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Tector: Never been involved in a bigger accomplishment

Beating back-to-back world champions of T20 cricket 2-0, ending their unbeaten series and tournament streak at 16, has to be close to if not the greatest result in international cricket for Ireland. The first result that challenges this notion is their win over Pakistan in the 2007 ODI World Cup, which resulted in their semi-professional cricketers having to scramble for leave from their day jobs because all of a sudden they had another round of matches to play. The thrill and adrenaline of hunting down 328 from 111 for 5 against neighbours England in the 2011 ODI World Cup would have hit different.
Harry Tector, who can now afford to be a professional cricketer thanks to those results and has become only the sixth Ireland player to reach 100 T20Is, acknowledged both those matches as he tried to put this series win in perspective.

“Sometimes those things can be hard to measure,” Tector said, “because when I was growing up, Ireland beat Pakistan in 2007, beat England in 2011. Like they were so, so big for the sport, but I think as an achievement for a cricket team to go out there and beat the two-time back-to-back world champions, it’s like they’re such a good team.

“I couldn’t speak to the games I haven’t been involved in because they were such amazing wins at a time when Irish cricket needed to do it, but certainly since I’ve been involved I’m not sure I’ve been involved in a bigger accomplishment.”

Those wins paved the way for Irish cricketers of today, but it can be argued they needed this result just as desperately. It is not out of place for them to still be mistaken for Associates even though they have been a Full Member team of the ICC for nine years now. And that is because such results have been few and far. That leads to a vicious cycle of less cricket leading to less exposure leading to fewer chances of such results.

On top of that Ireland were without five first-choice seam bowlers and Paul Stirling. Two naturalised Irishmen stood up for them in particular: the Indian-born Jai Moondra and the South African-born Matt Hollard. Both of them had to struggle to get where they did away from home, but both phlegmatically took their struggles in their stride and put in seasoned performances in their first two international matches. Moondra started both matches with the wicket of Sanju Samson first ball, and Hollard backed those starts up with hard lengths from his high release.

“I sat there in the change room [thinking] the three guys [fast bowlers], Liam McCarthy had only played one game before,” Tector said. “So we went into the series with one match between three bowlers. Just the clarity they bowled with…

“We went in with a simple plan once we saw the first innings on Friday, and then batting on the surface today it felt similar so the plan didn’t change that much, but you still have to execute against some really good batters. Jai, Matt, Liam today was excellent and probably went under the radar, but I reckon he went it under six an over. I think they’ve certainly stuck their hand up. That’s what we want to see: guys come in, put in performances and make it difficult for the selectors, and they’ve done that in buckets today.”

“What the women achieved yesterday was huge and I think it’s a big monkey off their back,” Tector said. “I think it was, it was a long time coming. They’ve been playing really well for a really long time and I obviously date Gaby [Lewis, the captain], so like I’m quite intimate in the whole, experience of it, I guess, but, I think she would probably think that they were disappointed to not win more than once because I think they went in with a lot of confidence, so I was delighted to see them get over the line.

“I think Orla [Prendergast] is world class. She’s one of the best allrounders in the world. The way she’s played at this World Cup has certainly shown that. The weekend on a whole is just huge. You know, you ride that wave of momentum of reporting, and hopefully get onto the front or back pages of major newspapers here would be a big achievement because sometimes you win games and it doesn’t even get reported on. This weekend, the momentum we have is brilliant, and hopefully it does a lot for us going forward in terms of getting more games in our summer and playing in front of home crowds.

“That’s what you want to do as an Irish cricketer. I got my 100th cap today, but I reckon more than half of them are away from home, certainly a good bit more than half actually, so playing at home is brilliant, and I’d love to do more.”

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