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Fantasy
Love's miss is as good as a lifeline
John Polack - 15 October 2000

Queensland's first real blemish of the match - a missed catch at slip in late afternoon - threatens to undo most of its good work over the first three days of the Pura Cup clash with Western Australia at the WACA ground in Perth. Martin Love's uncharacteristic error has allowed Damien Martyn (70*) and Simon Katich (39*) to add an unbroken century stand and reduce the Warriors' overall deficit in the match to ninety-nine runs (with seven second innings wickets in hand) by stumps.

Prior to the advent of the grassed chance, the Queenslanders had continued to dominate until almost the point of tea on another fine, sunny day. Indeed, the tale of woe that could have been recounted on the back of Western Australia's batting performance yesterday soon needed extra paragraphs added to it when play resumed this morning. Following the two best individual performances amid the wreckage of an innings of 195, Adam Gilchrist (59) and Mike Hussey (41) both lost concentration and forced away from their bodies at deliveries cutting off the pitch. Soon, Jo Angel (5) was driving uppishly at a reasonably full outswinger from the ever-accurate Adam Dale (5/41) and lofting a catch straight into the hands of Jimmy Maher at a shortish cover position. And then, on the other side of lunch, Dale continued to capitalise on a similarly excellent effort behind the stumps from Wade Seccombe (who held six catches for the innings) by attaining the opening five-wicket haul at first-class level for the season. The right arm paceman had snared the final two scalps, and allowed captain Stuart Law to enforce the follow-on, when he induced Matthew Nicholson (35) into a top edged cut and then trapped Gavin Swan (0) lbw with an inswinger from the very next delivery.

A mere nineteen minutes into the new innings, Hussey (5) suffered the ignominy of being dismissed twice in the one day as he made the mistake of pulling to mid on a delivery far too full in length to encourage such a shot. As if that was not bad enough, Australian number three Justin Langer (0) then encountered the rare horror of being dismissed for a pair as he drove loosely at, and outside edged, a ball swinging away two deliveries into the next Andy Bichel (2/32) over. Ryan Campbell (25) fought bravely for a time but was the next to head back in the direction of the pavilion as he tried to cover drive an Ashley Noffke (1/34) outswinger, only to mistime the shot and watch as Maher completed a fine catch high to his left at backward point.

In between some scorching strokes to the boundary from the former, matters were initially no easier for either Martyn or Katich. Both played and missed repeatedly at Noffke and the right hander dodged a large bullet at 12 when Umpire Woolridge ruled in the batsman's favour upon being subjected to a beseeching lbw appeal from Dale (0/24).

But this was all before Love, normally as reliable as slips fieldsmen come, snatched at the opportunity to bring Martyn's hand to a close in the same general manner as in the first innings - with an interception at first slip following an ill-advised slash at a Bichel leg cutter. At the time, the Test aspirant had just 25 alongside his name and the Western Australians were deep in trouble at a mark of 3/61, a scoreline which still left them as many as 186 runs in arrears.

Occupation of the crease has at no stage been the almost impossible assignment that the Warriors had made it look in their first innings and the early stages of a second that eventually billowed to an overnight mark of 3/148. And, offered the reprieve on the still placid pitch, Martyn joined with Katich to prove the point as they took the sort of toll of a tiring attack that should have been exacted far earlier. The former hit some delightful shots behind point and through the covers, while the latter - playing his first match since returning home from a productive season of county cricket with Durham - concentrated his energies on executing some magnificent drives through the arc between mid on and mid off. Having weathered the series of early scares and been forced to bat against attacking fields for much of the afternoon, both genuinely earned their runs.

Difficulties still loom for the Western Australians tomorrow if they do not show an equivalent level of application. But the extent of the resolve displayed by both Martyn and Katich must surely have served up something in the way of a general morale-boost among their teammates in the dressing room. Together with the sight of some wayward bowling and sloppy fielding from the Bulls - one piece of it in particular - the generation of the best Western Australian stand of the match is indeed an edifying development. At the very least, it would certainly imply that the connection between Queensland and an eleventh outright victory from its last fourteen first-class encounters is not necessarily so inextricable after all.

© 2000 CricInfo Ltd


Teams Australia.
First Class Teams Queensland, Western Australia.
Players/Umpires Martin Love, Damien Martyn, Simon Katich, Adam Gilchrist, Mike Hussey, Jo Angel, Adam Dale, Jimmy Maher, Wade Seccombe, Stuart Law, Gavin Swan, Justin Langer, Andy Bichel, Ryan Campbell, Ashley Noffke.
Season Australian Domestic Season
Scorecard Pura Cup: Western Warriors v Queensland Bulls, 13-16 Oct 2000