Ryobi Cup wrap: the winners

By Patrick Effeney / Editor

With the inaugural Ryobi Cup carnival done and dusted, it’s time to reflect on the performances that kept a surprisingly large number of viewers coming back for more.

Looking beyond the inexorably tedious question of whether the format will remain the same in coming years, there were plenty of positives to be taken.

The bowling, generally speaking, was very much on top of the batting early on in the piece on the slower, lower decks.

Bankstown in particular proved difficult to score from in the early engagements, meaning much of the cricket played was more attritional than attractive.

North Sydney Oval, however, presented a completely different test case. Scores of above 300 were churned out as easily as Russell Brand does a witty trope.

And on the subject of the smallest ground in the cricketing universe, let’s have a look at the best with the bat:

Winners with the willow
David Warner: A player who might be known to you, Warner certainly took a liking to the smallest ground in the competition.

He took the Queensland attack apart on his way to 139, the innings that prompted certain columnists to assert he had blown a guaranteed double ton.

In reality, blowing the double century wouldn’t come until later.

He then proceeded to thrash John Hastings, Peter Siddle, Scott Boland and Dan Christian around the postage stamp on Miller street on his way to 138 and 197 in the space of five days.

Warner’s epic 197 epitomised his value to any team: he’s a match winner.

Chasing an imposing Bushrangers total of 321, Warner looked completely untroubled until his search for a boundary that would have sealed his 200, and the game, brought him unstuck.

His 138 was similar. He never looked threatened by the bowling until a piece of daft shot-making in the form of an attempted switch hit made him appear incredibly foolish.

Without Warner’s three centuries, NSW would never have made the final. The feisty lefty will now be hard to leave out of the first Test at the Gabba.

Cameron White: The former Bushrangers skipper was back to his best during the 2013 edition of the Ryobi Cup, and will be unlucky to miss out on a one-day or Twenty20 berth in the home summer.

He was the model of consistency and selflessness: his scores of 86, 82*, 51, 76, 50 and 42 attest to that.

‘The Bear’ was controversially awarded the player of the tournament award, with many punters thinking Warner’s three brutish innings were enough to get him over the line.

While Warner may have scored more runs, White did the hard yards early in the tournament on bigger grounds and less helpful decks.

The best bit of all was that White was back to doing what he does best: clearing his front leg and whacking it miles over mid-wicket.

He surely now owns the record for most balls lost at North Sydney Oval, after taking a liking to Nathan Lyon.

Whatever your state allegiances, White was a deserving winner of the player of the tournament award and we should see him in Aussie green this summer.

Usman Khawaja: Uzzi is another who might earn a shot in the Aussie pyjamas after yet another string of quality knocks at domestic level.

A frustrating enigma on the international stage, Khawaja showed the pedigree and skill we all know so well, looking every bit as elegant as he always does on his way to being second top run scorer for the comp.

His 426 runs at an average of 71 came in the form of four half centuries, including an unbeaten 88, and a marvellous ton in the final that earned him man of the match honours.

As always, he was so good to watch. If a silky left hander can’t get a cricket fan’s juices flowing, then not much can.

His annoying propensity to get out just after his half century seemed to be conquered by the end of the tournament, but whether his glut of runs with be enough to win over Test selectors is another thing altogether.

Who bowled best?
Andrew Tye: While I hadn’t seen much of Tye before the competition started, his rise to the top of the wicket-taking leaderboard (to be taken over by Sean Abbott after the finals) made WA fixtures of much more interest to me.

With a slightly round-arm action, and a bit more zip than you might expect, Tye edged out good players early on in the piece and showed good death bowling skills to weasel out tail-enders.

It will be interesting to see how he goes with a red cherry in his hand at Shield level. His outswinger will become more prominent and his control will be tested.

Tye impressed me as a first-time viewer and it will be interesting to see how he goes over the rest of the summer.

Jon Holland: For a spinner, bowling against David Warner, Steve Smith, Nic Maddinson and Peter Nevill on North Sydney Oval is not an attractive proposition.

Just ask poor Nathan Lyon, who was traumatized by Cameron White, Matthew Wade, David Hussey and Dan Christian.

