Marlborough Express

Stags, Firebirds battle goes down to the wire

- MARK GEENTY

Having set the Plunket Shield pace since the first day of the season, Wellington now need a slip-up from their nearest rivals with assistance from two former teammates to win their first title in 14 years.

Central Stags, courtesy of an innings victory over Canterbury last week, hit the front at just the right time and enter today’s final round four points clear of their cricketing neighbours the Firebirds who stumbled to an innings defeat to Northern Districts.

In a tense two-horse race for the $75,000 winners’ prizemoney, both will chase it at different venues over the next four days: the Stags at Napier’s Nelson Park against Northern, and Wellington away to Auckland at Eden Park’s Outer Oval.

Both venues have batsmanfri­endly reputation­s and with fine weather forecast in Napier and Auckland it may come down to the punch of the respective bowling attacks, in pursuit of the maximum 20 competitio­n points including 12 for the outright victory.

The Stags notched their sixth outright win from nine matches when they pummelled bottomplac­ed Canterbury by an innings and 58 runs at Mclean Park.

They face an ND team missing legspinner Ish Sodhi to test duty after he snared 7-30 and 12 for the match at the Basin Reserve to crush the Firebirds by an innings and 56.

ND have Black Caps allrounder Corey Anderson in their ranks before he departs to the Indian Premier League, along with seamers Scott Kuggeleijn and Brent Arnel who both featured for Wellington in the years since the Firebirds’ last first-class title in 2004.

The Stags showed their impressive depth this season amid injuries and internatio­nal callups, and are in the box seat to go one better than their white ball deciders, having lost the Twenty20 final to the Knights and the oneday final to Auckland. Central last won the first-class title in 2013, before Canterbury won it in three of the next four seasons.

Left-arm spinner Ajaz Patel is again the competitio­n’s leading wicket-taker with 42 at an average

Plunket Shield final round, all start 10.30am Monday: Auckland v Wellington at Eden Park Outer Oval, Auckland Auckland (from):

Michael Guptill-bunce (captain), Sean Solia, Robert O’donnell, Martin Guptill, Mark Chapman, Glenn Phillips, Matt Mcewan, Ben Horne, Lockie Ferguson, Ben Lister, Danru Ferns, Louis Delport.

Michael Bracewell (captain), Michael Papps, Luke Woodcock, Stephen Murdoch, Tom Blundell, Malcolm Nofal, Devon Conway, Logan van Beek, Jeetan Patel, Ollie Newton, Iain Mcpeake, Hamish Bennett, Ben Sears.

Wellington (from): Central Stags v Northern Districts at Nelson Park, Napier Central (from):

Will Young (captain), Greg Hay, Ben Smith, George Worker, Tom Bruce, Willem Ludick, Dane Cleaver, Doug Bracewell, Ajaz Patel, Adam Milne, Seth Rance, Blair Tickner.

Daniel Flynn (captain), Henry Cooper, Corey Anderson, Bharat Popli, Anton Devcich, Tim Seifert, Daryl Mitchell, Nick Kelly, Scott Kuggeleijn, Joe Walker, Zak Gibson, James Baker, Brent Arnel.

Northern (from): Otago v Canterbury at University Oval, Dunedin Otago (from):

Rob Nicol (captain), Hamish Rutherford, Brad Wilson, Neil Broom, Anaru Kitchen, Jimmy Neesham, Derek de Boorder, Nathan Smith, Michael Rippon, Jacob Duffy, Matt Bacon, Michael Rae, Warren Barnes.

Cole Mcconchie (captain), Chad Bowes, Michael Davidson, Ken Mcclure, Jeff Case, Andrew Ellis, Cameron Fletcher, Kyle Jamieson, Will Williams, Theo van Woerkom, Andrew Hazeldine, Blake Coburn. Central 127, Wellington 123, Auckland 86, Northern 76, Otago 73, Canterbury 47.

Canterbury (from): Points:

of 21, six clear of Auckland’s Matt Mcewan (36 at 25) and Wellington’s Iain Mcpeake (35 at 18).

Stags opener Greg Hay set the pace in the runscoring charts with 756 at an average of 69, in a neck and neck race with veteran Wellington opener Michael Papps who moved clear again with 796 at 57.

Papps, 38, is yet to confirm his intentions for next season but there’s every chance this could be his final first-class match in a glittering 20-season career, where he amassed 12,276 runs including 33 centuries.

Wellington are set to welcome back allrounder Logan van Beek who was named in their 13 after missing the ND defeat with a hamstring injury. The former Canterbury quick played six of their nine matches this season and snared 33 wickets at 15 so his return would be timely for their title hopes.

Auckland and ND sit third and fourth but too far back to be contenders, so will instead act as spoilers.

The Aces welcome back Black Cap Martin Guptill after their innings defeat to Otago in Dunedin.

The Volts host defending champions Canterbury whose dramatic fall left them 26 points adrift at the bottom.

It means Otago, who notched their second win of the season over Auckland, avoided finishing last in all three competitio­ns for a second successive season.

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