Nannes happy to cash in on T20 riches up for grabs

Sydney, May 8 (ANI): Leading wicket taker in the Twenty20 World Cup, Dirk Nannes, has said that Australian cricketers who no longer are in contention for Test and Sheffield Shield selection should cash in on the T20 riches on offer.

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He, however added that young players should persist with goals to wear the baggy green.

“It would be disturbing if the younger blokes did it, (but) I see it certainly as a good option for people getting close to the end of their career who no longer see themselves as a fixture in the longer forms,” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted Nannes, as saying.

Nannes, a Twenty20 specialist who retired from first-class cricket last season, said: “It would be a worry if it happened at a younger age. Everyone says David Warner is a Twenty20 specialist. It would be wrong for someone like that to just be a Twenty20 cricketer.

“He’s got so much of his game to develop. There’s no reason he can’t play Test cricket and be a good player over a long period of time. People like that would be making the wrong decision. What happens if the IPL falls over? Who knows?”

“For someone who is on the outer of Test cricket, why not make the right business move and play the shorter form? You have to get out of cricket what you can, if you strip the emotion away,” he said.

The most unlikely of Australian cricketers, Nannes, after only nine internationals, T20s has become a key member of the team’s World Twenty20 campaign.

“I’d always play a couple of games (of cricket) before and after I went skiing. Skiing was December until the end of February,” said Nannes, who always wanted to be a skiier or a musician, a sax player.

“I don’t know how it happened. It was funny. It wasn’t like everyone else who has come through the representative system. I had never played a representative game until I played for Victoria and I never really actually wanted to be a cricketer. I had just played cricket in the backyard with my brother,” he added.

Nannes said he has had no more than 10 coaching lessons on his bowling action through his career, and yet has become one of the most potent short-form bowlers in the world. (ANI)

Youngster Marsh a full-time Warrior

Rising star Mitchell Marsh has been granted a full-time contract with Western Australia for the 2010-11 domestic cricket season.

Marsh, who captained Australia to victory in last year’s Under-19 World Cup in New Zealand, is considered one of the best young prospects in the domestic game.

The brother of Australian one-day player Shaun and son of former Test opener Geoff played six Sheffield Shield matches last season.

The 18-year-old has been upgraded from a rookie to a full-time contract along with all-rounder Nathan Coulter-Nile, while Victorian spinner Michael Beer, NSW quick Martin Paskal, all-rounder Matt Johnston and batsman Michael Swart are the other new faces on the Warriors’ full-time list for next summer.

All-rounders Justin Coetzee, Theo Doropoulos and Drew Porter, paceman Ben Edmondson and leg-spinner Josh Mangan were not offered contracts for the upcoming summer.

New additions to the rookie contract list are paceman Ryan Duffield (Melville) and batsmen Tom Beaton (Mount Lawley), Jake Fawcett (Wanneroo) and Marcus Harris (Scarborough).

New Warriors coach Mickey Arthur said he is satisfied with the make-up of the full contract and rookie lists.

“We have secured arguably the leading spinner outside of the state system in Australia and one of the most promising quicks in grade cricket and have given a great opportunity to two promising local batsmen to show their wares at interstate level,” Arthur said.

“We are very confident that we have a good balance of youth and experience in this squad to carry on the great work that has been done with the team in recent times.”

WA squad 2010-11: Mike Hussey, Mitchell Johnson, Shaun Marsh, Marcus North, Adam Voges, David Bandy, Michael Beer, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Liam Davis, Brett Dorey, Aaron Heal, Michael Hogan, Matt Johnston, Brad Knowles, Steve Magoffin, Mitchell Marsh, Ashley Noffke, Martin Paskal, Luke Pomersbach, Wes Robinson, Luke Ronchi, Michael Swart, Luke Towers.

Young Bulls keep Symonds on

Former Australian all-rounder Andrew Symonds has been included in the Queensland Bulls’ list of contracted players for next season.

The 34-year-old, who has been playing with the Chargers in the IPL, will feature in the Bulls’ Twenty20 campaign only.

“We’ve got a pretty young squad and having players like Andrew along will certainly assist our T20 preparations,” said QC boss Graham Dixon.

