Manawatu Standard

In search of domestic bliss At a glance

The whites go on as the men’s provincial cricket season starts today, for some at least. Ian Anderson sets the scene.

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Trying to predict which sides will flourish in domestic cricket is akin to assessing an iceberg. What’s imposing and grabs the attention is on the surface, but it’s the hidden depth that forms the basis, and has the greatest impact at collision time. That’ll be how the six teams best navigate the men’s 2021/22 season which starts today, with two games in the first-class Plunket Shield competitio­n.

At first glance, Northern Districts have a stacked squad, but it’s unlikely they’ll get much productivi­ty in the four-day, Ford Trophy and Super Smash campaigns from Kane Williamson, Tim Southee, Trent Boult and Mitchell Santner.

In stark contrast, the Otago squad doesn’t even poke its head above the water line in terms of internatio­nal representa­tion – none of the Volts have a New Zealand Cricket contract. But that ensures new coach Dion Ebrahim will be able to constantly field a settled unit in all three formats.

The Black Caps schedule for the home summer is yet to be revealed, but we know they’re going to be involved in the Twenty20 World Cup for the next fortnight at least, before the test squad heads to India for three T20Is and two tests.

Then there’s the likelihood after Christmas of home tests and T20Is against Bangladesh, ODIs versus the Netherland­s and two tests and a few T20Is against South Africa, amid four white-ball internatio­nals in Australia in late January/early February.

That won’t leave much room for star power in the domestic sides bar the rare possible Super Smash cameo, with the T20 schedule set to be revealed on Wednesday.

There’s also the interrupti­on to the start of the season caused by the Covid-19 pandemic and its associated restrictio­ns on training and travelling – hence why there’s no Auckland or Northern Districts in action in round one of the four-day programme, nor an appearance from Ross Taylor.

So which major associatio­ns are best-placed to flourish, after Canterbury came close to sweeping all before them last summer?

AUCKLAND

Coach: Heinrich Malan.

Last season: Fourth in the Plunket Shield, fifth in the Ford Trophy, fifth in the Super Smash.

Contracted: Adithya Ashok, Cole Briggs, Mark Chapman, Louis Delport, Danru Ferns, Matthew Gibson, Ryan Harrison, Ben Horne, Ben Lister, Robert O’Donnell, William O’Donnell, Ollie Pringle, Sean Solia, Will Somerville, Ross ter Braak, George Worker.

Black Caps contracted: Lockie Ferguson, Martin Guptill, Kyle Jamieson, Glenn Phillips.

Prospects: While Kyle Jamieson is likely to be tied up with the Black Caps for the next five months, the other three players with NZC contracts could still make appearance­s for the Aces in various formats as they’re not viewed as test cricketers. Add in T20 internatio­nal Mark Chapman and Heinrich Malan may be pleased with what he has at his disposal. Auckland’s batting is bound to be their strength – the O’Donnell brothers give them a solid middle-order spine while the addition of veteran left-hand opener George Worker will further boost run production. Sean Solia is an exciting all-round talent, but the bowling lineup appears to lack penetratio­n and could limit their title prospects.

NORTHERN DISTRICTS

Coach: Graeme Aldridge.

Last season: Second in the Plunket Shield, second in the Ford Trophy, fourth in the Super Smash.

Contracted: Peter Bocock, Joe Carter, Katene Clarke, Kristian Clarke, Henry Cooper, Matthew Fisher, Zak Gibson, Brett Hampton, Scott Kuggeleijn, Bharat Popli, Brett Randell, Jeet Raval, Tim Seifert, Freddy Walker, Joe Walker, Anurag Verma.

Black Caps contracted: Trent Boult, Colin de Grandhomme, Mitchell Santner, Ish Sodhi, Tim

Southee, Neil Wagner, Kane Williamson.

Prospects: Even without their Black Caps superstars, ND have the potential to contend for silverware as they did last season. Joe Carter and Jeet Raval will score runs while a better season than last is likely from Henry Cooper. NZ under-19 star Kristian Clarke is a promising all-rounder while Scott Kuggeleijn will likely carry a big bowling load. It’s possible ND may get decent doses of Colin de Grandhomme, Neil Wagner and Tim Seifert during summer, which could be enough to see them land a trophy.

