Draw enough for Victoria to win third straight Sheffield Shield

By News / Wire

Victoria weren’t able to celebrate their historic third successive Sheffield Shield triumph with a win in the final after South Australia hung on for a gritty draw in Alice Springs, but there was no denying the Bushrangers were deserving of their success.

A defiant unbeaten 137 from South Australia captain Travis Head saw the Redbacks weather the final day charge from Victoria to reach 6-236 when stumps were called.

Victoria were bowled out on the final morning for 323, leaving South Australia an almost-impossible target of 524 from 69 overs.

The Bushrangers elected to bat into day five despite the history books suggesting it was taking caution a step too far – the previous highest successful fourth-innings run chase in a Shield final was Victoria’s 2-239 against NSW 26 years ago.

Victoria comfortably finished top of the standings and therefore only needed a draw at Traeger Park to retain their title.

They continued that form in the final dominating from the opening session, though they did enjoy some good fortune along the way.

With Victoria winning a crucial toss, South Australia were forced to bowl in extreme heat over the opening two days before milder conditions prevailed.

It is the first time in the Bushrangers’ 125-year Sheffield Shield history they have three on the trot. The feat was last achieved by Queensland in 2002.

Victoria made the perfect start to the final with a 224-run opening partnership between Marcus Harris (124) and Travis Dean (94).

But the individual performance of the match was undoubtedly Jon Holland’s 7-82 which left South Australia 200 runs in arrears on the first innings.

“We had a goal at the start of the year to achieve three in a row, something Victoria has never done, so to achieve this is fantastic,” said Holland, who was named player of the match.

Cameron White, who along with Rob Quiney has won five Shields, said he would likely relinquish the Victorian captaincy with Peter Handscomb the likely candidate to assume the role.

Victoria achieved their triumph without four players on Test duty in India – Handscomb, Mathew Wade, Marcus Stoinis and Glen Maxwell – with John Hastings unavailable due to injury.

It was a second loss in a row in the season decider against Victoria for SA, whose winless run in the competition extended to 21 years.

“Victoria have been the standout all season with seven wins, and they played the conditions really well, so it was always going to be a tough week,” said SA captain Head.

“That wicket was tough. With the quality of spinners they have, they weren’t able to get 10 wickets, so it would have been difficult to get a result on that wicket, even if we took our opportunities on day one.”

There was some joy for South Australia with wicketkeeper Alex Carey claiming a Shield record for most dismissals in a season (59), while seamer Chadd Sayers was the season’s top wicket-taker with 62 scalps.

The Crowd Says:

2017-04-01T01:22:17+00:00

BurgyGreen

Guest


Finch was never an opener. I think that probably had an effect on his early career - he's simply not suited to facing the moving new ball. In the middle order, however, he's very dangerous. I think he'd be a reasonable Test 5 or 6, but there are a fair few younger guys who are well ahead of him in the line. It's interesting to consider what might have been had he played as a middle order batsman for his entire Shield career.

2017-03-31T07:59:24+00:00

qwetzen

Guest


I think The Conn has formalised his relationship with NSW cricket by officially working for them. Yep, "Senior Manager - External Communications, NSW"

2017-03-31T07:15:19+00:00

AREH

Roar Guru


Not out of the question; but you'd think if Maxwell can continue to flourish at number six that batting lineup with be cemented for some time yet.

2017-03-31T06:00:22+00:00

Peter Z

Guest


Finch batting at 4/5 made 581 runs at over 50 this year. Fantastic that he's now found his milieu in first class cricket. If he makes runs like that again next year, he'll be putting his hand up for a spot in the Test team.

2017-03-31T02:04:02+00:00

The Bush

Roar Guru


Bit weak by Victoria not to be a little more ruthless and go for the win. Surely they could have declared late on day four, likely well more than 400 ahead and had a pop at South Australia to really try and go for the win. Still, I suppose when you've put the effort in all season and finished in top, you earn the right to make the other side beat you (as opposed to the other way round).

2017-03-31T01:24:55+00:00

Ken Spacey

Guest


Where's Malcolm Conn now? Taking pop shots at other sports while one of cricket's oldest comps gets played in the desert in front of nobody?

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