Taranaki Daily News

Ferguson fired up by Wagner’s treatment

- MARK GEENTY

The scariest fast bowler in New Zealand cricket thought it was only a matter of time before he got some of his own medicine.

Sure enough, Lockie Ferguson got a crack on the end of his thumb from a Doug Bracewell short delivery in Nelson last week but played on for Auckland a few days later, even if the fracture was on the right thumb he grips the ball with.

It was minimal bother for the 26-year-old 150kmh man, who defied the pain to tear through Otago’s batting lineup on Eden Park’s Outer Oval for career-best match figures of 12-78, to usher in Auckland’s first Plunket Shield win by 135 runs yesterday.

‘‘To be fair I was probably due one, having pinned a few other lads,’’ Ferguson quipped, of the knock he suffered against Central Stags.

‘‘Dougie got me with a decent short one right on the end of the thumb. I’ve just got a little fracture, nothing to write home to Mum about. It was a bit niggly last week but it settled down and luckily it’s under the nail so not on the part of the thumb where I hold the ball.’’

Still it was vulnerable when he batted. Especially against Otago’s test left-armer Neil Wagner who’s not widely known for taking it easy on a tailender.

‘‘I wasn’t planning on hanging around too long facing Waggy. I know he was targeting my thumb. I just tried to get a few cheap runs and have a bowl.

‘‘He actually got me on the thumb on the first innings, that one I got out to, the bugger.

‘‘I’d expect nothing less. Wags and I are good mates, we play hard on the field and it’s part of the game. I enjoy it just as much as he does and we give it to each other but he’s the first to come and have a beer with me afterwards.’’

The prognosis was 4-6 weeks before the fracture fully healed, and Ferguson hinted he may sit out next week’s game after playing three tough ones on the bounce.

Ferguson’s first innings 7-34 was career-best innings figures and his eighth five-wicket bag. He’d never taken more than eight in 29 previous first-class matches but he steamed past that with 5-44 on the final day to help skittle Otago for 185.

There were some classic fast bowler’s dismissals. Opener Brad Wilson was snared at short leg to a snorter and former team-mate Rob Nicol was trapped in front by a sandshoe-crushing yorker. Derek de Boorder left one that tailed back and castled him then debutant Warren Barnes missed a lighting full toss that sent middle stump cartwheeli­ng.

After showing promising signs on Black Caps debut last summer, Ferguson got New Zealand Cricket’s final central contract for this season after Mitchell McClenagha­n opted out. He looks certain to feature in black in coming months.

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