You snooze, you lose, Blues: Drastic overhaul needed after once-mighty NSW endure winless Shield season

By Paul Suttor / Expert

NSW suffered the humiliation of their first winless season in 84 years on Friday in Adelaide and there is nothing that can paper over the cracks that have reduced Australian cricket’s perennial powerhouse to rubble. 

The Blues need a total rebuild after their worst summer on record after also finishing equal last with Tasmania in the Marsh Cup 50-over tournament (ahead of the Tigers on net run rate if you want to be kind) with just two wins from seven matches. 

NSW won just two of seven Shield outings last season – a steep decline after they were champions in 2019-20 and runners-up the following year.

They punted coach Phil Jaques before November was out, installing Greg Shipperd as the interim coach and are yet to make a decision on whether the veteran mentor will remain at the helm next season. 

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The Blues had a golden opportunity to register their maiden win with their last chance at Karen Rolton Oval against South Australia.

NSW had to settle for a draw against South Australia at Karen Rolton Oval. (Photo by Sarah Reed/Getty Images)

But after claiming a first innings lead and setting the Redbacks a target of 386 from 87 overs, the home side finished the final day on 7-290 to hold on for a draw and consign NSW to their first season without a victory since 1938-39 and just their second winless season ever since the inaugural summer of 1892-93.

For so long, the strength of NSW has been powering Australia’s cricket team. Of the past 10 captains of the men’s Test team, eight have been Blues or originally from the state with Tasmanian duo Ricky Ponting and Tim Paine breaking the sequence.

It has been a cause of angst for players, officials and fans from other states, that NSW has dominated selection in the national team for decades.

The collective gripe is best reflected in the late, great David Hookes’ famous comment two decades ago that “when they give out the baggy blue cap in NSW, they give you a baggy green cap in a brown paper bag as well to save making two presentations”.

But that representation from Australia’s most populous state at international level is about to drop away dramatically.

The six regular Test players from NSW are either on the way out or entering the twilight stages of their career – David Warner (36), Steve Smith (33), Nathan Lyon (35), Mitchell Starc (33), Josh Hazlewood (32) and captain Pat Cummins (29).

Hazlewood is the most recent of that group to break into the Test ranks but since his debut against India at the Gabba in 2014, NSW have produced just two of the past 26 baggy green cap recipients – Nic Maddinson, who played three matches in 2016, and Kurtis Patterson, who scored a ton in one of his two appearances against Sri Lanka four years ago. 

Wicketkeeper Peter Nevill was also picked to play for Australia during that timeframe while playing for the Blues but he came through the Victorian system before heading north.

Maddinson has since switched to Victoria, Patterson was the Blues’ captain this season but his form slump led to him being dropped for the final game against South Australia while Nevill retired last year. 

The Blue tinge at Test level appears certain to fade in the next few years. 

With Western Australia a home Shield final win away from defending all three domestic trophies, all-rounder Cameron Green should have plenty of state comrades alongside him soon enough at Test level like Cameron Bancroft, Aaron Hardie, Josh Inglis, Teague Wyllie and Jhye Richardson.

When the national selectors announced a 14-man Australia A squad to tour New Zealand next month to give fringe Ashes candidates a chance to show their wares on seaming wickets with an English Dukes ball, there was not one NSW player selected. 

Tasmanian opener Tim Ward is a former NSW Second XI representative but he went south in search of an opportunity and was rewarded. 

This has been another problem at the Blues in recent years – players such as Ward, South Australian quick Nathan McAndrew, Tasmanian duo Jake Doran and Nathan Ellis have succeeded elsewhere, raising questions about whether NSW are identifying the right players to retain.

The Blues have mostly fielded a team this season mixed with a few veterans like Moises Henriques, Sean Abbott and Daniel Hughes along with players who have been in the junior pathways since their teens but are yet to get established at first-class level.

Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Nathan Lyon. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe – CA/Cricket Australia via Getty Images)

Using the excuse of the Test stars not being able to play in the Shield holds no water. 

In the first couple of decades since the turn of the century, the Blues won the competition five times even when the likes of the Waugh twins, Glenn McGrath, Michael Clarke, Brett Lee and the six current stalwarts were perennial Test representatives.

A lack of resources is not the reason either – the Blues moved to their new base at Silverwater in Sydney’s west last year complete with a multitude of indoor and outdoor nets, a picturesque ground, gymnasium and all the sports science facilities the modern-day athlete requires.

But the current crop of rising stars have not delivered. 

Jason Sangha, who became the youngest player to receive a NSW rookie contract when he was just 16 in 2016, has captained his state at times over the past 12 months when he was as young as 22 despite but his form with the bat has been modest – averaging just 28.14 with a top score of 54 from 15 innings. 

