Karori and Easts to meet in much anticipated final
Karori and Easts to meet in much anticipated Wilkinson Pearce Cup final at the Basin
It’s the battle of the heavyweights of Wellington club cricket. In one corner are the nine-time defending champions Eastern Suburbs, gunning for a remarkable 10 straight Wilkinson Pearce Cup titles, having won outright four finals in a row. In the other corner are the challengers to their throne, Karori, Wellington cricket Twenty20 and One-Day champions and top qualifiers for the second straight year.
Neither will give an inch when they meet in the 2010/11 Wilkinson Pearce Cup final this Saturday, Sunday and Monday at the Hawkins Basin Reserve in what promises to be a high intensity match for Wellington club cricket supremacy.
As top qualifier, Karori just needs to draw with Easts and a maiden Pearce Cup title and first Wellington club title since 1986/87 will be theirs, while Easts need to win outright to clinch a decade of championships - a situation they are familiar with having won in last year’s final against Karori at Barton Oval in a whirlwind match.
Karori won the toss and batted first but were bowled out for 67. Not to be outdone, Easts were in trouble at 37 for 7 but recovered to make 112. Karori then made just 70 in their second innings and Easts found themselves needing just 26 to knock off the win.
Easts captain Lance Dry said the team can’t wait for the opportunity to defend their title on the Basin Reserve.
"We are very excited about the opportunity to extend our dominance to 10 consecutive Pearce Cup titles,” he said. “We are also really looking forward to playing at the Hawkins Basin Reserve, it’s one of the world’s premier Test cricket grounds and to be able to play the Pearce Cup Final there is a genuine privilege and as such an opportunity we want to do justice to."
Despite being top qualifier, Dry said the pressure is right on Karori to perform.
"I think Karori's weaknesses are well documented, this is their fourth Pearce Cup final in six years and they have not managed a title yet. People have bandied around the term chokers but the reality has been that on each occasion we have managed to outplay them, whether we do or not this year will be determined in a few days time".
Karori
captain Simon Baker says the stage is set for a big
weekend.
“This final is surely one of the most
pressure-baked in the history of club cricket in Wellington
and New Zealand. We have pressure on us to win it for the
first time in years. However Easts have a huge opportunity
and pressure to create history, no one will ever again get
the chance to win a monumental 10 straight titles. It's a
one-time deal, and they know it.
“It's exciting to be a
part of the Pearce Cup final with the two best teams in
Wellington playing at the Basin Reserve, something the lads
are really looking forward to. Our aim at the start of the
season was to win the local Twenty20 title, One-Day title,
Pearce Cup and defend our National Club title. We are
wrapped to be on track but the really fun stuff starts now,
although after nine consecutive days of finals cricket there
are going to be some sore bodies!”
Baker says the key
to Karori’s potential success this weekend will be a
strong team effort.
“The strength of our Premier side
is our depth, we will be fielding a side with 11 potential
match winning players whether it be with the bat or ball,
everyone of us will contribute. Easts rely on two or three
guys each week and the rest can be unreliable. If their key
players fail, they will struggle over the three
days.
“There is a great culture within the broader
Karori premier squad and the coach Glenn Pocknall has
ensured high standards are consistently met. If we continue
to play at the level we have played at all summer I believe
we can win the Pearce Cup and the National Club
Champs.”
The Easts and Karori squad lists for the
Final are:
Easts from: Josh Brodie, Nathan
Cameron, Jeremy Dean, Lance Dry, Chamika Gajanayaka, Ben
Gamble, Scott Golder, Jamie Gibson, David Holt, Ricky
Joseph, Josh McLauchlan, Sam McLauchlan, Niranjan
Naguleswaran, Jamie O'Donnell, Ben Orton
Karori from:
Stefan Allan, Jules Balasingham, Simon Baker, Harry
Boam, Tom Blundell, Lee Edwards, Marc Ellison, Charles
Gallagher, Neil Martin Andy McKay, Steve Murdoch, Fraser
Quarterman, Oliver Redwood, Jarred Sewell, Chris Spring,
Hamish Templeton
Wilkinson Insurance Brokers
promotions
As proud supporters of grassroots cricket
in Wellington, Wilkinson Insurance Brokers are on board
promoting a number of initiatives, including:
•
The search for Wellington’s fastest bowler. After a season
of running in and bowling fast, speed merchants around the
region have the opportunity to decide once and for all who
is the fastest of them all with Saturday’s speed ball
challenge. A speed radar will be set up in the practice nets
for anyone to enter and test their speed. Prizes of $200
will go to the fastest U16 bowler and over 16 bowler on the
day.
