DANDENONG STAR JOURNAL
Home » Release the hounds

Release the hounds

By JARROD POTTER

DDCA Turf 1 – Grand Final

MORDIALLOC (9/246) looked buried against Heinz Southern Cobras.
The Bloodhounds were sent begging from the crease in droves on the first morning of the DDCA Turf 1 grand final as the Cobras struck… and struck… and then struck a few more times to leave Mordialloc in all sorts of trouble at 6/58.
Justin Davis (3/63) seared through the top order – taking Tim Richardson (8) and Mordy skipper Monto Perera (0) in a single over rampage.
Once Ian Daniel’s (21) gallant knock came to an end, it looked like Heinz would take the points on the first day… but that’s not the end of the tale by a long margin.
Chathura Athukorala (72) turned the match on his own shoulders – anchoring a pair of lower-order 50 run partnerships to keep the Bloodhounds alive. Firstly with Stuart Squires (13) then a sensational stand with Cameron Tomkinson (62 not out) before Athukorala was finally sent to the sheds after Davis snared the must-have wicket. But the Bloodhounds kept sniffing out runs as Tomkinson and Nick Connellan (29) went the tonk. Connellan connected with a couple that flew onto rooves and Cheltenham Road to push Mordialloc past 200. They would finish on 246 with the 19-year-old Tomkinson undefeated in his first, and likely most memorable, Turf 1 half-century.
Michael Davies (3/48) toiled for the Cobras – running through 26 overs and 14 maidens in his inaugural Turf 1 grand final appearance – while Paul Stockdale (3/79) was the other major wicket taker.
Sunday belonged to Mordialloc as the Bloodhounds ripped through the Cobras (61).
Patience was a virtue no Heinz bat could afford as reckless shots gave Mordialloc the upper hand.
Cobras’ captain Trevor Davies (25) top scored and with Matt Cox (10) proved the best two of the Reedy Reserve brigade.
Ian Daniel (4/11) and Chathura Athukorala (2/17) excelled with the new leather to wipe out any chance of Heinz getting its first Turf 1 premiership, before Bloodhounds skipper Monto Perera (3/19) finished the job.
It is Mordialloc’s first DDCA Turf 1 premiership.
TURF 2
TURF 2 looks done and dusted as Narre Warren (6/147) has claimed first innings points against St Brigids/St Louis (143) after clawing its way back after a collapse.
Sanjeewa Weerasinghe was the rescuer – slogging his way past St Brigids – taking one over for three fours and a whopping six at Arch Brown Reserve. Another six would ensure the Magpies swooped on the first-innings victory on the first day of the scheduled two-day grand final (no Narre scores available).
TURF 3
IN TURF 3, Aspendale (330) has powered ahead of North Dandenong (1/1) on Saturday via a resounding century from Travis Campbell (135 not out).
Battling to make Aspendale’s Turf 3 stay a short visit, Campbell combined with Josh Boyle (41) and Chris Cleef (30) to rack up the runs. North Dandenong could not dismiss the Dales’ number four as he walked to the sheds with his best score of the season coming at just the right time.
For full results of all DDCA grand finals – including junior results – click onto the Dandenong Journal website www.dandenong.starcommunity.com.au on Monday morning.

Digital Editions


More News

  • State promises thousands of jobs with new employment precinct in Cranbourne

    State promises thousands of jobs with new employment precinct in Cranbourne

    The State Government plans to deliver fresh promises of more houses and thousands of jobs for the City of Casey. The Allan Labor Government pledges to unlock 6800 locals jobs…

  • Casey council opens naming consultation for new Clyde North facilities

    Casey council opens naming consultation for new Clyde North facilities

    The Casey Council is opening up their consultation period for the naming of a reserve and community centre in Clyde North. With the recreation reserve in Springleaf Avenue currently undergoing…

  • Free fun at Keysborough’s Big Picnic

    Free fun at Keysborough’s Big Picnic

    Pets and ground rugs are going to pack out Wachter Reserve for Keysborough’s Big Picnic. The park party has an expanded program of activities, performers, dog flyball antics, animal display…

  • God is with us and gives us hope

    God is with us and gives us hope

    When things feel heavy, and we are afraid, angry or bewildered, God holds us close and travels with us. The New Testament of the Bible tells how Jesus went out…

  • Looking Back

    Looking Back

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 251071 100 years ago 18 March 1926 Local Industry The attention of readers, particularly ladies, is drawn to the advertisement on page 6 by…

  • What’s On

    What’s On

    Mini Sustainability Festival Activities such as recycled collage art, refills of natural cleaning products, mending and patching, pre-loved book giveaway, clothes swap and urban harvest swap. Eco-friendly door prizes. –…

  • Rubbish-collection strike looms in April

    Rubbish-collection strike looms in April

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 255946 Greater Dandenong’s library staff, parking inspectors and rubbish collectors are set to vote on a potential strike from next month, with their union…

  • Offender still not found following alleged assault on teenage boy in Cranbourne West

    Offender still not found following alleged assault on teenage boy in Cranbourne West

    Police are investigating an alleged unprovoked assault on a school boy in Cranbourne West on Tuesday 10 March. A 16-year-old was walking along Tony Way on his way to school…

  • Council opposed to new skyscraper heights

    Council opposed to new skyscraper heights

    A draft council report has called for the State Government to scale back its plans for giant apartment towers in Springvale and Noble Park CBDs. The Government recently released Train…

  • Multicultural funding: When support crosses the line

    Multicultural funding: When support crosses the line

    The Dandenong-based Taha Group funding controversy has forced Australia to confront an uncomfortable question. Should taxpayer money be funding religious or culturally-exclusive organisations at all? Because once government money enters…