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Australian Off-Season Thread (2010)

brockley

International Captain
Victorian captain Cameron White has jumped ship for this year's Twenty20 Champions League, choosing to play for his Indian Premier League side ahead of the Bushrangers.

The Bangalore Royal Challengers are the beneficiaries of White's decision, and they will feature an exceptionally strong squad for the September tournament after also convincing Jacques Kallis and Ross Taylor to forget state loyalty.

South African Kallis, aligned to the Warriors, and New Zealander Taylor (Central Stags) will also find themselves competing against their home provinces.

White's choice was the most significant selection in the final list of squads for the 2010 event, to be held in South Africa.

Victoria will be handed a compensatory fee of $US200,000 ($A218,125) for their trouble, while batsman David Hussey is expected to take the captaincy reins in White's absence.

South Australia, the other Australian team to qualify for the lucrative tournament, will send a squad significantly weaker than the one that managed to reach the final of the domestic T20 competition last summer.

Redbacks officials failed to secure overseas stars Kieron Pollard (Mumbai Indians) and Shahid Afridi.

Likewise, the Bushrangers lost Dwayne Bravo to Mumbai, though their squad has arguably greater depth to cope.

The tournament, run jointly by the boards of India, Australia and South Africa, is being pushed as a theatre for the world's best T20 exponents.

Tournament chairman and BCCI president Shashank Manohar argued many of the teams were higher than international standard.

"The teams named for this year's Airtel CLT20 would compete with and arguably defeat many of the nations playing international cricket today," he said.

"The squad lists read like a who's who of world cricket with some of the brightest emerging stars and some of the greatest names to have graced the game."

Squads:

Victoria: David Hussey, Ryan Carters, Aaron Finch, Shane Harwood, John Hastings, Brad Hodge, Andrew McDonald, Bryce McGain, Clint McKay, Glenn Maxwell, Dirk Nannes, James Pattison, Rob Quiney, Peter Siddle, Matthew Wade.

South Australia: Cullen Bailey, Daniel Harris, Graham Manou, Daniel Christian, Gary Putland, Peter George, Callum Ferguson, Michael Klinger, Jake Haberfield, Tim Ludeman, Shaun Tait, Tom Cooper, Chris Duval, Cameron Borgas, Aaron O'Brien, Cullen Bailey.
The west australuian copyright.
 

outbreak

First Class Debutant
Abit disappointing that white isn't sticking with his state especially as he is captain. I don't like the way crickets going with players playing for mickey mouse sides with money over their states. The Vic squad still looks fairly solid though
 

brockley

International Captain
Interested the make up of sides.
The new one dayers.
4 bowlers can bowl 10 overs and a team only needs 4 bowlers.
Question do you play a spinner.
No need of an allrounder,altho people like hopes will be picked.
4 bowlers 1 wickie and i gather 7 batsmen.
Question whether thats top heavy or not.
Off topic bet bangalore paid white heaps.
 

NUFAN

Y no Afghanistan flag
Good on White. Giving another batsman from his state an opportunity to play on the world stage and helping the team get $218 000 compensation.

In the end it will probably help Victoria domestically next year too.
 

brockley

International Captain
I agree nufan,next season white national one dayers,hodge no first class,mcdonald injury,jewell semi retired vics could be quite thin this season.
See that carters opened for the AIS yesterday,maxwell could well get a game in all forms.
 

Top_Cat

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Rumour from one of the Canberra coaches.

Don't think people on here realise how badly Cullen has lost his bowling.
Yeah, it's sad. Was at the SACA nets almost every day last season but just can't find his rhythm. Was smashed by district blokes last year and Adelaide's district batting is at an all-time low.
 

Spikey

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fmd only needing 4 bowlers in one day cricket is ****ing stupid
hey if it means James Hopes stops playing international cricket.........

The only problems I have with the new format (right now) are:

A) Starting it the season before a WC. They should have waited til afterwards
B) The super-batsmen
And there was a C) but I've forgotten it.
 

outbreak

First Class Debutant
I don't like the new format but i'd take it if they'll televise shield games so i have some REAL domestic cricket to watch.
 

Top_Cat

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SA is dead meat in the club champions league thingo. Four of the players who did anything of note (Pollard, Afridi, Cosgrove, Cleary) aren't in the team any more. Tait can't blow everyone away.....
 

brockley

International Captain
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Last Updated: August 12, 2010

Melbourne 9°C - 13°C . Showers. Windy.
Coleman caught between sports

Paul Amy From: Leader August 11, 2010 10:18AM
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Jackson Coleman at the crease for Premier Cricket team Dandenong. Picture: Guy Thayer Source: Leader

JACKSON Coleman could be the latest talented teenager caught up in a tug-of-war between cricket and football.

The rookie Victorian Bushrangers paceman has been invited to the AFL's national draft combine in October.

But cricket commitments will prevent him from attending.

"He's got a contract with Cricket Victoria so he can't go," Jackson's father, former Fitzroy, Sydney and Footscray forward Glenn "Galaxy" Coleman, said on Tuesday.

"I reckon he'd want to go but he can't."

Jackson has taken the eye of AFL recruiters while playing school football for Haileybury College. He was selected in the APS representative team coached by Robert Shaw.

The key forward also played one match for Old Haileybury in VAFA B section, kicking six goals.

He has trained but not played with TAC Cup team the Sandringham Dragons.



"He's got a bit of ability," Glenn Coleman said of his son.

"He's a left-footer, pretty skillful, pretty quick and agile, six foot five.

"It's pretty exciting to think a few league clubs are looking at him.