Holland showed impressive control and variation to be the best of the Victorian bowlers in their two fixtures against the Blues, as well as the destroyer against Western Australia, where he took 4/48, again at North Sydney.

The left arm spinner wasn’t afraid to give it air and got his reward, with batsmen never able to settle against him.

26-year-old Holland snagged 12 wickets at a tick over 27, but more importantly his overs only cost 4.82 on average, very good reading.

It was the sort of performance that will put pressure on incumbent left armer Xavier Doherty for the coming international limited overs games, so don’t be surprised if Holland’s name comes up.

All-round achievement award:
Ben Cutting: Cutting did his Ashes chances no harm at all with his displays over the last month.

We all know Cutting has the ability to hit a long ball, displayed most prominently in his 98* from 48 balls to almost single-handedly give the Bulls an early win over Victoria.

This is not to discount his 41* from 21 balls in the final; clean hitting in that sort of pressure situation only improves his international prospects.

But perhaps most importantly for Big Ben were his 10 wickets at a smidgeon under 30.

Although outdone in the latter stages by his ever-impressive teammate Ryan Harris, Cutting bowled with good pace and nip early on.

His ability to take the ball away from left handers from his height could see him gain selection in the Ashes opener at the Gabba, depending on his performances in the first three Sheffield Shield games.

So there’s my take on the winners out of the 2013 Ryobi Cup. Next time, the losers!

Follow Paddy on Twitter @PatrickEffeney

The Crowd Says:

2013-11-02T08:35:47+00:00

krishna

Guest


you were right.white was consistent throughout the tournament.and the innings of 82 and 86 on very slow and low wickets need to be mentioned .

2013-11-01T01:45:58+00:00

Brian Daey

Guest


I think if Warner's no ball out was called I think NSW would have taken the cup what's wrong with replay check for no ball at fall of wickets

2013-10-29T14:19:30+00:00

Francis Curro

Roar Pro


Warner should be in the ODI team ahead of Hughes. Marsh could get a test recall but I see Bailey getting the spot, although i prefer a 1st class player like Khawaja to get it over Bailey.

2013-10-29T10:18:26+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


So you say that Warners performances, while highly impressive say more about North Sydney Oval, but then say Cuttings slogging at the same ground is enough to suggest he could bat at No. 6 in test cricket?

2013-10-29T10:16:37+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


Yeah, the edges of bats these days are better than the middles were 30 years ago!

2013-10-29T07:30:11+00:00

Ash

Guest


+1 was a great tournament. A hit with the fans => http://www.cricket.com.au/news-list/2013/10/29/ryobi-cup-a-hit-with-fans the final peaked at 1.075 million viewers !!! crazy !

2013-10-29T06:23:48+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Guest


I think Cutting hit a six of a leading edge as well, had a laugh at that.

2013-10-29T06:21:11+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Guest


Yep, agree with all of that. I thought Sandhu was ok though, Hazlewood did him no favours at the other end in the 49th

AUTHOR

2013-10-29T05:33:20+00:00

Patrick Effeney

Editor


All fair assessments, though I might suggest we leave Cutting as a 'nice to have' batsman down the order, rather than one you rely on to score when we're in a bit of trouble against a good attack. Holland will rightly push for ODI duties later in the summer, picking up where he left off.

2013-10-29T05:05:33+00:00

TheGenuineTailender

Guest


Nice write up that. I thought Warner's performances, while highly impressive, said mire about North Sydney Oval than about David Warner himself. Don't get me wrong, if it were easy, everyone would have done it. But I wouldnt read too much into his resurgent form. White was superb, the only one to look free at the crease at Bankstown. He was the standout to me. Never let his side down once. Khawaja was beautiful to watch and wouldn't we all live to see him carrying on with that sort of form in first class cricket. Shaun Marsh was good, refinding his mojo. Some good first class form could see him putting his name back up there in no time. Steve Smith was a standout too. The NSW captaincy was fittingly handed over and he already looks like the odds on to take over from Clarke when the time comes. cutting was just brutal. He'd have a case to be the specialist batsman at no. 6 come the first test. Solid with the ball too. Holland looked as though he's matured a lot. Bowled well all series. It's the first time in a long time that a spinner in Australia has really stood out as a genuine threat at all times with the ball whilst also keeping it tight. Very positive signs.

