The Northern Advocate

Guptill to have a bash at Aussie T20 league

Renegades come calling after Blacks Caps great cuts ties with NZ Cricket

- Andrew Alderson Martin Guptill

Aturbulent week for Black Caps white-ball cricket great Martin Guptill has ended with him signing a deal to play for the Melbourne Renegades in Australia’s Big Bash Twenty20 competitio­n.

The news comes two days after being released from his New Zealand Cricket contract.

He replaces England’s Liam Livingston­e, who withdrew this week due to increased internatio­nal commitment­s.

Guptill will slot in for the last 10 regular season games, beginning on Monday against the Sydney Sixers. He has played one previous game in the league for the Sydney

Thunders against the Sixers in December 2012.

Speaking to the Herald, Guptill reflected on what has been a pivotal move in a storied career, dating back to his internatio­nal debut in 2009.

“Sport doesn’t really owe you anything. Going out to play for your country is the big pull. I’m hoping to get another crack whenever that might be. If I don’t, I’ve had a fantastic career, something I’m really proud of across nearly 14 years but hopefully there’s still one or two more games up my sleeve.

“It’s been a tough week, and a tough decision to give back my contract to move forward to something new. It wasn’t an easy decision, but ultimately it’s the best one for my family.

“They [the Renegades] came to us and asked if I was available. That helped because I had been mulling over what was next during the [T20] World Cup. This came along and I thought it could be an opportunit­y.”

The 36-year-old didn’t play in the World Cup last month and wasn’t selected for the current series against India. NZC’s agreement to release him means future internatio­nal windows might be slim.

Guptill stressed he wants to be considered when available, but understand­s preference will be given to players with central or domestic contracts.

“[NZC] were supportive of everything — I dealt with [chief executive] David White and [high performanc­e boss] Bryan Stronach mostly. The opportunit­y to get more consistent cricket in my last couple of years was the aim.

“I’ll play as long as my body holds up and as long as I’m enjoying the game.”

What chance does he have of a

"It wasn’t an easy decision, but ultimately it’s the best one for my family."

Black Caps encore?

“I’m told the door’s not shut, so hopefully there’s another opportunit­y to get back in at some point. As long as I’m scoring runs and staying fit, anything’s possible.

“The was a wee bit of talk [with coach Gary Stead during the World Cup] but I need to play as much cricket while I still can rather than being on the outer not knowing when my next game’s going to be. This was the best decision in the circumstan­ces.”

Guptill will play limited overs cricket for Auckland before the Big Bash and intends to put his name forward for other leagues across the calendar year to make the most of his twilight years as a profession­al.

Basketball: The Brisbane Bullets parted ways with head coach James Duncan two days before they are due to play the Breakers in the Australian basketball league. The Bullets are second from bottom, but have won three of their last four games ahead of the Breakers match-up tomorrow. Assistant coach Sam Mackinnon will step into the head role. The Breakers faced the Taipans last night in Cairns, before squaring off against Brisbane tomorrow in Auckland.

Cricket: Glenn McGrath has claimed a near-deserted MCG for the Australia-England ODI cricket dead rubber should ring alarm bells for the survival of the 50-over format. Huge swathes of the venue were empty. Nine days earlier, more than 80,000 attended England’s T20 World Cup win over Pakistan at the same stadium.

Softball: The Black Sox hope they have seen the last of the internatio­nal softball wilderness. The World Cup starts today in Auckland marking the first major fixtures for the New Zealand team since the start of the pandemic. Wellington catcher Te Wera Bishop says watching the rest of the world was tough. New Zealand open against the Czech Republic this afternoon.

Cricket: West Indies batsman Tagenarine Chanderpau­l has boosted his chances of a test debut against Australia in Perth next week by making a century against the Prime Minister’s XI in Canberra. The son of Caribbean great Shivnarine lifted his side to 234 for seven in reply to their opponents’ 322 at stumps on the second day.

Rugby: Uruguay winger Juan Manuel Alonso was suspended for five weeks on Thursday for his red card against Tonga last weekend. Alonso was sent off for tackling a player in the air in the 69th minute of their rugby test in Bucharest. Tonga was leading 31-19 at the time and won 43-19. At his judicial hearing, Alonso admitted the foul was worthy of a red card. The committee’s sanction started at eight weeks and reduced it to five weeks. Alonso will miss the next four legs of the sevens world series in Dubai, Cape Town, Hamilton and Sydney.

Football: Friendship only goes so far when buddies become rivals in sports. United States coach Gregg Berhalter considers himself as a friend to England counterpar­t Gareth Southgate, but communicat­ion between the two has been cut off recently with both leading teams at the World Cup. “I’ve been Whatsappin­g, but I haven’t seen the blue checkmark,” Berhalter said yesterday, a day before his team was to play England in Group B. “So I don’t know what’s going on. We will pick up our relationsh­ip after tomorrow.”

Tennis: Italy beat the United States in a doubles decider yesterday to advance to the Davis Cup semifinals for the first time in eight years. Simone Bolelli and Fabio Fognini defeated Tommy Paul and Jack Sock 6-4, 6-4 to secure a 2-1 win for Italy after the teams split the singles matches. Bolelli and Fognini broke once in each set to set up a semifinal tomorrow against Canada.

 ?? PHOTO / PHOTOSPORT.NZ ?? Martin Guptill in full flight against Bangladesh earlier in the year.
PHOTO / PHOTOSPORT.NZ Martin Guptill in full flight against Bangladesh earlier in the year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand