Greenock Cricket Club

Glenpark, Brisbane Street, Greenock, PA16 8NY

Founded 1862

1st XI's all-round performance leads to Challenge Cup win


Greenock 1st XI v Edinburgh
CS Challenge Cup
Sunday 17th August 2025

Edinburgh 154   M Butt 57, M Sohail Butt 42; Mu Ahmadzai 4 for 18
Greenock 1st XI 155 for 7   CS Pandher 38*, WN Jenkins 35

Greenock 1st XI defeated Edinburgh by 3 wickets

Scorecard

The 1st XI triumphed over Edinburgh CC by three wickets in the Grand Final of the Cricket Scotland Challenge Cup on Sunday.

The last Scottish trophy wins came in 2007 when the Club won both the Scottish National Cricket League (SNCL) Premier League title and the Scottish Cup (against Carlton) and then in 2009 when the Club was victorious in the Murgitroyd 20/20 Final (against Corstorphine). Interestingly each of these most recent wins came against Edinburgh based clubs.

Sunday's final took place at Stenhousemuir's The Tryst ground in Larbert and was played in warm sunshine and possibly the best conditions of the 2025 summer.

The 1st XI captain, Aryan Sanghera, won the toss and invited Edinburgh to bat. With just the third ball of the match, it looked a fine decision as opener Kashif Hussain was comfortably caught at backward point by Mubi Ahmadzai off the pace bowling of Fahim Dinarkheil.

Mateen Butt and Sohail Butt quickly established a very productive second wicket century partnership which propelled Edinburgh to 103 early in the 18th over. But with just the second ball of new bowler Mubi Ahmadzai's first over, an attempted quick single led to Sohail Butt being run out due to a very smart piece of fielding by Will Jenkins. Butt had scored 42 runs.

As often happens when a good partnership is broken, a third wicket was captured just two balls later when Ahmadzai had new batsman Umair Farooq caught by Harry Briggs without any addition to the score.

A fourth wicket fell just seven runs later when Edinburgh's main run scorer Mateen Butt became the second batter to be run out. He had scored 57 runs.

And from that point in the innings wickets fell regularly as Edinburgh failed to find another partnership of any size. From 110 for the loss of 4 wickets, the team from the capital city collapsed to 154 all out after just 33.3 overs of the 40 available.

Mubi Ahmadzai was the top wicket-taker for Greenock with 4 wickets for 18 runs from 8 overs.

The 1st XI's reply, after the interval between innings, was almost a mirror image of the start of the Edinburgh innings earlier in the afternoon. With only the fourth ball of the innings Aryan Sanghera had his stumps knocked back as he was beaten by the pace of Hazrat Bilal.

There was to be no hundred partnership for the second wicket, however, as the team's star batsman of the season, Cal Henry, was adjudged LBW to Bilal with the last ball of the third over and with the score on just 16. Henry had looked in good form and had scored 12 runs from 11 balls faced. His dismissal was a huge blow to the team.

Harry Briggs and Will Jenkins steadied the innings with a battling 45 runs partnership as Edinburgh sought to gain a third wicket. It did eventually come in the 18th over when Briggs was caught by Mateem Butt off the bowling of Farooq, having scored 23 runs.

Edinburgh looked to be taking control of the match as the wickets of Cammy Calder, Sam Sanghera and Sehmat Pandher were all captured in a period of just six overs which saw the 1st XI stumble to 97 for the loss of 6 wickets.

At that point in the innings, the team needed another 58 runs to win with just 12 overs remaining and seemingly unable to score more than two or three runs an over against some fine Edinburgh bowling.

And when Will Jenkins was caught off the bowling of Daud Ahmed for a very important innings of 35 runs it looked as though Edinburgh might have gained the upper hand. Just under nine overs remained and with the lower order now exposed, 36 runs were still needed and seemed a distance away.

But number 8 batsman Chirag Pandher was the man for the moment as he took charge supported by number 9 batsman Mubi Ahmadzai.

Pandher, who had scored two boundaries and a six just before Jenkins was dismissed, changed his tactics and skilfully beat the Edinburgh field with a series of ones and twos which took his team to the brink of victory towards the end of the 39th over.

With the scores tied and eight balls remaining, Ahmadzai perfectly clipped pace bowler Ahmed high and long over the square leg boundary for a six only later to discover that the umpire had given a no ball for a front foot infringement by Ahmed which, in fact, had ended the game.

For the sizeable travelling support, the sight of Ahmadzai's shot flying well over the boundary sparked scenes of jubilation as the first national trophy win was achieved in almost two decades.

Pandher was unbeaten on 38 and Ahmadzai was also unbeaten on just 6 runs as his last shot did not count as the match ended with the umpire calling 'No Ball'.