CENTRAL DISTRICTS

Coach: Rob Walter.

Last season: Fifth in the Plunket Shield, last in the Ford Trophy, third in the Super Smash.

Contracted: Doug Bracewell, Tom Bruce, Josh Clarkson, Dane Cleaver, Joey Field, Greg Hay, Jayden Lennox, Christian Leopard, Adam Milne, Ajaz Patel, Seth Rance, Brad Schmulian, Ben Smith, Blair Tickner, Ray Toole, Ben Wheeler, Bayley Wiggins.

Black Caps contracted: Ross

Taylor, Will Young.

Prospects: The Stags may get to see a lot of Taylor and Young (who misses the opening Shield game with a wrist injury) this season, which would make a massive difference to their batting. That would make them a dangerous foe in all formats, as Rob Walter, in his first year in charge after moving from Otago, has a welter of bowling firepower, with fringe Black Caps Adam Milne, Ajaz Patel, Blair Tickner and Doug Bracewell backed up by Seth Rance, Ben Wheeler and Ray Toole.

WELLINGTON

Coach: Glenn Pocknall.

Last season: Last in the Plunket Shield, third in the Ford Trophy, Super Smash winners.

Contracted: Finn Allen, Hamish Bennett, Jakob Bhula, Michael Bracewell, Luke Georgeson, Jamie Gibson, Troy Johnson, Callum McLachlan, Iain McPeake, Ollie Newton, Rachin Ravindra, Ben Sears, Nathan Smith, Michael Snedden, Logan van Beek, Peter Younghusba­nd.

Black Caps contracted: Tom Blundell, Devon Conway, Jimmy

Plunket Shield, round one from 10.30am today to Wednesday, October 27: Canterbury v Central Stags, Hagley Oval; Wellington Firebirds v Otago Volts, Basin Reserve.

Neesham.

Prospects: The Firebirds will need to get used to not having Devon Conway plundering runs in all three formats like he has since his arrival, with internatio­nal duties now taking precedent. That adds a bigger onus on young stars Finn Allen, Rachin Ravindra and Jakob Bhula, while Tom Blundell will be a key figure with bat and gloves. Nathan Smith’s move from Otago gives the capital an allrounder capable of big things, as is Luke Georgeson, while tearaway quick Ben Sears will be worth watching after his first taste of internatio­nal cricket.

CANTERBURY

Coach: Peter Fulton.

Last season: Plunket Shield winners, Ford Trophy winners, second in the Super Smash.

Contracted: Todd Astle, Chad Bowes, Jack Boyle, Leo Carter, Harry Chamberlai­n, Sean Davey, Cam Fletcher, Andrew Hazeldine, Ken McClure, Cole McConchie, Ed Nuttall, Will O’Rourke, Fraser Sheat, Henry Shipley, Theo van Woerkom, Will Williams.

Black Caps contracted: Matt Henry, Tom Latham, Daryl Mitchell, Henry Nicholls.

Prospects: Only Devon Conway’s match-changing innings prevented a clean sweep of the prizes last season by Peter Fulton’s troops. Canterbury romped away with the Plunket Shield and were deserving one-day victors also. Their bowlers produced a swag of wickets, led by Will Williams and Fraser Sheat and with Matt Henry likely available early, look to again have a potent seam and swing attack. There’s no better individual story this season than Andrew Hazeldine’s recovery from cancer either. Cam Fletcher’s runs were valuable in all formats and while there will be fewer Daryl Mitchell sightings in red and black, some input from Henry Nicholls and backed by strength in depth again makes them the side to beat.

OTAGO

Coach: Dion Ebrahim.

Last season: Third in the Plunket Shield, fourth in the Ford Trophy, last in the Super Smash.

Contracted: Matt Bacon, Neil Broom, Max Chu, Jacob Duffy, Josh Finnie, Jake Gibson, Nick Kelly, Anaru Kitchen, Angus McKenzie, Jarrod McKay, Travis Muller, Dale Phillips, Michael Rae, Michael Rippon, Mitch Renwick, Hamish Rutherford.

Black Caps contracted: None.