“Andrew has been contracted as a T20 player only but no doubt he will provide some valuable advice across the season for the Bulls and QAS squad members.”

Batsmen Glen Batticciotto, Nick Kruger, Greg Moller and paceman Grant Sullivan were all delisted with Queensland Cricket looking further towards the next generation.

Leg-spinner Dan Doran has nominated for the national transfer pool after being overlooked.

Rising batsman Chris Lynn, all-rounder Jason Floros, leg-spinner Cameron Boyce and wicketkeeper Ben Dunk were all promoted from last season’s rookie list to gain full contracts for the first time.

Policeman Luke Feldman, a former Australian Country representative, was also added to the full squad after a superb debut season in which he took 33 first-class wickets at 27.

The Bulls’ 21-man group includes 12 players under 23 and the average age is 23.7, down from 24.6 last season when they lost to Victoria in Sheffield Shield final.

Former Australian coach John Buchanan’s son, Nicholas, a 19-year-old fast bowler, was one of the four new rookies the Bulls named.

Bulls squad: Ryan Harris, James Hopes, Cameron Boyce, Ryan Broad, Lee Carseldine, Ben Cutting, Ben Dunk, Luke Feldman, Jason Floros, Chris Hartley, Ben Laughlin, Chris Lynn, Alister McDermott, Craig Philipson, Nathan Reardon, Nathan Rimmington, Chris Simpson, Chris Swan, Wade Townsend, Scott Walter.

New South Wales speedster Copeland touted as the next McGrath

Sydney, Apr 17 (ANI): New South Wales bowler Trent Copeland, who played just five Sheffield Shield matches last season but managed to take more wickets than Glenn McGrath, Brett Lee, Stuart Clark and Doug Bollinger did in their debut seasons, is being compared with McGrath for his accurate bowling.

Copeland up to the under-19s was a wicketkeeper-batsman and only started bowling four years ago after he got tired of broken fingers.

He has taken 35 wickets at 17.57 to kick off his first-class career, The Sydney Morning Herald reports.

“He is very similar to Glenn McGrath,” Cricket NSW chief executive David Gilbert said.

“You hate to saddle a young guy with so much expectation but Trent”s introduction to first-class has been truly extraordinary. He has got that really awkward in-between length like McGrath that the batsman doesn”t know whether to come forward to or go back,” he said.

And there is no doubt in Gilbert’s mind that Copeland will be difficult to shift from the line-up by Bollinger, Clark and Nathan Bracken for the first Shield game of next season.

“Guys like McGrath and Lee and Clark had been in the under-17s and 19s, everyone knew about them, there is an aura and hype surrounding those people,” Copeland said.

“I am not afraid to have that around me but other teams I suppose focused on other bowlers like Moises Henriques and Josh Hazlewood, they didn’t know anything about me. They knew what these other guys were bringing to the table and could set plans around that,” he said.

Copeland’s 8-92 on debut against Queensland was the second best match return by any debutant in NSW’s history. (ANI)

Hartley gloves Ian Healy Trophy

Chris Hartley’s career-best season for Queensland has seen him become the first wicketkeeper to win the Ian Healy Trophy.

Hartley, who last month was named the Sheffield Shield player of the year, fittingly received Queensland’s best player trophy named after the state’s finest gloveman in Healy.

Hartley finished with 839 runs at 46.6 to top the batting standings, scoring two centuries and four 50s, while also claiming 49 catches and one stumping.

He became just the second wicketkeeper in Australian first-class history to score more than 800 runs in a Shield season, behind Brad Haddin.

Fast bowler Ben Cutting, the leading wicket-taker in the Shield this season with 46 victims at 23.91, was the players’ player of the year.

All-rounder James Hopes was named the Twenty20 player of the year, while last year’s Ian Healy Trophy winner, Lee Carseldine, won the domestic one-day player of the year award.

Blues retain Warner’s services

Twenty20 specialist Dave Warner has rejected the entreaties of rival states to remain with New South Wales for the next three seasons.

Warner, afforded only limited opportunities with the Blues’ first-class team despite his peerless reputation for T20 pyrotechnics, was due to be out of contract in July but ultimately decided to stay and fight for his place in NSW.

