Sheffield Shield preview part one

By sajjittarius / Roar Rookie

Aah, spring. The weather’s warming up and the footy seasons are coming to a close. Time then for willow fanciers around the country to stock up the fridge, make sure the couch is still comfy and get ready for the upcoming cricket season.

With Test series against the top-ranked South Africans and the always competitive Sri Lankans coming – not to mention the home-and-away Ashes series soon after – this season’s Sheffield Shield is the time for many players to shine.

The Australian batting line-up hasn’t looked this unsettled since the 1980s, while the bowlers keep dropping like flies: perform well in the Shield and you could be pulling on the baggy green.

But who’s expected to do well – and who do we look out for? Let’s have a look at New South Wales, Queensland and South Australia.

NEW SOUTH WALES BLUES (5th last year)
IN: none
OUT: Beau Casson (retired); Stuart Clark (retired); Nathan Hauritz (Queensland); Phillip Hughes (SA); Phil Jaques (retired); Simon Katich (retired); Usman Khawaja (Queensland); Timm van der Gugten (TAS)

Wow. Fifth last year and with seven Test players either retiring or moving interstate. Just looking at that you’d think NSW would struggle to win anything for a long time.

First impressions can be misleading though. Of those departing Test players only Katich (483 runs at 43.90) had anything approaching good form last year.

Hughes, Khawaja and Jaques all averaged in the 20s with the bat, while Hauritz only took three wickets in two matches. Clark was only listed as an emergency, while a recurrence of a congenital heart condition sadly forced Casson to retire at the age of 29.

Of those left, many are reaping the rewards of the September start with Australian captain Michael Clarke leading the side for the first two matches. While players like Clarke, Shane Watson and David Warner will be away most of the season, former Test players Doug Bollinger and Trent Copeland will lead the attack, while there will be plenty of attention on all-rounders Steve O’Keefe, Moises Henriques and Steven Smith as they slowly progress.

And that’s without NSW’s uncanny knack of producing good batsmen: keep an eye out on Nic Maddison and Peter Nevill.

Prediction: third or fourth.

QUEENSLAND BULLS (1st)
IN: Nathan Hauritz (NSW); Usman Khawaja (NSW); Luke Pomersbach (WA)
OUT: Ben Dunk (TAS); Steve Magoffin (Sussex); Chris Swan (retired)

Last year’s champions did it in time-honoured Queensland fashion: strong fast bowling; a great wicket-keeper; and some very brittle batting.

Only two Queensland batsmen (Peter Forrest and Joe Burns) averaged over 40 last season, while no less than seven bowlers averaged under 30, with four (Alister McDermott, Magoffin, Ryan Harris and Ben Cutting) averaging under 20 runs per wicket.

Indeed, it’s an interesting fact that of the 78 players to make their Test debuts after a certain S.K. Warne, only three of them have been Queenslander specialist batsmen (Matthew Hayden, Stuart Law and Martin Love), with two all-rounders (Shane Watson and Andrew Symonds).

This compares with seven specialist bowlers picked during the same period (Michael Kasprowicz, Andy Bichel, Adam Dale, Scott Muller, Nathan Hauritz, Mitchell Johnson and Ryan Harris).

To that end Queensland have recruited wisely: Khawaja and Pomersbach were once two of the more highly rated young batsmen going around. Both come with their own personal baggage they hope coach Darren Lehmann can help them get rid of; while it will be interesting to see if Hauritz can flourish in his return to his home state after being ‘blowtorched’ by Queensland in the past.

Both Hauritz and leg-spinner Cameron Boyce have been named in the Bulls’ squad for their opening match against South Australia, something very much against the mould of Queensland all-pace attacks. Look out for McDermott and Cutting again this year as they aim for any openings in the Test team.

Prediction: finalists.

SOUTH AUSTRALIA REDBACKS (6th)
IN: Johan Botha (South Africa); Phillip Hughes (NSW)
OUT: Aiden Blizzard (TAS)

For the last couple of years South Australian coach Darren Berry has been slowly building his side: Big Bash winners 2010/11; Ryobi Cup winners 2011/12. Next step is to try and lift their Shield results after last year’s desperately disappointing effort of just two points for the whole year.

The team’s problems aren’t with runs. The Adelaide Oval is renown as being a batsman’s paradise, with Dan Christian, Michael Klinger and Tom Cooper all averaging over 40 last season. Hughes’ recruitment will add more runs to that, although whether it’s in his best interests to be playing home games on a flat wicket with short square boundaries is another thing.

No, the problem for South Australia is taking wickets. Just four bowlers (Gary Putland, Joe Mennie, Peter George and Christian) took more than 10 wickets last season, with former Test bowler George scalping at an average of 37 and Christian taking his 10 at nearly 50.

To that end new captain Botha will give them something while Test spinner Nathan Lyon is away, but you can’t help but feel the team are still one bowler short of consistently getting 20 wickets a game.

