Horowhenua Chronicle

Ka¯ piti Old Boys eye up double

And the form book suggests the young team might be well able to achieve it

- Paul Williams

It’s the gift that keeps giving, and Ka¯piti Old Boys (KOB) have a chance extend their 50th-jubilee celebratio­ns by snaring some more silverware this weekend. The young and in-form Ka¯ piti team — who already have the Horowhenua-Ka¯piti senior one-day cup in the cabinet — have a shot at a clean sweep of one-day titles when they meet Whanganui United in the Coastal Cup final at Victoria Park this weekend.

Horowhenua-Ka¯piti clubs might have dominated the Coastal Cup in recent seasons, although KOB were the only side from the province to make the semifinals of this year’s competitio­n, played between clubs from HK, Whanganui and Wairarapa.

And while it might be the first time KOB have made the Coastal Cup big dance, the form book does read well.

KOB won the Horowhenua-Ka¯piti two-day club competitio­n in 2021-22 and 2022-23, won the one-day title this year and, although beaten, they made the final of the T20 competitio­n this year.

KOB president Brendan Harris said getting a shot at the one-day double was a credit to a relatively young team, even more meritoriou­s considerin­g they also went into hiatus a few seasons ago when struggling for numbers.

It must be mentioned that the KOB

senior B team also won their competitio­n one-day final this season, putting another cup in the cabinet.

“It’d be awesome.

“It’s been a great season already for the club and we’re in with a shout,” he said.

While there is no exposed form in the head-to-head stakes because the round-robin game between KOB and Whanganui United earlier in the season was washed out, both teams appear to be hitting their straps.

KOB made the Coastal Cup final with a gritty win against Red Star in the semifinal last weekend, winning the toss and batting first.

Wet weather in Masterton on Saturday meant the game was postponed to the reserve day, Sunday.

The visitors started well with openers Daniel Franks (37) and Daniel Browne (60) getting set, while Tristan

Cleote chimed in with 48 and Carter Andrews hit a valuable 24 off 12 ball at the death.

But they needed to bowl well on a wicket conducive to scoring runs, and Red Star looked as though they were cruising early in their chase of 245.

Cue a spell from mercurial bowler Marty Harrison, who is an unmistakab­le figure on the field as he keeps his sunglasses and hat on while bowling.

Harrison proved hard to score from and swung the match around when picking up the crucial wicket of Mark Steventon for 72.

Red Star were unable to build partnershi­ps from there on and were all out for 231 in the 47th over.

The scoreboard suggests KOB leaked a lot of runs through wides — 33 in total — although 20 of those runs were wide balls that went to the

boundary.

The KOB bowlers will be looking to tighten up in that area in the final against Whanganui United.

Whanganui United beat Whanganui Marist in their semifinal, scoring 207-8 off 40 overs and bowling the opposition out for 186 at Victoria Park. United’s Greg Smith (101 not out from 101 balls) carried his bat the entire innings and carried his side home.

The Ka¯ piti Old Boys line-up for the final remains unchanged: Daniel Franks, Daniel Browne, Taine Halbert, Jayden Rose-Miles (c), Tristan Cloete, Brayden Meikle, Martin Harrison, Carter Andrews, Zack Benton, Michael Newell, Conor Beleski.

Marty Harrison is an unmistakab­le figure on the field, bowling with cap and sunglasses.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Ka¯ piti Old Boys bowler Martin Harrison has been a key figure in the senior side this season.
Ka¯ piti Old Boys bowler Martin Harrison has been a key figure in the senior side this season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand