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2 years ago



Trevor Jay made his first grade debut for Randwick Cricket Club in 1969 as an 18 year old left arm orthodox spinner.

In a remarkable career spanning 24 years in first grade Trevor took 707 wickets at an impressive average of 20.58 and to this day is 14th on the list of all-time leading wicket takers in Sydney Grade Cricket, now NSW Premier Cricket.

Trevor’s impact in Sydney Grade Cricket is highlighted not just through his individual performances but also his influence on Randwick’s successful 4 first grade premierships in 7 years from 1976 to 1984.

Trevor was awarded Life Membership of Randwick Cricket Club in 1989 and Sydney Cricket Association in 2002.

Let’s find out more about Trevor’s terrific journey in the game

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2 years ago



In August 2020, Tim and I would go out onto the cricket pitch and work on our cricket skills in preparation for the upcoming games.

As we were hitting balls a number of kids joined in to help return the balls and were so eager to know more about what we were doing.

Tim and I started to learn more about cricket at the age of 14 or 15 and these kids were much younger. We reflected on how much time it took us to develop our talents that bring us so much joy and how we can’t go a day without talking about cricket.

We started to provide coaching sessions 3 days a week and apply the coaching tips we received from mini cricket.

This was in Nakanyonyi, Jinja, Uganda. We had to improvise by using bricks as stumps and sticks to especially teach how to grip the bat.

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2 years ago



An outstanding wicket-keeper, either standing up to the stumps or standing back to the quick bowlers, Greg Dyer’s selection for New South Wales was delayed by the fine work of another excellent keeper from Wests, Steve Rixon.

Within seasons of his first appearance for New South Wales, Dyer made his Test debut against England in 1986-87, and he held his place throughout the following season, playing in Australia’s successful team in the 1987-88 World Cup Final against England in Calcutta.

An aggressive batsman (and compulsive hooker), he often contributed handy runs in the lower order, including a lively 60 against New Zealand in Adelaide.

His performances for Australia were uniformly impressive, and did not warrant his abruptly dropping at the end of 1987-88; it was generally thought that he was made a scapegoat for an incident in the Test against New Zealand in Melbourne, in which Andrew Jones was given out caught by Dyer, although Television replays revealed that the ball had bounced.

Half-way through the following season, he was summarily dropped from the New South Wales team, of which he was then captain, although he unquestionably remained the outstanding wicket-keeper in the state.

The dignified and graceful manner in which he dealt with these arbitrary and unjust decisions won him many admirers.

Joining Western Suburbs in the Green Shield team at the age of 13, Dyer reached First Grade two years later. He was an inspirational captain of First Grade in 1984-85 leading his team to the final.

Greg Dyer is the current President of the Australian Cricketers Association.

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2 years ago



Recently, I asked my son: ‘Who are your favourite cricketers?’

Two names stood out in his batch of answers: Pakistan’s Imam-ul-Haq and England’s Jack Leach.

‘Because they both wear glasses,’ said my bespectacled 11-year-old.

His statement struck me hard. It wasn’t so much an acknowledgement of the players he watched, but an acknowledgement of his own identity and sense of belonging. My son was like Imam and Jack. Or more tellingly, Imam and Jack were like him. Perhaps old-fashioned perception would shove all three of them into a class of nerds, but times change, and nowadays, perception walks

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2 years ago



Scaling the Pyramid

Anyway, so, we batted. It was a 60-over game, which was probably why I was in it (“Keeps it tight. Too slow to get people out, though.”). We made 226. Brad McNamara, only seventeen himself, somehow born with a flawless technique, stroked an elegant 60. Greg Douglas, the hardest hitter of a cricket ball in all of Sydney, hit a fifty too, landing several meaty blows against left arm spinner Freddy Freedman. I went in last, though not for long. Mark Waugh ambled in to bowl with the laziest run-up imaginable, but then suddenly the ball was fizzing past me, the pace coming from God-knows-where. I lunged forward to my first ball, and missed. An unimpressed voice came from gully: “f***ing second grader!” Nothing to lose, so I turned and answered, “Steve, it’s worse than that, I’m a second grader who can’t bat!” He did not smile. Mark’s third ball flicked the very outside of my pad and disappeared to fine leg. I was half way through running the leg-bye when the umpire gave me out.

