There were wins in the NW Championship for Bonds Glen, Ballyspallen, Killyclooney and Eglinton.

Burndennett lost to Bonds Glen by 213 runs (DLS)
Bonds Glen 381-7 (45 overs; Dane Rossouw 170, Dharm Singh 80, William McClintock 50, Heinrich Roberts 36; Andy Barr 2-65, Rahmat Sahaq 2-66)
Burndennett 140 (33.1 overs; Marty Mehaffey 36, Corey Roulston 23, Derek Curry 23; Sam Haslett 3-17, Sam Kincaid 2-7, Heinrich Roberts 2-29) (Target 354 in 45 overs)
Bonds Glen produced a devastating batting display to overwhelm Burndennett by 213 runs in a one-sided encounter.
The foundation was laid by a magnificent opening partnership of 157 between South African professional Dane Rossouw and Dharm Singh. Rossouw dominated the attack with a breathtaking 170 from just 107 balls, hammering 15 fours and nine sixes in a brutal exhibition of power hitting.
Singh provided the perfect support act with an aggressive 80 from 75 deliveries that included seven fours and five maximums.
The punishment continued late in the innings as William McClintock blasted a stunning 22-ball half-century featuring seven fours and three sixes, while Heinrich Roberts added a rapid 36 to propel Bonds Glen to a towering 381-7. Andy Barr and Rahmat Sahaq claimed two wickets apiece for Burndennett.
The hosts reply started brightly with Marty Mehaffey striking a run-a-ball 36 in an opening stand of 50 alongside Corey Roulston. Derek Curry added 23, but young spinners Sam Haslett and Sam Kincaid shared five wickets as Bonds Glen sealed a comfortable DLS victory.
Killyclooney beat Letterkenny by 8 wickets.
Letterkenny 185 (30.2 overs; Gopi Silva 54, Neelansh Singh 44; Jason Wallace 4-33, Giles Moan 2-22, Keenan Viera 2-34, Tim Dougherty 2-62)
Killyclooney 186-2 (No score details yet)

Jason Wallace took four wickets in four balls as Letterkenny were dismissed for 185 despite a hard-hit half century from skipper Gopi Silva.
Alan Nicholl and Alfie Moan gave the Killyclooney reply a strong start and they coasted to an eight-wicket win.
Eglinton beat Ardmore by 9 wickets (DLS).
Ardmore 121-6 (27.2 overs; Kasun Aberaytne 74*; Kyle Moore 4-20; Robbie Millar 2-22)
Eglinton 111-1 (16 overs; Andy Lucas 68*, Andy Millar 28) (Target 111 in 22 overs.)

Frequent showers may have interrupted proceedings, but there was no stopping Eglinton as they stormed to a nine-wicket DLS victory over Ardmore chasing a revised target of 111 in 22 overs.
Ardmore were indebted to Sri Lankan overseas professional Kasun Aberaytne, who carried the batting almost single-handedly with a superb unbeaten 74 from 74 balls, striking 11 fours and a six.
Wickets tumbled regularly around him with little resistance from the top order, as a string of single-figure scores left the innings in danger of collapse. Valuable late contributions of 13 apiece from Vivek Dwivedi and Mark Chambers at least pushed the total towards respectability in the rain-hit contest.
Eglinton’s bowlers kept a firm grip throughout, with left-armer Kyle Moore claiming four wickets in an impressive spell, while leg-spinner Robbie Millar chipped in with two more.
Any hopes of a dramatic defence quickly disappeared as Eglinton’s openers made light work of the chase.
The only real threat came from the dark clouds overhead as skipper Andy Lucas blasted an unbeaten 68 from 49 deliveries, including seven fours and three sixes. Alongside Andy Millar’s fluent 28, the pair shared an unbroken opening stand of 104 to seal a comfortable maximum-points win.
Ballyspallen beat Glendermott by 23 runs (DLS).
Ballyspallen 191-9 (45 overs; Hassan Shahid 43, Raveen Yasas 42, Pushpal Singh 27, Curtis McElwee 20; Lewis Pearson 4-31, Alex Boyd 2-24)
Glendermott 148-7 (34 overs; Ben Mills 36, Jake Montgomery 34, Craig Averill 29; Graham Kennedy 3-13) (Target 171 in 34 overs.)
Ballyspallen claimed a hard-fought 23-run victory over Glendermott after defending a revised DLS target in another rain-affected encounter.
The home side posted 191-9 from their 45 overs, built around a vital third-wicket partnership of 63 between Hassan Shahid and Raveen Yasas.
Shahid top-scored with 43, while Yasas struck 42 in an innings that also featured useful contributions from Pushpender Singh and Curtis McElwee.
Glendermott’s attack was led superbly by Lewis Pearson, who claimed 4-31, while Alex Boyd picked up two wickets.
Set a revised target of 171 from 34 overs, Glendermott made an encouraging start through Ben Mills and Craig Averill. Mills hammered 36 from 35 balls with six fours and a six, while Averill added 29 as the visitors looked well placed.
However, left-arm spinner Graham Kennedy turned the contest with a miserly spell of 3-13 from seven overs, including the prize scalp of Blayde Cappell, strangling the middle order along with his brother Stephen (7-1-11-1) and slowing the scoring rate dramatically.

Jake Montgomery battled for 34 from 67 deliveries, but Ballyspallen closed out victory comfortably in the closing overs.





