Driver roars in aboard a Grand night for cricket
FORMER county cricketer Ryan Driver is Jersey’s Player of the Year later his superb exertions with cmd and pellet for Romeril’s and the Island over the elapse few months.
The former Lancashire player was presented with the trophy by former England Test bowler Angus Fraser,
beat headphones, the guest spokesman at the Grand Hotel last night.
Driver accumulated 589 runs in the NatWest Weekend League at an average of 84.14 and demanded 24 wickets at an average of 12.54 runs each.
He was too, of lesson, a membership of the successful senior Inter-Insular crew.
The NatWest Cricket Dinner evening was a party of a gorgeous season for Jersey cricket at so many levels, during which they firmly established themselves as excellent hosts and antagonists on the European scene to go by with their partner member of the ICC.
And the nightfall could virtually have had a better start when Jerry Whitsey, of long-standing sponsors NatWest, announced a beyond two-year deal worth £50,000 for Jersey cricket.
And variant big success story � junior cricket in general � was again highlighted when Rathbone’s Old Victorians Edward Farley (19), a normal in their Premiership line-up,
bose in ear headphones, won the Jersey Evening Post Young Cricketer of the Year award after scoring centuries for Jersey’s successful U19s and U23s.
The Durham University student ’s clubmate and fellow teenager Mark Chipperfield was also in disagreement, as was Romeril’s 2nds’ Paul Connolly and Springfield 2nds’ Nishant Sharma.
Highlands student Connolly did pick up a trophy, whatsoever,
discount supra shoes, elevating heaving the Weekend League Division I Young Cricketer of the Year, forward of Sharma.
Connolly (16), who made 9 appearances for Romerils seniors in their championship season, scored 148 runs from 8 innings (average of 18.86) as well as catching 15 wickets at a spend of 15.26 every.
He also cornered out for Sloggers in the Evening League, scoring 245 runs.
Those in the running for the night’s top award, triumphed by Driver, embodied Springfield bowler Simon Parker (22 Weekend wickets); Ward Jenner of Rathbones Old Victorians, who scored 475 runs in the Weekend at an average of 59.38 as well as taking a dozen wickets; Serial champion Matt Hague of Fairbairn Sporting Club, the Island captain, has scored 553 runs at the Weekall overcluding one century against St Ouen for an average of 55.30 he also took 14 wickets at an average of 18.50; Another Island athlete, Chris Jones of OVs, kick 546 runs in the Premier Division for an average of 60.67, including a ton against Mavericks,
nike air max shoes, as well as taking 17 wickets at an average of 22.18.
JEP columnist Mark Saralis also won one reward, for services apt cricket, from the Island’s umpires and scorers,
birkenstock online, meantime the President’s prize went to Nikki Holmes for her eminent Jersey Cricket Board bulletin as well as her aid in organising ECC accidents.
Jerry Whitsey of NatWest presented the manifold team trophies won during this memorable season which, unusually still has life in it, with the Senior Cup Final among Romerils and Sporting Club creature played at Grainville
today and a Twenty/20 inter-insular in Guernsey afterward weekend.
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News reports from Bangladesh say three days of incessant rains have killed at least 15 people, stranded tens of thousands more and left at least 50 fishermen missing across the delta nation’s southern coast.Bangladeshi media reported Saturday that thousands of people have fled to emergency shelters, as waters triggered by a tidal surge from the Bay of Bengal inundated homes along the low-lying coastal zone. Two teenagers were reported to have died in the capital, Dhaka, when a wall collapsed on them.Of the 200 fishermen originally reported missing in the Bay of Bengal Thursday, 150 have returned to shore. Ferry services in the country’s southern areas were halted because of the rough weather.Storms originating at sea kill many Bangladeshis nearly every year.