By doing so he elected not to entertain the approaches from rival states, among whom Queensland and Victoria are thought to have pushed hard to win his signature by offering the incentive of a place in their respective Sheffield Shield sides.

“I am very much looking forward to continuing my playing career at New South Wales,” Warner said.

“I have played all my junior and senior cricket here and I would like to perform well for my home state.

“NSW has a proud tradition of producing great cricketers for the state and for Australia and if, in some way, I have the opportunity to be part of that tradition it would be great.

“We have a strong squad at NSW.”

Though he missed out on a Cricket Australia contract for 2010-11, Warner has made no secret of seeing himself as more than a T20 player, saying he would like to add to his seven Australian appearances in 50-over cricket while also yearning to play Tests someday.

Nevertheless, his place as a T20 maestro in NSW has had its advantages, not least his ability to secure lucrative T20 contracts with the Delhi Daredevils in the Indian Premier League and English county Middlesex.

Ronchi named Warriors’ best

Wicketkeeper Luke Ronchi capped off a memorable summer by winning the Laurie Sawle Medal as Western Australia’s domestic cricket player of the year.

Ronchi endured a miserable campaign last season but returned to form this summer, scoring 716 Sheffield Shield runs at an average of 47.73 and also snaring 42 catches with the gloves.

The 28-year-old also scored 274 runs at just under 40 in the one-day competition and averaged 40.3 with the bat in the Twenty20 format.

Ronchi received 44 votes to win ahead of Shaun Marsh (29), Wes Robinson (27), Marcus North (21) and Adam Voges (21).

Veteran batsman Mike Hussey was awarded the Gold Cup for the fourth time in the past five years as WA’s most outstanding cricketer across all levels of cricket as voted by the WA media.

Hussey averaged 44 in the Test arena over the voting period and 50.7 in the one-day international arena.

Promising all-rounder Mitchell Marsh won the Rising Star award after averaging 58.4 in six one-day matches.

The 18-year-old also led Australia to victory in the Under 19s World Cup in New Zealand.

- AAP

Cult hero Bollinger, a legend in the making

Hamilton (New Zealand), Mar. 26 (ANI): Fast bowler Doug Bollinger is a popular figure both inside and outside of the Australian dressing room.

He is a cult hero in his own team. His whole journey to the top of Australian cricket defies belief.

He played his first game of cricket at the age of 15 and he mucked around on artificial grass pitches for Seven Hills until he was 20.

A late introduction to the Sydney grade premiership was followed by acceleration into the Sheffield Shield. And now, he has the respect of Test captain Ricky Ponting.

””You”re on the field, you”re playing for your country, you”re not going to take it lightly,”” the Sydney Morning Herald quotes Bollinger, as saying of his approach to bowling.

””I was playing with my mates in the park when I was 20. So, this is all a dream for me. I just thought I”d have a crack and it snowballed a bit and here we are,” he adds.

””Your first Test you”re like, ”What do I do?” But two or three in and you tell yourself you”re here to do a job. You”ve got to show you”re enthusiastic. You”ve got to prove you deserve to be here,”” Bollinger said.

“I love being around this group of blokes, actually getting to put the baggy green on, hopefully contributing to a few wins and having people actually wanting to come out and watch us play,”” he adds.

Bollinger will again be Australia”s pace spearhead when the second Test against New Zealand begins in Hamilton tomorrow.

He has captured 34 wickets in his first seven Tests.

There aren’t any Australian bowlers who have done that. That is the extent to which The Legend of Douglas Bollinger has grown. (ANI)

Victorian Saker in line to be England’s next bowling coach

Sydney, Mar 25 (ANI): David Saker, who as bowling coach has led Victoria to the past two Sheffield Shield titles, is in the running to be England’s next bowling coach, undermining Australia’s Ashes campaign later this year.

The 43-year-old is the only Australian among the four candidates shortlisted by the England and Wales Cricket Board to replace Ottis Gibson, who quit to become head coach of the West Indies.

Saker is due to fly to England this weekend for an interview with the ECB scheduled for early next week. He declined to comment, The Sydney Morning Herald reports.

Australia’s losing 2005 tour to England was partly blamed on the ability of English pacemen to use reverse-swing, which had been taught to them by the team’s then fast-bowling coach Troy Cooley.