• An additional $100 will be up for grabs
if anyone in the crowd can catch a six during the game on
Saturday.
• Wilkinson’s are offering Cricket
Wellington supporters a special offer of a 10 percent
discount on insurance premiums through them. The contacts
for this are James Crichton and Conrad Shanly (details
below)
Match details
What: Wilkinson Pearce Cup Final
When: This Saturday, Sunday and Monday (2-4 April)
Where: Hawkins Basin Reserve (10.30am start on Saturday; 9.30am starts Sunday and Monday)
Pearce Cup Facts
• The
Pearce Cup was introduced in the 1996/97 season as the
Senior Grade Trophy after the merger of the Hutt Valley and
Wellington Cricket Associations
• Only four
clubs have ever won the Pearce Cup, University twice
(1996/97, 1997/98), Wellington Collegians (1998-99), Stokes
Valley twice (1999/00, 2000/01), Eastern Suburbs nine times
(2001/02 through to 2009/10)
Individual records from the four completed finals are:
• Highest
individual score: Scott Golder (Easts) 149 not out, Easts v
Naenae 2006/07
• Best bowling in an innings:
Lee Edwards (Karori) 7 for 56, Karori v Easts 2009/10
•
Best bowling in a match: Ricky Joseph (Easts) 12 for 112,
Easts v Karori 2008/09
• Highest innings score:
474-8 dec by Easts 2006/07
• Lowest innings
score: 67 by Karori 2009/10
• Biggest winning
margin: 10 wickets, Easts v Karori 2009/10
Pearce
Cup Finals – past matches
• This will be
Eastern Suburbs’ fifth consecutive final since the first
in 2005/06
• This will be Karori’s third,
having appeared in the 2005/06 and 2008/09 and 2009/10
finals. These two teams will thus be playing each other
in their third consecutive Pearce Cup final.
•
Naenae Old Boys (2006/07) and North City (2007/08) are the
two other sides to play Easts in a Pearce Cup final.
•
Of the previous five finals, Easts have been top qualifier
just twice, and thus won it three times from the number two
position.
• The first final in 2005/06 was
abandoned without a ball being bowled, but Easts have won
the subsequent four outright and, as second placed
qualifiers, to claim their 10th title this season will need
to win outright again.
2005/2006
Easts (1)
v Karori (2)
Inaugural final
Match abandoned
without a ball being bowled.
Easts won the Pearce Cup as top qualifiers.
2006/07
Easts (2) v Naenae
Old Boys (1)
Easts claimed their sixth successive
Pearce Cup final.
Finishing second, Easts had to beat top
qualifier Naenae to claim the title, which they did, winning
by 10 wickets. Scott Golder scored 149 not out and Roger
Fouhy took 9 wickets in the game. Naenae were bowled out for
144 on the first day with Fouhy taking 5 for 47. In reply
Easts made 474 for 8 declared – a lead of 330. Jesse Ryder
hit 104 as Naenae posted 347, but Easts still needed just 18
to win.
2007/08
Easts (1) v North City (2)
Easts won by 7 wickets.
After being in early
trouble in their first innings, Easts rallied late and their
collective big-game experience in the end proved too much
for an emerging North City side. Easts made 385 in its first
innings, with John Peters hitting 110 and Lance Dry 70 not
out. North City, in their first final mustered 235 and 181
and Easts needed 32 to win in the fourth innings.
2008/09
Easts (1) v Karori (2)
Easts
won by 2 wickets.
The 2008/09 final was a tense affair.
Karori made 154 in its first innings, and then dismissed
Easts for 130. Easts then fought back dismissing their
challengers for just 94 and needing 119 to win won early on
the third morning by 2 wickets. Ricky Joseph had match
figures of 12 for 112. This gave Easts its eighth successive
title.
2009/10
Easts (2) v Karori
(1)
Easts won by 8 wickets
Such was the dominance
of Easts and Karori that their places in the final were
decided with two rounds to go – and Karori claimed top
spot by just 1.02 points. This meant that Easts had to win
outright to claim their ninth consecutive Pearce Cup
title.
The final was played at Barton Oval. Karori won the toss and batted first but were bowled out for 67with Ricky Joseph taking 6 for 14 from 13 overs. Easts were in trouble at 37 for 7 but recovered to make 112 – a lead of 45. Lee Edwards took 7 for 56 for Karori. Karori again struggled making only 70 in their second innings which meant the Easts needed just 26 to win.
ENDS