Prospects: Can a side that doesn’t feature even one of the top twenty players in the country win a title? With no internatio­nal commitment­s, bar a possible callup again for Jacob Duffy, the Volts will be a united, focused unit across all three formats. Much will be expected of veteran batters Hamish Rutherford and Neil Broom, especially with Dean Foxcroft denied entry into New Zealand, while Duffy will need more support than he had during last season’s Shield campaign.

What’s the competitio­n format?

This year’s competitio­n is split into two rounds. The first saw Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Scotland and one other team (to be determined today NZT) qualify for the second stage after finishing in the top two places in their respective four-team groups.

The second round, known as the Super 12, sees the world’s eight topranked T20 sides enter the fray and is again divided into two groups.

Group 1 features England, Australia, South Africa, West Indies, Bangladesh and TBC. The Black Caps are in Group 2 alongside India, Pakistan, Afghanista­n, Scotland and TBC. Each team will play the other five in their group once, with the top two from both sections going through to the semifinals on November 11 and November 12 (NZT). The final will be held in Dubai on November 15.

What is the Black Caps’ schedule?

New Zealand open their T20 World Cup campaign against Pakistan in Sharjah on October 27, before taking on India in Dubai on November 1. They then meet newcomers Scotland at the same venue on November 3, returning to Sharjah two days later for a clash with an as yet unknown opponent. Gary Stead’s men complete their Super 12 fixtures against Afghanista­n on November 7 at Abu Dhabi’s Sheikh Zayed Stadium.

How does the points system work?

Teams get two points for a win, one for a draw, a no result or an abandonmen­t, and zero for a loss.

Should two or more teams finish on the same points, the deadlock will be broken first by number of wins, then net run rate. If that still doesn’t separate them, their head-to-head result comes into play, followed by their seeding.

If a match is tied, a Super Over will decide the outcome. If that is also tied, then the two teams will keep playing Super Overs until a winner is found. So Kiwi cricket fans needn’t worry about boundary countbacks this time.

If weather or time constraint­s prevent a Super Over from taking place, the match will be declared a tie.

Will DRS be available? Yes. For the first time in the

Who are the current holders? West Indies are the defending champions after capturing their second T20 world title with a dramatic four-wicket win over England in Kolkata.

Needing an improbable 19 off the last over, Carlos Brathwaite smacked four consecutiv­e sixes off the bowling of New Zealand-born allrounder Ben Stokes to trigger wild celebratio­ns among his team-mates at Eden Gardens.

Brathwaite won’t get the chance to repeat his heroics from 51⁄2 years ago though, having been left out of their 15-man squad.

Since the inaugural tournament in 2007 won by India, Pakistan, England and Sri Lanka have also tasted glory.

How much will the winners pocket?

A decent wedge. The champions take home US$1.6 million (NZ$2.24 million), the runners-up get US$800,000 (NZ$1.1 million) and the semifinali­sts will earn US$400,000 (NZ$559,000) apiece.

Where will the matches be played and are fans allowed? Spectators are allowed to attend matches, but the stadiums will be operating at a reduced capacity due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The three UAE venues in Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Sharjah will be up to 70 per cent full, while in Oman 3000 fans will be allowed into the Al Amerat Stadium in Muscat.

Who are the players to watch? All eyes will be on Indian superstar Virat Kohli, who is relinquish­ing the captaincy after the tournament. At his best, Kohli is a destructiv­e batter capable of turning a game in an instant. He will be desperate to lead his country to glory after losing the World Test Championsh­ip final to New Zealand.

From a Black Caps perspectiv­e, tweaker Ish Sodhi will be crucial to their hopes of going deep into the tournament on the spin-friendly surfaces in the UAE and Oman.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Will Williams and his Canterbury team-mates loom as the side to beat again this season.
GETTY IMAGES Will Williams and his Canterbury team-mates loom as the side to beat again this season.
 ?? ?? Finn Allen was a Twenty20 star for Wellington last season.
Finn Allen was a Twenty20 star for Wellington last season.
 ?? ?? Seth Rance gives Central Districts depth in their bowling.
Seth Rance gives Central Districts depth in their bowling.
 ?? ?? Joe Carter hits out strongly for Northern Districts.
Joe Carter hits out strongly for Northern Districts.
 ?? ?? Otago should be a factor in all three formats.
Otago should be a factor in all three formats.

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