Cooley, an Australian, was poached within a year to take over as Australia’s bowling coach, a role he still holds today.

In October Saker told The Age that he was keen to coach overseas, citing a strong ambition to coach in county cricket in England.

Applications for the England bowling coach job closed late last month, with the ECB declaring it hoped to appoint Gibson’s successor in early April. (ANI)

Skippers at odds over Shield format

Rival captains Cameron White and Chris Simpson are at odds over the best format for the Sheffield Shield final, after Victoria turned the MCG decider into a run-fest against Queensland.

This season’s final was evenly placed after two days before the Bushrangers batted the Bulls out of the game by amassing 8 for 591 in their second innings before declaring and setting Queensland a victory target of 640 from 100 overs.

That mammoth lead assured Victoria would claim the title as it only needed a draw as the top team, although it eventually won the match by 457 runs.

Recent finals have been notable for home sides batting long periods to set the opposition an enormous task to win, which could strengthen Cricket Australia’s push to scrap the decider to accommodate more Twenty20.

But Victorian skipper White said the match was important to help develop domestic players into international performers.

“It’s the most pressure you can be under as a state cricketer,” he said.

White is also comfortable with the format where the home side has the right to bat as long as it wants, as he said the best team in the home-and-away season deserved an advantage.

“It’s hard to make finals and it’s very hard to host them,” he said.

“I think you reserve the right to do all that work across 10 games in a season to get a home-ground advantage and the other team has to come and beat you on that home ground to win the game.

“I agree with the format, yes.”

Simpson, who has been on the wrong end of three Victorian bat-fests in finals, agreed the best side over the

season deserved to host the final.

But he doubted how much pressure there was in the last three days of this match, and what Australian selectors could learn from seeing one side in the field so long.

“Maybe they want to see the young players under pressure in big games and in that format I don’t think produces that,” he said.

Of 28 competition finals, only five have been won by the visiting side.

-AAP

Bushrangers wrap up big Shield win

Victoria has cemented its standing as the powerhouse of Australian domestic cricket by capping an outstanding season with back-to-back Sheffield Shield titles for the first time in three decades.

The Bushrangers thrashed Queensland by 457 runs in the final at the MCG by bowling the Bulls out for 182 in their second innings.

The Vics were assured of the title entering the fifth day given they only needed a draw and had set the visitors 640 to win, but Cameron White’s side was keen to better last season’s final, when the Bulls held out for a draw.

Leg spinner Bryce McGain (4 for 70) and paceman John Hastings (3 for 25) capped a great performance by Victoria, which was a precarious 6 for 75 on day one.

The Vics called on the mantra imposed by the late coach David Hookes by winning from any position, as during the match they fought back through Matthew Wade’s 96, took a first-innings lead of 48 runs and then batted Queensland out of the game.

Victoria’s title was its 28th overall and capped a superb season of dominance in what is regarded as the strongest domestic competition in the world.

The Vics reached the semi-finals of the Champions League in India last year, won the domestic Twenty20 title, dominated the Shield season, but lost the one-day final to Tasmania.

All that came despite regular absences of key players through injury, national call-ups and the retirements of Brad Hodge and Dirk Nannes from first-class ranks.

Given Hodge, Nannes, Peter Siddle, Chris Rogers and Clint McKay all watched the final from afar, White said the campaign highlighted Victoria’s depth of talent.

“It’s a very good effort, it shows the depth of the squad, the depth of the fast-bowling department and the skill of the batsmen,” he said.

“It’s a credit to the group that they’ve been able to start in September and hold their form the whole way through.

“[We had] a little bit of a down spot through a few one-day losses, but you look across the board and we’ve played a hell of a lot of games and we’ve won more than we’ve lost.”

White said Victoria’s strength was its evenness, as it got strong contributions from a large group.

David Hussey’s 168 in the second innings gave him a competition-high 970 runs, Damien Wright took 35 wickets in six games, Wade earned the man-of-the-match award in the final after a great season with gloves and bat, and all-rounder John Hastings and batsman Aaron Finch had breakthrough seasons.

