Hurricane Mitchell

A look back at the BBL Final, and one of the most extraordinary T20 innings ever played. Also a photo gallery.

Today saw the final of the 14th edition of the Big Bash League. The contending teams were Hobart Hurricanes, winners of the league stage of the tournament, and also victors over Sydney Sixers in the first match of the post-season, and Sydney Thunder, third in the league stage of the season, enders of Melbourne Stars’ Lazarus act (making the KOs after starting with five successive losses) and victors over their Sydney rivals in the penultimate match of the tournament to claim their place in the final. As group winners Hurricanes staged the game at the Bellerive Oval in Hobart.

Hobart Hurricanes won the bat flip and put Thunder in. David Warner and especially Jason Sangha got Thunder away to a fast start. At the end of the four over Power Play the score was 40-0, and that tempo was pretty much maintained through the first half of the innings, at which point the score was 97-0. A team who are 97-0 after 10 overs of a 20 over innings SHOULD top the 200 mark without much difficulty. However, the first half of their innings was be the last period of the match in which Thunder could claim to have had the better of things. Thunder delayed their Power Surge, due to wickets starting to fall, and just as they were preparing to take it Jason Sangha was out for 67 off 42 balls. That was 146-4 after precisely 16 overs, and having basically left themselves no other choice Thunder activated the Surge for overs 17 and 18. They scored 20 runs for no wicket in those two overs, which is no better than fair for a Power Surge on a good batting track. A big last over of the innings (14 in total coming from it) got Thunder to 182-7 from their 20 overs – 85-7 in the second half of their innings. A total of over 180 wins more T20s than it loses, and finals are often lower scoring than regular matches…

The first ball of the Hurricanes innings, bowled by Nathan McAndrew, went away for five wides. The six legal deliveries of the over yielded a further 18, as Mitchel Owen gave notice of his intentions. By the end of the four over Power Play Hurricanes were a barely believable 74-0, most of the damage being done by Owen, who was playing an innings that will become part of cricket legend. Tanveer Sangha had Caleb Jewell caught by Warner for 13 off the second ball of the eighth over to make 109-1. Owen reached three figures off his 39th ball, having hit 11 sixes, an all time record for any BBL innings, along the way. By the end of the 10th over it was 138-2, Owen 108* off 42 balls. The mid-innings drinks break, as often happens, broke the flow, and Owen was out first ball on the resumption, but by then the job was done, and it was just a question of when Hurricanes would complete their victory. Hurricanes past 150 in the 12th over, and at the end of that over activated their Power Surge. Those two overs yielded 29 further runs for no further loss, Wes Agar saving a tiny amount of face by avoiding conceding the winning runs, but finishing with 2-0-39-0. Ben McDermott dispatched the first ball of the 15th over for four, and Hurricanes had won by seven wickets with 5.5 overs to spare. Tim David, who most would have pegged in advance of the innings as Hurricanes likeliest matchwinner with the bat ended up not being required at all, such was their dominance due to that amazing knock by Owen. Hurricanes have been the best team in this year’s competition, and although the scale of the hammering was rough on Thunder, cricketing justice was done in this final. The scorecard from this amazing game can be viewed here.

My usual sign off…

2,500

My 2,500th blog post, featuring a cricket story, a review of a science book and lots of photos.

Welcome to my 2,500th blog post. The only thing I could think of about the number 2,500 for this post is that it is the square of 50, which is coincidentally the age I will be at my next birthday.

The Men’s Big Bash League is now in full swing, and today is a double header day. The second half of that double header, the so-called ‘Sydney Smash’ derby between Sixers and Thunder is currently underway. The first match took place in Tasmania, where Hobart Hurricanes hosted Perth Scorchers. The Hurricanes won by eight wickets with four balls to spare. All else in the match was overshadowed by the batting performance of Mitchell Owen, who came into this match without a century in any form of professional cricket to his name, and with a mere 89 BBL runs IN TOTAL from 14 previous BBL matches. By the end of the 19th over he was on 96* but was at the wrong end, with a mere seven needed. His partner, Ben McDermott, got a single off the first ball of that finakl over, which was also called ‘no ball’, reducing the ask to five, and meaning that Owen was back on strike with five needed and a ‘free hit’ on the way. He cashed in, smashing the ball in question for four to reach three figures off the 63rd delivery of his innings. He scored the winning single off the next ball. Given that the Hurricanes target had been only 156 there was only one conceivable candidate for Player of the Match, and Owen duly collected that award. Scorecard here.

In the week just gone I have been imaging toys that will go under the hammer in March (the week before that I did what was almost entirely a ‘copy and paste’ exercise to create the stamp section of the April auction, lots 501-750 inclusive). The following pictures are the galleries for two of the lots from this week:

One of my recent library finds was “Life is Simple” by Johnjoe McFadden. This book is both history and science, covering the life and work of William of Occam, and the role that Occam’s Razor, the notion that unnecessary hypotheses should be disposed of, has played over the last seven centuries since it was first proposed. The book is a wonderful read, and I would recommend it wholeheartedly.

My usual sign off (remember photos can be viewed at large size by clicking on them)…