The selectors have given extended runs to Blake Nikitaras (240 runs at 18.46) and Matthew Gilkes (329 at 23.5) but they have also struggled to repay that faith with runs of their own. 

NSW have always prided themselves on being a state that produces Test players while also succeeding in the domestic competition but at the moment it appears to be doing neither.

Former Test seamer Stuart Clark, an old Bluebagger who still keeps an eye on the selection scene as a director for his club Sutherland, has been an outspoken critic of Cricket NSW prioritising the players chosen in their elite pathways from a young age over established grade cricketers. 

Another old Blues quick, Trent Copeland – who retired recently – echoed those sentiments last week, appropriately enough on The Grade Cricketer podcast

Phil Jaques. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

He said there was an abundance of players at club level who become disenchanted by younger prospects in the elite pathways system getting preferential treatment at the selection table.

“When I first started grade cricket and was pushing into (NSW) Second XI, I felt an animosity around, like it was a heated battle,” he said. 

“There were endless amounts of 28-33-year-old players at the level just below Shield cricket that were pushing everyone to be better. And it was legitimately a thrash and bash of the best who could possibly play the next game of Shield cricket.

“In my career, upwards of nearly 15 years, it’s very much been a focus on the next 19-year-old who could play 10 years of first-class and Test cricket, as opposed to who are currently our best cricketers. It’s an overarching generalisation about the system but it’s certainly affected the amount of guys that are in that age bracket of 25-31 who just give the game away.”

Copeland said cricket’s best batters hit their peak in their late 20s but “we’ve already ruled out those guys if they haven’t looked like the next Steve Smith and also averaged 70 at the lower level”.

And he said states have fallen into the trap of “attribute-based” selections for fast bowlers – prioritising tall speedsters with athletic prowess ahead of those who may not be physically imposing but get the job done, as he did with his seamers netting 344 wickets at 26.3 for the Blues to be third all time behind past legends Geoff Lawson (367) and Greg Matthews (363). 

It’s a fine balance for NSW, or any state for that matter, to be picking players who they think will develop into Australian representatives but also fielding a team capable of competing for domestic titles. 

They’ve hit rock bottom after placing their trust in the system but the system is broken and it’s time for a complete overhaul.

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The Crowd Says:

2023-07-31T06:23:20+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Aaaaahhh, I made a comment recently Paul stating my suspicion of what Clark & Copeland have outright declared here: that CA and the states, either conspiring in league with each other, or separately (as CNSW appears to be doing), are treating the Shield as a development comp to fast-track talented youth into the professional setup, rather than have them earn their way to Shield selection by dominating grade cricket. Hence underperforming youth are maintaining Shield team spots at the expense of battle-hardened and better performing grade cricket "veterans": 25-35 year olds. WA seems to have the balance right with the old school mentality of performing in grade cricket to get promoted to the Shield squad. Teague Wylie has been playing top level grade cricket since 15 or 16 for Rockingham-Mandurah and has been consistently performing against tough battle-hardened bowling lineups. But I can't say if his example is the norm or not in WA as I honestly don't know?? This actually goes back to another long-term issue I think specifically affects NSW Paul: the massive population of NSW, and particularly the massive regional/rural population of NSW means too much pressure to promote youth to avoid them quitting cricket for other sports (particularly RL/NRL) due to lack of professional cricket opportunities. I think it's high time CA invest in a 7th Shield entity: an ACT (Manuka Oval) based Shield side, that can also be given a significant territory of southern NSW to scout and develop/promote talent. This can alleviate some of the Sydney/NSW pressure of too few spots for youngsters, with the ACT providing a third Shield outlet (after Tas & SA) where that huge excess of NSW cricket talent can go seek a professional opportunity for first class cricket. (Maybe a Canberra BBL franchise to go with it as well?)

2023-04-06T04:52:13+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


It was pretty weird when they did not play Chris Tremain at the start of last season. He had been amongst the leading wicket takers in the Shield for about five years with Victoria.

2023-03-19T21:59:16+00:00

Peter

Roar Rookie


Great reading the comments. You lot know. a lot more than me. We seem to have a let a lot of players go in recent years, and that seemed fine as we were still getting results. Will be fascinating to see what happens next year, will Ship remain as coach (hope so), will the team look more like the final Shield game? In a few years time when the quicks and Smudge retire NSW may not have many players in the Test team if things don’t change. And as TGC like to say I won’t be feeling safe.

2023-03-18T22:02:52+00:00

The Late News

Roar Rookie


Thanks Paul. Yes it's complicated. Young guys all grow, literally and otherwise, at different paces. The guys who had to overcome obstacles to get there are more resilient than those who had a dream run. Cricket isn't just about batting and bowling. Great article! Thanks.