Queensland’s defeat, which included a late collapse of 5 for 27, was the biggest in a fourth-innings run-chase in a Shield final, and skipper Chris Simpson was disappointed by the limited resistance.

“All year our heart and our determination has never been questioned, not that it was today, but we owed it to ourselves to bat the day out,” he said.

Simpson credited Wade for his vital innings, but rued dropped catches on day one and admitted his day-one decision to bowl leg spinner Cameron Boyce did not work, as it did not reap the wickets needed.

-AAP

Bulls battle losing cause

Victoria is six wickets away from securing its second successive Sheffield Shield title against Queensland, on the final day at the MCG on Sunday.

After resuming at 29 without loss, the Bulls lost openers Wade Townsend and Ryan Broad inside the first six overs of the day to be reeling at 2 for 48 chasing an insurmountable 640.

At lunch, Queensland was 4 for 118 with Lee Carseldine standing firm on 53 and Chris Hartley unbeaten on 2.

Townsend (19) was brought unstuck by Bryce McGain, who landed a wildly-turning off break in the rough outside the left-hander’s off-stump which shot back into the stumps.

Darren Pattinson got his second scalp of the match when he tempted Broad (14) into playing at an outswinging delivery outside his off-stump.

The ball found the edge of Broad’s blade and flew to Matthew Wade for an easy catch.

Carseldine and Chris Lynn righted the ship for awhile but their 62-run stand was ended by McGain, who bowled Lynn for 21.

Bulls skipper Chris Simpson again failed to have an impact, falling for a seven-ball duck in the same fashion as Broad.

Shield retention a formality for Vics

Victoria will be crowned Sheffield Shield champion for a second season running after flogging Queensland with the bat on day four of the final at the MCG.

The Bushrangers set the Bulls an insurmountable victory target of 640 after amassing 8 for 591 in their second innings – the biggest third-innings total in a competition final – as the season decider developed into another run-fest.

David Hussey (168) spanked a century in a final for the second successive season, skipper Cameron White made 89 and Aaron Finch 63 after openers Rob Quiney (73) and Nick Jewell (70) turned the match the home side’s way on Friday.

Victoria’s unbeatable position means they will on Sunday claim back-to-back titles for the first time in three decades, after dominating Queensland in last season’s drawn final at the Junction Oval.

The only interest in the final day will be whether the Vics can round out an excellent season with an outright win.

The Bulls whittled the victory target down in 10 overs before stumps on Saturday, but at 0 for 29 still need 611 more runs.

Wade Townsend finished 16 not out and Ryan Broad 9 not out.

The only highlight for Queensland on a bleak day in the field was the effort of 20-year-old leg spinner Cameron Boyce, who took four wickets for the day to finish with 6 for 181 from 44 overs in just his second first-class game.

But Victoria did largely as it pleased, as Hussey and Finch posted a stand of 156 before the latter needlessly ran himself out, Hussey and White thumped a partnership of 170 and Andrew McDonald (41 not out) and the tail kept the score humming.

Victoria’s merciless show meant it set Queensland a steeper victory target than in last season’s final, when the Bulls were set 593 on the final day.

That match was drawn, but Victoria will be out to cap a great season this summer with an outright victory on Sunday.

Queensland was a bowler short on Saturday because of James Hopes’ calf injury, and the Vics are also a bowler short because of Damien Wright’s hamstring injury.

But the Bushrangers showed how remorseless they were towards Queensland during their innings when they sent Wright in with a runner when the lead was over 600.

-AAP

Bushrangers set for Shield win

Victoria batted Queensland out of the Sheffield Shield final at the MCG to be assured of claiming back-to-back titles.

The Bushrangers led by 569 runs with five wickets in hand, four sessions remaining and no declaration in sight after turning the fourth day into a run-fest.

The home side reached 5 for 521 in their second innings at tea thanks to a sparkling century by David Hussey, who backed up his ton in last year’s decider with 168.

Hussey spanked 18 boundaries and four sixes in his 198-ball knock and shared in century stands with Aaron Finch (63) and captain Cameron White (89).

The Bushrangers did as they pleased with the bat in the first two sessions on Saturday by adding 248 runs after openers Rob Quiney (73) and Nick Jewell (70) put on a 154-run start on Friday, which turned an evenly-poised match the host’s way.

