Flourishing young quicks and a 'Bazball' bat paving Victoria's road to the Shield final

By PSha / Roar Rookie

Victoria has gone on a remarkable five-match streak on the back of disciplined bowling efforts from a young pace brigade, along with blistering batting displays from Matt Short,.

The result has been a berth in the final of the Sheffield Shield against favourites Western Australia.

Following the completion of the first half of the season, Victoria looked to be in a rebuilding season, having in six attempts only won one game, which came in the final fixture against New South Wales before the onset of the Big Bash.

During Victoria’s struggles, Matt Short was fighting to keep his place in the team after a disastrous first leg of the Shield where he averaged 14.42 with the bat.

Since the BBL break, the Vics have featured at least players five players aged 23 or under in every game of their unbeaten run. Quicks are at the centre of this youth movement, particularly with the absence of Scott Boland to international duty.

Scott Boland. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Victoria have relied on the bowling performances of stand-in captain Will Sutherland, who is only 23 years of age, and 22-year-olds Mitch Perry and Fergus O’Neil.

In the four matches that Victoria won where Australia international Scott Boland did not feature, their oldest pacers were 23-year-olds Sam Elliott and Sutherland. In these matches, the highest score they allowed was 260, posted by NSW, in the game before the start of the Big Bash.

Since the BBL break, the pace trio of Sutherland, Perry, and O’Neill have gone to another level. In tandem with veteran spinner Jon Holland, the Victorian quicks have run through Shield batters. They bowled Queensland out for 175 and 185, South Australia were rolled over for 114 and 190, while NSW only made 203 and 130.

Since the end of the BBL season, the highest innings score Victoria has allowed in the Shield was 236, posted by Western Australia who possess three of the top eight run scorers for this season in Cam Bancroft, Hilton Cartwright, and Sam Whiteman.

Sutherland, Perry, and O’Neill all helped support Boland, who returned from India to take match figures of 8/98 off 40.5 overs. Sutherland took 3/33 off 12 overs in the first innings, while Perry and O’Neill took 3/44 and 3/52 from 15 and 21 overs respectively. The trio of pacers aged 23 or under undertook combined match figures of 9/192 off 80 overs at a bowling average of 21.33 and economy rate of 2.40.

In the second leg of the Shield, Sutherland took 13 scalps with a bowling average of 21.07, O’Neill claimed 16 victims with an incidental average of 16, and Mitch Perry has been on a tear taking 22 wickets at 13.86.

On the other side of the Victorian line-up, Matt Short has taken his dominant form in limited-overs cricket and replicated it in the red-ball game. With the absence of captain Peter Handscomb due to international duty and Nic Maddinson suffering an ACL tear during the BBL, Victoria needed Short to step up with the bat and provide experienced opener Marcus Harris with some much-needed support.

Short delivered and then some.

Short went from averaging 14.42 to raising his season average to 44.92. In just seven innings, the right-hander from Ballarat has piled on 483 runs at an average of 80.50.

An ardent supporter of ‘Bazball’, Short has demonstrated an attacking mindset and taken the game on, with his 483 runs coming in just 666 balls at a strike rate of 72.52.

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The destructive right-hander isn’t just scoring these runs on flat pitches either. In a performance that earned him man-of-the-match honours against South Australia, Short’s 70 off 69 deliveries and 119 from 135 balls came on a green mamba where only one other player in Ben Manenti passed 50.

Short has also demonstrated the ability to tough it out during tough periods and play a more patient inning when required. He scored 58 off of 114 balls in the second innings against Queensland to help set an unassailable target of 350. Against NSW, Short scored 104 from 196 deliveries on a deck where the next highest score was 53 posted by Marcus Harris.

The dramatic turnaround in batting returns for Short, along with the wicket-taking abilities of the young pace trio, has helped Victoria return to the Shield Final, where they will look to get their revenge on a WA outfit that bested the Vics in last year’s final.

The Crowd Says:

2023-03-30T16:45:41+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Paris needed injections just to get through the Final! :shocked:

2023-03-23T06:48:54+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Random to experiment with Chandrasinghe opening for a final

2023-03-23T06:40:41+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


We don’t look very good at moment. The only hope is a par 250 & hope Boland rips into your top order.Unlikely at this stage but haven’t given up yet.

2023-03-23T06:14:40+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


The Vic's are struggling, mate. 5 down for not many and have to rely on Chandrasinghe and Harper for many more

2023-03-22T22:20:27+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Holland has played a number of those fluky slogging innings...for higher scores.

