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The Panthers have been one of the powerhouses of the association for many years, but have started introducing a batch of teens in recent years.
"They've given us a few opportunities to come up and play and having had the experience now has given us the platform to come in and play more consistently," Brady Marshall explained.
Marshall is a wicketkeeper-bat, while schoolmates Jordan Croker and Jordan Rhodes are spinners, bowling leg and off-spin respectively.
Rhodes claimed a wicket with his second ball at provincial level.
Murray High's Eddy Schultheis is an all-rounder, capable of opening the innings and bowling medium pace, while Oscar Lyons from Albury High is a top order bat.
Lyons and Schultheis have already shown their class with the bat this season, while Croker has the toughest art to master.
"It's not too bad (bowling leg-spin), it took a while to get used to and get better at and I'm still not there yet," he admitted.
"Over time, you just try to develop a few variations, but the hardest part is when people start going after you, you have to try and rein it in a bit, keep your cool and focus on the next ball, coming back better."
Leg-spin is incredibly difficult for an experienced cricketer, so to be playing first grade at only 16 is a tremendous achievement for the emerging leggie.
Marshall is a year older, but he too has a difficult task in coping with thunderbolts from the Panthers' much-vaunted quicks and then keeping to the spinners.
"When you keep more frequently to say (NSW Country pace bowler) Ryan (Brown), (O'Farrell Cup rep) 'Tass' (David Tassell) and especially Micky Galvin, he's quite a tough spinner to keep to, it helps with your continuity, you know what to expect," he revealed.
"Micky's different to most spinners, he's quite quick, he darts them in and has a lot more pace on it, plus he's very good at setting up a batter, so you've always got to be expecting something.
"When Ryan's up and about, he hits the gloves pretty hard, but definitely he and 'Tass' in their first spells are pretty sharp."
None of the 'fab five' played in last season's premiership win over North Albury, but Saturday's grand final re-match between the fierce rivals has been a talking point.
"It's the game you look forward to most when the fixture first comes out, you look to when you play (long-time powerhouses) North Albury and Wodonga."
IN OTHER NEWS:
The Panthers pipped the Hoppers by 11 runs.
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