"That said he hasn't played outside of school footy since Under 13s or 14s."

Asked if Jackson preferred cricket or football, Coleman said: "I wouldn't like to say. Cricket or footy might get upset if he said one or the other."

The 18-year-old left-arm paceman is in Brisbane this week training at the cricket centre of excellence alongside Australian fast bowler Peter Siddle.

He has already represented the Victorian and Australian under 19 teams.

The Bushrangers gave him a rookie contract last year and again for 2010/11.

"We're not sure where he's heading at the moment," Coleman said.

"He'll play his cricket and see where that takes him. If not he might have a ping at footy. Who knows where it will end up."

Cricket Victoria CEO Tony Dodemaide and Bushrangers cricket manager Shaun Graf were unavailable for comment this morning.
Herald sun copyright.
 

brockley

International Captain
Oz cricket's pale, stale and male

Ben Dorries From: The Daily Telegraph August 12, 2010 12:00AM
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AUSTRALIAN cricket has been given a sobering wake-up call with an urgent warning it is becoming complacent, out of touch with schoolkids and governed by "pale, stale and male" administrators.

Cricket Australia boss James Sutherland has vowed to take the findings of the five-day Future of Cricket seminar to heart labelling it the "single most important cricket meeting in Australia in 30 years."

The key point from the talkfest in Melbourne, involving 180 key Australian cricket stakeholders, was that cricket is simply not connecting with the younger generation and had lost massive ground to other sports.

Test great Greg Chappell told the conference cricket had taken itself too seriously and as a result was no longer seen as fun by many youngsters in the 5-15 year age bracket.

"Forget this business of front elbow up, seam position and all the technical stuff we just have to encourage kids to go out and run, throw, catch and have fun," Chappell said.



"That's how we will attract the next generation of cricket fans."

Corporate strategy expert Laura Anderson, chairperson of the Melbourne Fashion Festival and on the board of the Australian Grand Prix, told the conference that cricket desperately needed to re-engage the younger generation. And she had a pointed message for some of the game's administrators who were told they are living in the past.

Sutherland and other CA heavyweights took in every word.

"We are at risk of becoming a sport administered by pale, male and stale administrators," CA public affairs manager Peter Young admitted.

"Cricket is at risk of being complacent and the real risk is we are not connecting with young kids and women was the key issue from the conference that has hit everyone between the eyes.

"Cricket is in good shape at the moment but it's not going to stay that way unless we re-engage and get cricket back into the schoolyard with a focus on fun. We need to start acting urgently to engage kids and women and be more agile in the administration of game so we can be connected to the fast rate of change in today's society."

Australia's largest media buyer, Harold Mitchell, claimed cricket needed to embrace new social technologies like Twitter to recapture the lost younger generation of fans.

The colourful Twenty20 format is one of the key mechanisms to win more fans particularly children and women and CA will discuss the future of its domestic Big Bash competition at a meeting in Melbourne tomorrow.

As revealed by The Daily Telegraph last year, the competition will be expanded to include teams from growth areas such as the Gold Coast, western Sydney and Geelong.

Board members will also vote on whether to embrace the controversial split-innings format in Australia's domestic 50-over comp this summer.

With the 50-over World Cup being staged in the sub-continent early next year, there has been a player revolt against a CA proposal to split 50-over matches into four innings of 25 overs.

Leading players fear the radical revamp designed to spruce up the domestic cricket landscape will harm Australia's bid for a fourth consecutive World Cup.
The daily telegraph copyright.
 

Julian87

State Captain
SA is dead meat in the club champions league thingo. Four of the players who did anything of note (Pollard, Afridi, Cosgrove, Cleary) aren't in the team any more. Tait can't blow everyone away.....
Honestly think the likes of Christian, Cooper and Ferguson will well and truly fill the void left by those guys. Afridi wasn't that brilliant anyway from memory. Add to that they'll do the sensible thing and bring Klinger in at the top of the order for a bit of stability if things go awry.

The bowling probably will be a problem though. Not so sure Christian's hit and miss yorkers ill do the job they did in Australia.
 

Nate

You'll Never Walk Alone
So over this "20/20 is the way to win the fans back" crap. Cricket is really losing its focus. They think spectators want to see lots of sixes. Well, we did, back when they were special. I barely bat an eyelid at a six now. It was a special thing, almost, though not quite, like a goal in soccer.

Cricket is always going to be a traditional game, with lots of history. Buy cheapening and modernising it to be like other 'modern' sports, we're losing the game entirely.

Don't make runs easier to score. Bring back the humanity - the grit, the fight, the struggle, the determination that unearthed the real heroes, the Borders, the Waughs. That's what Australia wants to see.
 

Top_Cat

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Honestly think the likes of Christian, Cooper and Ferguson will well and truly fill the void left by those guys. Afridi wasn't that brilliant anyway from memory. Add to that they'll do the sensible thing and bring Klinger in at the top of the order for a bit of stability if things go awry.

The bowling probably will be a problem though. Not so sure Christian's hit and miss yorkers ill do the job they did in Australia.
Perhaps but they'll miss Afridi's work with the ball and definitely Pollard's with both bat and ball. The leadership of both guys was massive too. There's a few solid T20 contributors (Harris, Klinger, Cooper, Ferg) but no game-breakers any more. Christian's the closest to having a genuine long-bomb game in the team.

Cooper is an interesting one. I went to every game at Adelaide and he'd look as if he was smashing them, go a bit quiet then get out. Had the feeling every game it was a matter of time before he got away but never did. Hoping he has a break-out series!
 

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