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2 years ago



Life inside the scoreboard

‘John Dyson’s catch.’

Those three words, mentioned to anyone who was a cricket fan in the 1980s, will bring back immediate memories.

It was 5 January 1982, the fourth day of the second test between Australia and the West Indies. Deep into the West Indies’ second innings, Bruce Yardley was bowling from the Randwick end to number nine batsman Sylvester Clarke. Swinging across the line, the muscle-bound Barbadian connected with the ball very cleanly, sending it high and long towards the deep mid-wicket boundary. Time froze as everyone – the players, the crowd and the television audience – waited and watched as the ball traced its arc.

Standing about thirty metres in from the fence, Australian opener John Dyson found himself tracking the flight of the ball more closely than anybody, hoping for a catch rather than a six

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2 years ago



My Ashes – India v Pakistan

“Aren’t you disappointed you never umpired an Ashes Test?” It’s a question I’m asked often. My answer is “no” and “yes”. “Yes” because for most of my international career Australia were one of the best sides in the world and I wanted to test my skills against the best. “No” because there is another iconic series in world cricket that’s right up there for intensity and pressure, India v Pakistan.

It’s a series that has a similar passion of rivalry and a focus on the outcome by the fans that goes beyond the scoreboard..

I’ve lost count of how many India Pakistan matches I have umpired. It wasn’t long after joining the ICC Elite Panel that I was appointed to my first India Pakistan series in Pakistan. It was early 2004 and I was with my good mate and umpiring legend, the late David Shepherd.

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2 years ago



When it comes to inter-state sporting rivalry, nothing whets the appetite of sporting enthusiasts more than NSW against Queensland!

In 2002 Kevin Pike recalls being at the Gabba Test (Hayden’s Test) and running into an old school mate, Geoff Gallagher, who played with the Queensland Cricketers Club. Queensland Cricketers Club, I knew, played their season as a Veterans Touring side and soon after with Geoff’s introduction I met the famous Lew Cooper, manager of QCC. Lew was a gentleman of cricket and a great raconteur and after several telephone calls between us we set up the annual clashes between Armidale Golden Oldies and QCC with the first match played at Federation Park, Tenterfield on 9th March 2002.

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2 years ago



If you drive past Bottomley Park near Easts Rugby Club in East Brisbane these days you will see a tiny little brick building opposite the Norman Park train station with a few cricket nets and some large gum trees. It was once the home of the Eastern Suburbs District Cricket Club.

The clubhouse was known as the “Crab Pot” as once you got in you couldn’t get out!

It was a fantastic joint and loved by Easties all opposition players and the umpires as well. It was the good old days when after matches meant having a beer with the opponents.

It was actually the unofficial umpire’s clubhouse. Popular umpire Mel Johnson played for Easts before becoming one of our greatest ever test umpires and he may well have started the tradition.

Umpires like Peter Parker, Merv Musch and the late, great Jimmy Taylor could be found there on most summer Saturday evenings.

The most popular opposition player was former Queensland fast bowler “Wild Bill” Albury who lived only a couple of hundred yards away but played for Wynnum-Manly. What fantastic company he was.

The clubhouse was very modest with a few uncomfortable chairs and a pool table which was used more as a bed than a pool table.

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2 years ago



As a cricket fan growing up in India, one of my dreams was to set foot at least once into all the top cricket stadiums in the world and watch cricket matches. The Melbourne Cricket Ground was right at the top of this list and on the day I landed in Australia in 2020, I clicked a pic of one of the light towers from Wellington Parade, where my bus had made a stopover, while envisioning myself as experiencing the MCG in all possible ways. To this day, I have had the dream come true in different forms - spectator at Boxing Day Tests, T20 World Cup games, state one-day games, an Australia A game, AFL games, visitor to the sports museum, hospitality worker in the Members Stand, Cricket Australia employee, etc. to name a few.

As a 'step' to the next level, on June 4, I will be climbing 7300 stairs at the G as part of the Stadium Stomp HQ stairclimbing event. Last year, I volunteered at this event while this time I am going to challenge myself to climb 4-5 times as many stairs as I did at the Australia108 building earlier this month.

I will also be fundraising for Black Dog Institute in support of their incredible work towards mental health. If you would like to donate, head to the link in the first comment. Thanks in advance for all your encouragement and support 🙂

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