Sport
Central Park spoils Kyabram’s party, nabs Clyde Young Shield
The saying goes that ‘‘victory is sweet’’ — but Central Park-St Brendan’s may have felt a sugar rush coming on during Sunday’s play.
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Central Park has plenty to celebrate as season 2023-24 concludes following its B-grade contingent’s success at Mooroopna Recreation Reserve.
The Tigers met Kyabram and took the batting initiative, only to careen into early disaster with Andrew McMillan’s dismissal four balls into day one.
The Tigers had licence to take their time under the 100-over provisions across Cricket Shepparton’s two-day grand finals, but the dismissals of Rory Duffy and Max Hooper in consecutive overs set some alarm bells ringing.
Kyabram’s Connor McLeod picked up the good form he left the previous week with another decisive outing, collecting 3-31 over the day’s extended play.
Nobody took greater advantage of the extra wiggle room than Sam Holland, who faced a whopping 202 balls on his way to a top-scoring 43 (two fours) for Central Park.
McLeod would end proceedings 10 overs shy of stumps as the Redbacks came set to chase 166 for the flag — and there was no intention to race through it.
THE GAME
Kyabram 102 (Tim Nelson 19, Rory Duffy 4-32, Max Hooper 4-67) lt Central Park-St Brendan’s 165 (Sam Holland 43, Andrew Boyington 32, Connor McLeod 3-31)
STAR PLAYER
Rory Duffy (Central Park-St Brendan’s): Duffy was superb in eviscerating the middle order during a run chase that looked thoroughly competitive. His spell either side of lunch on day two ripped the heart out of Kyabram’s premiership chances.
As the second day entered full swing, so did Duffy’s bowling as the 16-year-old, who enjoyed sprinklings of experience in the Haisman Shield this season, pulled a severe cloud of doubt over what looked like a pedestrian innings.
Removing captain Jason Parsons and Jayden Fitzgerald in the space of four balls, Duffy’s handiwork left Kyabram on the ropes at 4-56 once lunch was called.
The Redbacks’ fortunes failed to improve after stomachs were filled, with another four wickets dropping in the half-hour after lunch as Duffy continued to impose his indomitable will.
There was no McLeod magic to be found with willow in hand, but the Redbacks at least salvaged the respectability of triple figures via a spirited 21-run stand for the inevitable final wicket, which went down as Max Hooper’s fourth.
In the end, though, captain Jack Hooper was thrilled to knock over the minor premiers — and, in his words, the “benchmark side all season”.
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Swinging hard: Kyabram's Tim Nelson rears back. Photo by Megan FisherImage 2 of 14
Steady on: Kyabram's Jason Parsons plays one late. Photo by Megan FisherImage 3 of 14
Light work: Central Park-St Brendan's keeper Harrison Baker takes a ball. Photo by Megan FisherImage 4 of 14
All mine: Central Park-St Brendan's Max Hooper celebrates a catch. Photo by Megan FisherImage 5 of 14
No rush: Central Park-St Brendan's Andrew Boyington gets a feel for it. Photo by Megan FisherImage 6 of 14
Not taking chances: Central Park-St Brendan's Brodie Lau catches up to a ball. Photo by Megan FisherImage 7 of 14
Back to me: Central Park-St Brendan's Rory Duffy takes over. Photo by Megan FisherImage 8 of 14
Getting there: Kyabram's Jason Leocata and Tim Nelson have a word. Photo by Megan FisherImage 9 of 14
Turn it around: Kyabram's Jason Parsons and Tim Nelson evaluate strategy. Photo by Megan FisherImage 10 of 14
On all cylinders: Central Park-St Brendan's Max Hooper comes in at full tilt. Photo by Megan FisherImage 11 of 14
Get around it: Central Park-St Brendan's fires up after another catch. Photo by Megan FisherImage 12 of 14
Recovery effort: Central Park-St Brendan's Jack Hooper gets after a ball in the outfield. Photo by Megan FisherImage 13 of 14
No nonsense: Kyabram's Jason Leocata plays the straight bat. Photo by Megan FisherImage 14 of 14
Offering encouragement: Central Park-St Brendan's Brodie Lau is vocal from the outfield. Photo by Megan Fisher“We knew Ky was a pretty strong side all round; they bat deep and we knew we'd have to bowl well, but we stuck to our processes,” Hooper said post-match.
“All year, the focus was on building dots and the wickets would come to us. We stuck to our guns and came out on top in the end.”
Duffy eventually scooped the Player of the Match award, notching 4-32 in a performance best summarised by the terror he inflicted on either side of lunch.
“Rory and Max (Hooper) were unreal,” Hooper said.
"Rory deserved to be best-on. He was phenomenal for us and turned the tide with those quick wickets in the middle.
“He's a great cricketer. He's only 16, so he's got a massive ceiling and he's shown that he's good enough to play at the top level.”
Hooper emphasised that the game did not feel over at lunch, but rather just after it as Duffy did his damage.
“When Brodie Lau got a run out (on Lukas Hanslow) to get them six down, I had an inkling that we'd be a big chance to win and they came through for us,” Hooper said.
Sports Journalist