AUTHOR

2023-03-18T21:08:16+00:00

Paul Suttor

Expert


The main problem at NSW seems to be talent identification, they have been wowed too much by the potential of some players who have dominated the youth rep scene and other players who werent as talented in their late teens and early 20s have been allowed to go elsewhere. It's accentuated when you have a lot of players coming thru the ranks & u cant keep all of them but guys like Nathan Ellis are slipping thru the cracks & becoming better players elsewhere

2023-03-18T10:18:58+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


How I wish we would stop helping the Brumbies. Those five years I lived in Canberra were miserable as a Tahs fan. Utterly miserable. Thanks for bringing up traumatic memories, Love Child

2023-03-18T07:01:54+00:00

jamesb

Roar Guru


Funnily enough, Chris Green did alright with both bat and ball. And just like Hackney, McDonald and Hadley, he looked the part as a first class player. Yes, he is a bit older than the other three, but at 29, he could be around for another 5-6 years. All of those players are not young teenage prodigies, but have been around the traps for a fair while, and are probably more ready to take the next step to shield cricket. Hopefully they all kick on next season. By all means, NSW selectors should never turn a blind eye to a youngster who could be the “next big thing”, but at the same time, pick players who are doing the job at grade and second xi levels.

2023-03-18T05:19:59+00:00

The Late News

Roar Rookie


Jees that's a shame. So if you are doing well I'm premier grade then surely you should be up for selection in the shield as spots become available. Obviously it's more complicated than that then.

2023-03-18T05:16:39+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


NSW have stated in the past their KPI is getting players selected for Aus, not winning the Shield. Now that focus has lead to them not winning and no players in the selection frame. The PONI schemes have to be done away with and go back to the old method. Young talents get to go to the Centre of Excellence but you have to outplay the other grade players to get a run. If you can't do that you should not be a FC cricket player. Young players who have not proven themselves in grade should only get a go if the State team is struggling and there are no stand out to replace them and all States should focus on winning and not getting players into the National teams

2023-03-18T03:33:50+00:00

DJM

Roar Rookie


It seems that the penny may have dropped before the last match. McDonald, Hackney and Hadley all did OK, and actually looked like Sheffield Shield players. What Solway has to do to get another run is a mystery. The problem with the pathways players is that we’ve all seen lots of potentially top players at under 19 level who are never heard of again. If one in 10 reach the top then you’re doing well. If you have a whole team of them playing against seasoned professionals like Siddle, Bird, Steketee, Neser and the like then you’re cruising for a bruising. It might help a bit when we (hopefully) get Tanveer Sangha back next season. With all due respect to Chris Green it would be nice to have a spinner who doesn’t just tie an end up.

2023-03-18T02:29:22+00:00

Simoc

Roar Rookie


I don't know the current state of NSW cricket admin but you used to have to be a mate of Brett lee to get a look in. I see Jack Edwards got a ton at the end, another of those talents who have comprehensively failed at the senior level until now. Will he kick on from here? Who knows but I doubt it.

2023-03-18T01:04:38+00:00

The Late News

Roar Rookie


Ok Paul I'll bite. Probably should know better...what's the root cause? Surely it isn't the lack of talent. Maybe the pathways? I can only speak from WA experience. So in juniors we have generally a club scene though some schools have a team or two. There are some high schools with dedicated cricket academies where some of the more talented youngsters go to complete their schooling plus a strong focus after hours on cricket. From the club scene there are the various representative or district teams. These are full of kids at say under 13 and under 15 levels. These teams can be a bit nepotistict with volunteers running things under some direction of the district clubs. These play in a district junior comp, in addition to their club competition. Now a while ago the WACA realised that some otherwise talented players weren't coming through the junior rep teams so they added City Week to the carnival. There is also a strong Country Week carnival too which attracts teams from all over WA on a nomination basis. These carnivals cover juniors, seniors and female cricket teams and are a lot of fun. I remember an old mentor of mine who grew up in the Wheatbelt in the 1930s who played Country Week many years ago. His main memory of the under 15s was beating the Eastern Goldfields team, who promptly took the Wheatbelt team off to the nearest pub! Oh well life was different back then! I have no idea how the system works in NSW, but am sure I will be enlightened soon!

2023-03-18T00:36:11+00:00

Brumby Jack's acquaintance

Roar Rookie


This seems to be a common theme in struggling elite teams. Picking on potential rather than established credentials. I understand the need for giving those with potential a chance but surely at the elite level you still need the best 11 out there. That said the Waratahs are great at picking on potential and that's always helped the Brumbies ????????????????

2023-03-17T20:16:50+00:00

badmanners

Roar Rookie


Should be some pretty hard questions being asked at board level and a few to fall on their swords. With the talent pool available there's no excuses when we go through a shield season and not win a game. :angry:

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