Even after Hussey and White fell in successive overs during the second session on Saturday, both with the score on 481, Matthew Wade (20 not out) and Andrew McDonald (19 not out) kept the score humming.

Victoria’s monstrous advantage means the only way they can be denied the title is if the Bulls claim five more wickets quickly and pull off one of the sport’s most astonishing pursuits.

The Bushrangers only need a draw to claim the title.

Leg-spinner Cameron Boyce (3 for 149) was the most successful of the weary Bulls bowlers, while paceman Ben Cutting (1 for 87) took the other wicket, as Finch ran himself out in the first session.

The Bulls have been a bowler short this innings because of James Hopes’ calf injury, while the Bushrangers will be a bowler short in the last innings because of Damien Wright’s hamstring strain.

- AAP

Bulls watch Shield slip away

David Hussey reached his century as Victoria pushed the Sheffield Shield final further from Queensland’s reach before lunch on day four at the MCG on Saturday.

With skipper Cameron White by his side on 47, Hussey (126 not out) took the Bushrangers to the break at 3 for 396, a virtually unassailable lead of 444 with a day-and-a-half to play.

Victoria only needs a draw to retain the Shield and the Bulls’ efforts with the ball in the morning session proved fruitless at attempting to stave off that result.

Aaron Finch was the only man to fall on Saturday, departing on 63 when he was run out by substitute fielder Jason Floros.

Cameron Boyce, the sole wicket-taker in the Bushrangers’ second innings, bowled efficiently in the morning session but was unable to make a breakthrough.

Clarke, North stand firm

New Zealand failed to make a breakthrough in the morning session, as Australia steered itself to a formidable total on day two of the first Test in Wellington on Saturday.

Michael Clarke and Marcus North went untroubled in the first 30 overs of the day, surpassing the record for a fifth-wicket Australian partnership at Basin Reserve to reach 4 for 405 at lunch.

The Australia vice-captain went into the break on 153 not out after resuming the day at 100, while North was 84, approaching his first Test ton since the fourth Ashes Test at Leeds in 2009.

Their dig was worth an unbeaten 229; Australia’s previous best stand for the fifth wicket in Wellington was in 1986, when Greg Ritchie and Greg Matthews put on 213.

Both men came into the game under a cloud of uncertainty about how they would perform but showed nothing but patience, as they kept out the good balls and punished the bad.

But as the lunch break approached and Clarke surpassed his 150-run milestone, North began to look antsy and his strokeplay became noticeably more aggressive to little effect.

Clarke appeared to offer some calming words mid-pitch to ensure his less-experienced team-mate survived until the luncheon break.

North spent the home summer in a form slump, averaging just 23 in the Test series against West Indies and Pakistan, and upon his return to the Sheffield Shield competition he scored just 104 runs at 12.8.

Clarke’s century on Friday sent a message that his off-field turmoil over the past fortnight has had no bearing on his cricket, and in the post-match press conference he thanked former fiancee Lara Bingle for her support.

Bulls battling back from shaky start

Queensland was 2 for 58 at lunch in response to Victoria’s 305 on day two of the Sheffield Shield final at the MCG.

Rookie Chris Lynn was unbeaten on 31, with opener Ryan Broad holding firm on 13.

Wade Townsend (1) and Lee Carseldine (7) were the men out, dismissed by new-ball bowlers Darren Pattinson and Damien Wright respectively.

Townsend, fresh off a record 311 in Brisbane grade cricket, was clean-bowled by a brilliant Pattinson delivery, while Carseldine edged Wright to Andrew McDonald in the slip cordon.

Lynn, playing in just his third Shield game and having scored a century in his last match, had faced only 37 deliveries, hitting six fours.

He led a Queensland recovery after the visitors had slumped to 1 for 3 and then 2 for 14.

The Bushrangers’ tail well and truly wagged, the last four wickets putting on 230 runs with wicket-keeper Matthew Wade top-scoring with 96.

The left-hander put on 86 with John Hastings (47), 84 with Damien Wright (42) and 40 with Pattinson, who was the last man out this morning when he was well-caught by Townsend off the bowling of Cutting for 25.