Prediction: sixth

The Crowd Says:

2012-10-22T01:20:05+00:00

Anita

Guest


I'd rather watch Katich, thnaks, he can bore for Oz as long as he scores runs. With Hughes, I find it vaguely depressing watching that level of unorthodoxy in test cricket. It's like a tail-ender is opening the batting.But no, I don't think that Watson is the answer to the opening problem. I find him far too flaky for a the test openers' berth. It is only a short-term measure I hope. Now I come to think of it, I didn't like watching Jacques much either.

2012-09-26T23:44:38+00:00

JohnB

Guest


I think that Pomersbach isn't in the 12 for the first Qld shield match (and nor is Chris Lynn. Pommersbach viewed more as a limited overs player perhaps, Lynn hopefully not still injured. If he isn't not bad for him to be told that having talent isn't enough to stay in the side). Khawaja and Hauritz are in the 12, but as Cameron Boyce is there also, you'd think it's between Boyce and Hauritz as 12th. Hopes fit again and captain, Forrest and Burns looking to make Test cases, all very promising. Which generally means we'll get a series of untimely injuries and badly rain affected draws. The one and a bit NSW games have been interesting - Bollinger, Copeland and Hazlewood looks a pretty decent attack, Henriques has made 2 scores already (and chipped in with some wickets), Neville playing as a batsman and pushed up to open, O'Keeffe contributing - and Smith has yet to bowl (but got some runs under pressure yesterday). Still a strong side regardless of who they've lost and whose in SL.

2012-09-26T14:48:48+00:00

Trev

Roar Rookie


Wouldn't surprise me to see Holland make a claim for the next spinner.

2012-09-26T13:37:49+00:00

Armado

Guest


Hughes is maybe the worst bat I have seen in the Baggy Green. A large reason of why we lost the Ashes. The guy bats like he is in a backyard match with his mates when it is the first over of a test match. Just a slogger and he gets away with it because he is from NSW and with all the best bowlers never playing Shield, he gets to only play the second stringers to boost his average.

2012-09-26T13:24:59+00:00

Bee Bee

Guest


Its hard to know who is from where anymore. I think you should only be allowed to loan players to other states. You should somehow be contractually obliged to belong to your own state. In that way if a state has two brilliant spinners, one could be loaned to another state. But if that states first line spinner goes to the national team then its home state can call back its 2cnd spinner next season.

2012-09-26T10:55:48+00:00

TheGenuineTailender

Roar Guru


Burns, Cutting or McDermott from the Bulls will all push for test spots by the end of the summer.

2012-09-26T09:52:19+00:00

Disco

Roar Guru


I'd say Pomersbach arrives at the Gabba with a tad more baggage than the Hobart Test scapegoat Khawaja.

2012-09-26T07:57:40+00:00

WhatUsername

Roar Rookie


Who's going to be the big surprise to make a test debut this year? Personally, I'd put my money on Joe Burns. I've been lucky enough to play with this guy once or twice, and his game is immensely solid. He would bring a calm to the middle order that Australia desperately needs.

2012-09-26T07:21:30+00:00

Matt F

Roar Guru


Whilst I am one of the first to praise NSW ability to produce it's own players rather than poach all their players from other states (looking at you especially SA) I should point out that Nevill is actually Victorian.

2012-09-26T07:18:45+00:00

Matt F

Roar Guru


Really? Good to see some NSW players showing some good form. A few good wins before Clarke and potentially a few others go to the national team sets us up nicely. Cricinfo still has Haddin on 43 and Henriques on 21!

2012-09-26T07:14:26+00:00

rsingi

Roar Rookie


Great article. Qld are favs again with their great bowling attack and coach. Sth Australias bowlers did not have totals to defend last year. Interesting to see if Hughes can fix that and Botha can add a harder edge. I expect some improvement from them.

2012-09-26T07:07:45+00:00

Chris

Guest


We do have two state teams PeteB. NSW A's (usually referred to as Australia) and NSW B's (usually referred to as NSW Blues).

2012-09-26T06:53:54+00:00

PeteB

Guest


Hughes and Khawaja are dead to me now. Their leaving though, along with Jaques and Kat, has a chance to settle the lineup, as there was just too much batting talent to fill too few spots. If only NSW could have 2 state sides our players wouldn't have to go elsewhere. Great start to the season by Henriques, and good to see Hadds getting some runs.

2012-09-26T06:33:41+00:00

Chris

Guest


NSW batting being led by their non-specialist batsmen today. Brad Haddin 101* (Should help him hold the test spot). Moises Henriques 50* Steve Smith 61. With Steve O'Keefe still to come NSW have a bloody long tail.

2012-09-26T04:37:05+00:00

tommy

Guest


I can't help agee with you about Hughes. His technique would improve more if he moved to the Gabba instead of the Adelaide Oval.

2012-09-26T04:32:18+00:00

formeropenside

Guest


Personally, while I'm glad Hauritz has been given a chance to atone for moving to NSW, I am disappointed that we recruited Khawaja and Pomersbach: I'd rather trust to real Queenslanders coming through than imports. Also, I would point out that Queensland batsman Brendan Nash made his Test debut for the Windies post-Warne, and performed quite creditably, too, even holding down the VC spot for a time.

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