2023-03-22T20:02:29+00:00

Pierro

Roar Rookie


except Holland wouldn't make Murphy's stand out 42 plus runs against India on a foreign pitches with bat and doubt he would achieve what Murphy did in the first test there

2023-03-22T19:10:36+00:00

John Allan

Roar Rookie


“Neser didn’t win enough games for Qld”. Didn’t play in the last vital game. Anyhow best of luck to WA in the final. After all, your A League & AFL teams aren’t providing too much joy for your state.

2023-03-22T13:43:46+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Qld over Aus any day :silly: Actually a tough choice for me

2023-03-22T10:33:57+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


Steady on you two. Without state rivalry and the unexcelled strength of the Shield competition, we wouldn't have high-achieving Test sides. And if there weren't advocates for players over and beyond their performances which as you both know aren't evenly rewarded, then a lot of players here and elsewhere wouldn't get a gig. Besides, banter makes it better.

2023-03-22T10:15:33+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


Cricket.com rated him behind Neser for Shield player of the year They counted Neser’s runs but not Bancroft’s catches. Unfathomable.. Neser isn’t in the Shield final because he didn’t win enough games for Qld. Bancroft is.

2023-03-22T10:00:47+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Fiction is fun but reality suggests otherwise.

2023-03-22T09:39:10+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Holland is also a better bowler than Murphy. Very similar in the field.

2023-03-22T09:37:52+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Had they won more games or scored more points, they could have been hosting the final. They didn't though. The reality is they were ahead of the Vics going into the last game and chose to not bother with bonus points or a win. That's why they missed.

2023-03-22T05:31:53+00:00

Pumping Dougie

Roar Guru


Great info, I didn't know that - thanks PSha.

2023-03-22T04:42:34+00:00

Nobody likes a smarta*s

Roar Rookie


While the Vics played well, they had a good slice of luck – Neser did not play and Steketee was injured in the Tassie game and WA rested Kelly and Paris had back soreness. Had those guys played, me thinks it would be QLD v WA in de finale

AUTHOR

2023-03-22T03:47:29+00:00

PSha

Roar Rookie


Handscomb will almost certainly come in for one of Dean or Chandrasinghe, who have both underperformed post-BBL. Murphy will likely come in for Holland which would be tough on Holland since he has done a very good job this season since coming back from his calf injury, but Victoria is unlikely to play two spinners on the WACA and Murphy is the heir-apparent. Victoria bowled WA out for 122 and 236 with a four-pacer lineup of Boland, Sutherland, Perry and O’Neill. They’ve played four pacers for their post-BBL run (Cameron McClure was the fourth pacer when Boland was unavailable) except for the game against South Australia when Glenn Maxwell returned. To accommodate the four pacers and one spinner, the Vics have been batting Sutherland at 6. The theory around it is that while Sutherland gives up 10 runs in batting average compared to a normal number 6, the above-average batting of Perry and O’Neill makes up for it with the two providing an extra 5 runs each in terms of batting average compared to conventional number 8s and number 9s. It’s an alternative way of thinking, but it has worked well for them since they’ve been able to maximise their bowling strength and constrain their opponents to low scores thus far.

2023-03-22T03:44:41+00:00

Pierro

Roar Rookie


Spot on Matt it's like a broken record over there ...not sure why the piece of dirt on one side of the border is different to the dirt on the other side but think we have more grass luckily in Victoria nice and green but at least WA has Cameron green

2023-03-22T03:34:40+00:00

John Allan

Roar Rookie


Had Qld not been robbed of 4 points with that dubious “light” decision against NSW, they would have been contesting the final with Khawaja & Renshaw strengthening their batting & maybe Neser & Steketee available. So now it’s a “who cares” final besides it’s footy season & the mighty Saints are unbeaten!

2023-03-22T03:14:02+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


If there is one thing Australia is rarely short of it’s good young quicks …. And WA whinging about the Eastern states

2023-03-22T03:11:09+00:00

Pierro

Roar Rookie


Great to see Victoria doing so well and great for shield we need more of this although I’m victorian I’m always thinking of the Australian national side and as international I don’t do all these silly state battles it got stupid in politics during lockdowns as well. nonetheless I notice wa types on here are the most territorial and don’t stop banging on about their state instead of country . It will be cracking to see a good final and will be great if Victoria can bring it home . What’s interesting for me is the way the young quicks have delivered for Victoria and alongside Morris for WA it’s generally very exciting for the nationals side . great article as it’s updated me on what’s been developing at state level .With Hazelwood starc Boland all a bit longer in the tooth we need these young ones to come through in next 24 months or so as by then those three are likely to be on the way out by way of natural ageing as bowlers if not sooner after say next summer or two . The batting is also important as smith sounds like a season or two left the way he’s talking .

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