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subject: New South Wales A Class Apart [print this page]


The venue, Moscow, was 1553miles away from the scenes of their usual skirmishes, Stamford Bridge and Old Trafford. Compared to the sense of displacement felt by supporters of New South Wales and Victoria in Delhi last night, which was nothing though. As the crow flies, it's 6,333miles to Melbourne, 6,472miles to Sydney. For one of sport's most ancient rivalries, spanning 262 games and 117 years, this truly was a step into the unknown.

In financial terms, the difference between exiting the tournament in the semi-final (US$500,000) and winning it (US$2.5 million) was huge. It's probably fair to say that there's never been a domestic match with so much riding on the outcome. Sadly, the occasion seemed to get to Victoria who were never in the game after a tidy first over from Shane Harwood.

David Warner and Phillip Hughes are quite an opening combination, one determined to bust the myth that left-handers make more elegant batsmen. If Hughes' bat comes down like an axe, the Warner method is redolent of the blacksmith on his anvil. Between them though, they took Peter Siddle apart, combining straight-bat flails with tennis-forehand smears.

Once such swipe from Hughes, down to the sightscreen, was spectacularly ugly. In this format though, aesthetics mean nothing, and by the time the Powerplay was over, New South Wales had 56 on the board.

Only Harwood and Andrew McDonald, with his slow medium pace pitched short of a length, adjusted to the conditions. Siddle was too full and Jon Holland, the left-arm spinner, was also brutalised. And though the batting lost some fizz in the second half of the innings, 169 was at least 30 more than Victoria could reasonably have expected to chase.

While other captains have whined about having to play on these Delhi pitches, Simon Katich has been utterly phlegmatic about it. "It's like the slow pitches we play on in Sydney," he said when asked if he would have preferred to play the semi-final in Hyderabad. "We're quite used to it." He and his side have made the adjustment seamlessly, and Katich's captaincy deserves plaudits, both for giving Nathan Hauritz a share of the new ball this evening, and also for bringing on a left-right combination against the spinners earlier in the game.

New South Wales have been flexible without being gimmicky, and Katich has had an answer for every situation, Kieron Pollard excepted.

Brett Lee has bowled with impressive control and fiery pace, and the support from Doug Bollinger, Stuart Clark and the innocuous-looking Moises Henriques has been tremendous. And with Hauritz getting prodigious turn to go with his new-found self-belief, no batting side has really looked at ease against them.

Pollard's heroics in Hyderabad merely obscured the fact that Trinadad and Tobago were comfortably second-best for 35 overs of that match. They may be a long way from home, but Australia's most successful state side seem intent on proving that, like the national team, they're a class apart.

by: Sarfaraz Khan




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