Chris Swan was the pick of the Queensland bowling attack with 3 for 65 from 24 overs, while James Hopes took 2 for 43, Luke Feldman 2 for 46 and Cutting 2 for 59.

The Bulls must win the match to claim the Shield, while defending champion Victoria only needs to draw after topping the ladder.

Bushrangers all out at MCG

Victoria has been dismissed for 305 early on day two of the Sheffield Shield final against Queensland at the MCG.

Resuming on 9 for 286, last pair Darren Pattinson and Bryce McGain frustrated the Bulls attack for almost another hour before the former fell for 25, well-caught by Wade Townsend off the bowling of Ben Cutting.

The tail well and truly wagged for the Bushrangers as the last four wickets put on 230 runs after the home side had been reduced to a paltry 6 for 75 yesterday after winning the toss and batting.

Wicket-keeper Matthew Wade top-scored with 96, the left-hander putting on 86 with John Hastings (47) and 84 with Damien Wright (42).

Wade also shared in a 40-run union with Pattinson.

Chris Swan was the pick of the Queensland bowling attack with 3 for 65 from 24 overs, while James Hopes took 2 for 43, Luke Feldman 2 for 46 and Cutting 2 for 59.

The Bulls must win the match to claim the Shield, while defending champion Victoria only needs to draw after topping the ladder.

Injured Hopes doubtful for Twenty20 World Cup, IPL stint

Sydney, Mar 19(ANI): Australian all rounder James Hopes is likely to miss the Twenty20 World Cup and the Indian Premier League (IPL) after he sustained a calf muscle injury in the Sheffield Shield final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

Hopes suffered the injury when he took off for a run early in his innings against Victoria on Thursday.

The 31-year-old, however, is hoping to make it to the national squad for the world championship, and said: “I”ve done it pretty good so I”m looking at four weeks (out).”

The injury means that he is certain to miss the IPL, where he has a 300,000 dollar contract with Kings XI Punjab.

“I was pushing to be in the Twenty20 World Cup squad and if I could have gone over there (India) after this game and played some Twenty20 games over there and done OK my case may have been stronger to be included in that team.” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted Hopes, as saying.

“Now I”m hoping to be included in that team on the back of probably no Twenty20 cricket, which is a bit disappointing,” he added.

The 31-year-old had also missed last year”s IPL because he was rested by Cricket Australia with a bout of knee tendonitis. (ANI)

David Hussey might be next candidate to give up Test hopes for IPL David Hussey might be next candidate to give up Test hopes for IPL

Melbourne, Mar. 17 (ANI): Victorian all-rounder David Hussey could be the next candidate to give up Tests for the lucrative Indian Premier League.

The former Western Australian, however, will forego over 230,000 dollars in IPL earnings from the Kolkata Knightriders to help the Victoria Bushrangers chase their second consecutive Sheffield Shield title.

””It was a massive decision to be honest. A lot of people [have been shocked by it] actually. They worked out how much it was going to cost me and they”re saying ”What are you doing? That”s a house you could pay off. You”ve already won two shields, take off [to India]” but, probably to my detriment, I”m a very loyal person and I still want to play cricket for Australia in the Test arena,”” the Daily Telegraph quoted 32-year-old Hussey, as saying.

Across the three forms this season the right-hander has scored 1237 runs for the Bushrangers, including 794 in the Sheffield Shield at an average of 52.9.

Only Ed Cowan (957), Phillip Hughes (953) and Michael Klinger (886) have been more prolific in the four-day game, a record that surprised Hussey.

The only national recognition Hussey has received of late is in the Australian Twenty20 side, of which is now a key member.

While the 32-year-old is grateful for any chance to represent Australia, he insisted he could not be satisfied just playing Twenty20 Internationals.

””To play Twenty20 is fantastic – don”t get me wrong, I love playing Twenty20 for Australia – but I think I”d be underachieving if I didn”t represent Australia in the Test arena,”” he said.

Hussey hopes another century in a shield final – he scored one last year too – could push him back into contention for the mid-year Tests against Pakistan and, later, the Ashes.

He said the ability of his older brother, Mike, this summer to snap his form slump gave him confidence he too could perform strongly well into his 30s. (ANI)