Brigade v Newbuildings, Faughan Valley Cup final (20 July)
- Johnny Thompson departs
- Great running catch by Ryan Barr
- Near miss for Peat Salmon
- Peat Salmon scored 44
- Josh Wilson bowling
- Josh Wilson to Peat Salmon
- Lofted by Peat Salmon...
- ..and caught by Adam McDaid
- Another catch by Ryan Barr
- Boundary for Ryan Hunter
- Half century for Ryan Hunter
- Ryan Hunter drives
- Six hit for Ryan Hunter
- Applause for Ryan Hunter as he leaves unbeaten on 66 in a Newbuildings total of 145 for 4
- Edged behind by Scott Macbeth...
- ..Gregory McFaul celebrates
- Ryan Hunter appeals
- Successful appeal by Ryan Hunter
- Ryan Hunter goes off with a hamstring injury
- Stunning catch by Leeroy McKeegan
- Charlie Downey celebrates with McKeegan
- McKeegan mobbed
- Boundary for David Barr
- Pat on the back for Peat Salmon
- Mark Hanna is bowled by Peat Salmon
- Boundary for Adam McDaid
- Andy Britton is bowled by Johnny Thompson
- JT celebrates
- Half century for Adam McDaid
- Adam McDaid scored 57
- Trademark JT celebration
- And another as he gets his third
- Greg McFaul stops the six
- Ross Hunter leads the team off after they seal the 21-run win
League Tables
View the latest international, interprovincial and provincial league tables.
The Week Ahead
Fixtures scheduled for the next seven days.
From the Archives
The CricketEurope Archives
Updated annually, the CricketEurope Archives contain international and domestic material published by CricketEurope since 2005 - results, reports, statistics, photographs, video, audio, articles, special features, blogs …
- Global and international tournaments
- CricketEurope Worldwide, Netherlands, Scotland, Jersey, Isle of Man
- Irish international matches and All Ireland competitions.
- Leinster, Munster, NCU and North West
- Feature articles and series
- Blogs and columns.
- The Online Library.
Live Coverage Archives
Recent matches covered with ball by ball commentary on CricketEurope.
Marc Ellison's VideoBlog
Harnessing natural aggression with Colin Munro
Colin Munro is 38-years-old and still plying his trade in t20 leagues around the world following an international career for New Zealand that spanned more than 120 matches. Despite scoring three T20I hundreds for the black caps and being the 11th highest run-scorer in all t20s, it is his first-class record that stands out like a beacon.
Colin Munro is 38-years-old and still plying his trade in t20 leagues around the world following an international career for New Zealand that spanned more than 120 matches. Despite scoring three T20I hundreds for the black caps and being the 11th highest run-scorer in all t20s, it is his first-class record that stands out like a beacon.





