Friday, March 18, 2011

Cowan, Copeland star on attritional day

Stumps Day 2 - New South Wales 440 (Hughes 138, Katich 96, Rohrer 64no) v Tasmania 3 -160 (Cowan 80no, Copeland 2-52)

Sheffield Shield finals are rarely free-flowing, cut and thrust affairs. More often than not they are attritional, absorbing, last-man standing encounters.

And so it proved on day two of Australian cricket’s domestic showpiece in Hobart. Whilst day one featured the batting of two Test stars in Phil Hughes and Simon Katich, day two featured a battle of wills between hard-nosed Shield journeymen.

Ben Rohrer has played just 20 Shield matches in four years since scoring 163 on debut at Bellerive. The 29-year-old was preferred for this final over 19-year-old prodigy Nic Maddinson, and his experience was invaluable this morning.

With the second new ball still nipping around Rohrer made 64 not out in a positive display of stroke-play to help NSW reach their total of 440 by lunch time. Rohrer, who was well supported by cameos from nightwatchman Scott Coyte (25) and Trent Copeland (26), cracked seven fours and two sixes in a 91-ball stay. The Blues plundered 124 runs in 29.5 overs and the game charged forward at a rate of knots.

Ben Hilfenhaus put a poor day behind him yesterday when he took a wicket with his first ball this morning. It was little surprise it was his first ball to a right-hander for the innings. He bowled an impressive spell to remove the only two right-handed NSW batsmen in the top eight as he found prodigious swing on a cool and overcast morning. James Faulkner and Xavier Doherty both added to their tallies to finish with three wickets.

Whilst the Blues opening batsmen clattered 85 inside 19 overs yesterday Tasmania’s top four took 35 overs to reach the same mark. The middle session was a grind highlighted by a battle of wills between a former Blue, Ed Cowan, and former Bathurst wicketkeeper turned wicket-taking machine in Copeland.

Cowan bats for a living. He watches each ball like a hawk and plays to his strengths without trying to over-extend himself. Copeland is the bowling equivalent. He doesn’t try to bowl any quicker than 125kph. Instead he uses guile and patience to strangle his victims, delivering over after over with metronomic precision.

It was a fascinating duel over four absorbing hours. Cowan finished unbeaten on 80 from 177 balls, nothing less than he deserved. Copeland delivered 21 overs and claimed two wickets and perhaps deserved more.

There were other players who impressed aside from that duo. Pat Cummins bucked the trend of the day. The 17-year-old raw-boned quick was exceptional bowling 20 overs over genuine pace. His first ball of the day was 134kph, his last 142kph. In between he was far too fast for Nick Kruger trapping him in front for one, and troubled every Tasmanian he bowled to. No batsman was excluded from the barrage of high velocity short balls. George Bailey was troubled more than any but it was Copeland who was rewarded for Cummins’ work. He is the youngest player ever to play in a Shield final eclipsing the former record-holder Michael Kasprowicz. It will be no surprise if his career reaches the same heights as the Queenslander.

Alex Doolan also played a nice hand. His 46 oozed class and reminded onlookers of the uncomplicated style of Martin Love. But the 25-year-old fell to Copeland, edging behind attempting to score a rare boundary from the medium-paced scrooge.

Mark Cosgrove’s entrance unshackled Cowan with the pair adding 53 in from 13 overs. They will need a lot more tomorrow to eat into the 280-run deficit.

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