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Blues look to deny WA back-to-back one-day titles

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Roar Guru
9th April, 2021
16

It has been a good season for New South Wales. Making the final of both the Sheffield Shield and the one-day cup has been a great achievement, alongside the Sydney Sixers lifting their third BBL title.

Before the Shield final, the Blues focus on the one-day cup final against Western Australia at Bankstown Oval.

Let’s look at how both teams qualified for the decider.

New South Wales’ road to the final
NSW 9-318 (50 overs) beat Victoria 259 all out (46.1 overs) by 59 runs.
NSW 4-208 (29.1 overs) beat South Australia 205 all out (46.3 overs) by six wickets.
Match abandoned without a ball bowled versus Western Australia.
NSW 7-259 (48.5 overs) beat Tasmania 9-258 (50 overs) by three wickets.
NSW 2-204 (33.2 overs) beat Queensland 203 all out (46.5 overs) by eight wickets.

Western Australia road to the final
WA 5-369 (50 overs) beat South Australia 356 all out (49.2 overs) by 13 runs.
WA 143 all out (31.5 overs) lost to Queensland 9-264 (50 overs) by 93 runs (DLS method).
Match abandoned without a ball bowled versus NSW.
WA 317 all out (48.3 overs) beat Victoria 147 all out (30.1 overs) by 170 runs.
WA 307 all out (48.3 overs) beat Tasmania 148 all out (24.5 overs) by 159 runs.

Despite getting hammered by Queensland at the Gabba, double bonus-point wins against Victoria and Tasmania saw Western Australia overtake Queensland to take the second final spot. With a highly attacking batting line-up and a bowling attack led by Jason Behrendorff, it’s been a recipe for success so far. The biggest question will be their adaptability. The wicket at Bankstown Oval is expected to be on the slower side and with Shaun Marsh not available for the final for personal reasons, the West Australians could be undone by spin.

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As for New South Wales, they’ve easily been the best side of the tournament. Winning three games comprehensively and fighting back against Tasmania at Blundstone Arena, no side has come close to competing with the Blues over the course of 100 overs. But with a host of NSW players currently in India due to the IPL, the young guns will be tasked to step up for the Blues at Bankstown Oval. With Jason and Tanveer Sangha named in the Blues’ squad for the final, there is a possibility of a three-man spin attack made up of the two leg spinners and Nathan Lyon.

Nathan Lyon

Could Nathan Lyon spin NSW to another one-day title? (Photo by Steve Bell/Getty Images)

Key battle: Western Australia’s batting versus New South Wales’ bowling
Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Nathan Lyon and Sean Abbott. That’s a combined 373 List A games of experience. Add in World Cup and BBL finals and you know this quartet have delivered in crunch games in front of packed crowds. If they stop D’Arcy Short, Josh Inglis, Sam Whiteman, Mitch Marsh and Cameron Green from causing havoc with the bat, then this game could end up a one-sided contest very quickly.

Both sides are stacked with quality white-ball players. Even without Shaun Marsh, Western Australia are a potent one-day outfit and are looking to go back to back. But New South Wales have been the benchmark of this season’s one-day cup. Despite many of NSW’s big names on IPL duty, the experience of Mitch Starc and Josh Hazlewood alone gives the Blues an advantage alongside an expected slow Bankstown wicket. Bring on what is expected to be a cracker of a final.

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Predicted XIs
Western Australia: Josh Philippe, Sam Whiteman, Cameron Green, Mitchell Marsh (captain), Josh Inglis (wicketkeeper), D’Arcy Short, Ashton Turner, Ashton Agar, Jason Behrendorff, David Moody, Lance Morris

New South Wales: Daniel Hughes, Matt Gilkes (wicketkeeper), Kurtis Patterson (captain), Nick Larkin, Oliver Davies, Jason Sangha, Sean Abbott, Mitchell Starc, Nathan Lyon, Josh Hazlewood, Tanveer Sangha

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