2013-10-29T04:14:41+00:00

ShmaxShmillas

Roar Rookie


Jon Holland was being considered for international selection at the beginning of last year before his shoulder surgery setback. Doherty has no chance to retain his spot if Holland continues his current form. He's got turn, he's got dip, he's got variation, he's on fire and deserves a call up. Pressure will be put on Lyon for the test spot as well if Holland impresses considerably with the ball in first class.

2013-10-29T01:26:54+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


Not to take anything away from Cutting who hit some nice sixes, but those young NSW quicks really need to learn to bowl at the death of a one day match. QLD seemed on target, then NSW got a couple of good overs in leaving QLD needing some really good overs to finish with. Then we got the six-a-thon, and watching those balls I'd have to say that if Cutting was ordering up some balls to hit sixes off, the request would have been pretty much exactly what he got served up. Straight length balls with nothing much on them. Cutting couldn't have asked for much more. Sandhu, Hazelwood and co really need to get down to the nets and practice bowling yorkers!

2013-10-29T01:09:47+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Guest


I don't mind Cam white, don't get me wrong, I just think there were better players, and it annoys me that consistency is rewarded over match winners and brilliance, Cam white has a long history of failing to covert in the international arena, that has continued all be it at state level. I say cutting because whilst Khawaja set it up , Cutting took the bulls from an almost unwinnable position and them smashed six after six to win with five balls remaining - I think he needs to be looked at as a genuine bowling all-rounder now, and he did that job perfectly. Bowled well, batted superbly and won matches for the team.

AUTHOR

2013-10-29T00:03:51+00:00

Patrick Effeney

Editor


Of course Klinger was up there! Just didn't want to go too overboard. Probably should have snuck his name in as an honourable mention.

AUTHOR

2013-10-29T00:02:30+00:00

Patrick Effeney

Editor


Good discussion, and when I say White is deserving winner I didn't mean there weren't others out there. I ain't no Vic either. If it were me picking the award I would have picked Warner, because I think to play two match-winning innings and one solo hand is pretty impressive. But I take nothing away from White. He was consistently, emphasis on consistently, the best player from the start to the end.

2013-10-28T23:14:56+00:00

Manoj

Guest


Klinger,Khawaja, White and Warner were the class acts of Ryobi

2013-10-28T23:13:32+00:00

Dan Ced

Guest


You said Cutting was "pretty good" with the ball...that's not a player of the tournament worthy description :P I assumed Warner was going to get it, but I think batting at 4 it's less important to get 100's and not as common as it is for openers like Warner/Khawaja and Klinger, Unless your openers both choke. I can't say I'm a White fan but I don't passionately disagree with him receiving the award. If Klinger had turned 1 of his 20's into a 50 he might've got the nod.

2013-10-28T23:01:06+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Guest


White did not deserve that award, and to say he he did is either ridiculous or written by a vic. How can a batsmen with an inability to go on and make a century be given it over any other batsmen that did? and there were a few. Warner, Klinger, Khawaja, Marsh just by memory. Warner or Cutting should have got it. I judge batsmen by runs and bowlers by wickets, unless your bowler goes out and belts 98 of 48 balls and then wins the final of the first ball in the last over with a six.....cutting was devastating with the blade, and pretty good with ball. CA strikes again.

2013-10-28T23:00:34+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Guest


The best thing was the showcase of domestic cricketers that generally we never get to see. Good hard comp. The lads will be primed for SS and beyond.

2013-10-28T22:39:44+00:00

Dan Ced

Guest


Klinger! I guess he'd be 4th in line. He did get the 2nd highest score of the tournament though :) White impressed me with his consistency, Khawaja with his class, but I don't have time for Warner anymore. He has been replaced by his carbon copy Aaron Finch so lets just forget about him. I'd never heard of Tye either, noticed him heading the leaderboard before finals. Might keep an eye on his stats in shield, Abbott also. Being a Redbacks fan, Peter George looked pretty good when I saw him bowl.

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