the sometime strut and bravado <strong>of</strong> first-class cricket but a<br />

world away, just down Anzac Parade to meet the classless, lazy, laconic, theory-riddled, boozed-fuelled, black and<br />

gold rawness <strong>of</strong> UNSW cricket where Test players treat fifth graders like Test players and fifth graders treat Test<br />

players like fifth graders.<br />

Of course the game moves on and living in the past can be pleasant but not productive. In 2007 the Village Green<br />

is <strong>of</strong> first-class standard, the practice wickets outstanding and the students better dressed than ever. But I can guarantee<br />

that the sloth that only undergraduates can produce has not changed, particularly when it comes to training<br />

discipline and batting collapses. First grade is a serious business, generally played well, by loyal men who don't take<br />

losses or victories like they had a finger cut <strong>of</strong>f or an OBE awarded. It is wonderful to have a heritage that players can<br />

look back to as a benchmark, or a milestone. The one-day victory in 2004-05 was another marker. It would be nice to<br />

keep laying down markers and reminding the doubters and sneerers that the Bumble Bee <strong>of</strong> UNSWCC is proudly<br />

worn, means business when it walks onto the field, and will be around for a long, long time.<br />

74

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