• Home
  • Cricket News
  • Bbl 10 Match Preview Distraught Renegades Seek Relief Against Impressive Strikers

BBL 10 Match Preview: Distraught Renegades seek relief against impressive Strikers


After losing to the Adelaide Strikers for by a big margin of 60 runs on Tuesday, the severely out-of-form Melbourne Renegades will taken on them again to avoid their eighth consecutive defeat in the ongoing season of the Big Bash League (BBL). 

Such poor form is very rare and Renegades would need all the luck to get out of it. Their opponents, unfortunately for them, happen to be a very competitive side as well. Currently, at the fourth position in the standings, the Adelaide side has enough motivation to get a win. 

Playing at home makes the Strikers even more dangerous, especially with pitches a little more conducive to spin. 

Renegades in Distress

Two teams were really struggling about a week ago in the BBL’s present season – Renegades and Perth Scorchers. The latter have now notched up three wins on a trot but the difficulties for the former team continues unabated. 

A first-ball duck for captain Aaron Finch was a good symbol of the problems being faced by the team. Finch is the best batsman in the team but he hasn’t been able to lift his team. His usual opening partner Shaun Marsh missed the last match and his availability for the next game is not certain. 

The promotion of Sam Harper hasn’t worked yet but there is hardly any better option. Mackenzie Harvey batted as an opener on Tuesday and did show some promise. This is a promising sign and every such positive is important for a beleaguered team. 

Mohammad Nabi and Imad Wasim, the two foreigners in the middle order, haven’t brought any change of fortunes. Their bowling has been more reliable than their batting. But there isn’t great depth of talent, at least proven one, in the ranks. So, the Renegades have to hope for a turnaround in form from the existing players. 

The bowling looks more promising. Imad bowled well with the new ball in the last match. His bowling style – tight line and length – is suited to this format. Mohammad Nabi is also a very useful option but it’s his younger compatriot Noor Ahmed who has got everyone excited. Highly talented but slightly uncooked, he could be the man to make a difference. 

A lot would also depend on Kane Richardson who has been average so far. Spin was the preferred option for Adelaide, based on the composition of the side, still, without the support of pacers, the slower bowlers will be easy to handle. 

Strikers in Good Stead

The bowling department of Strikers, on the other hand, is looking impressive. Rashid Khan was always going to be a star but the emergence of Danny Briggs as an equally reliable bowler has compounded the problems for opposition batsmen. 

The leadership of Peter Siddle has been working beautifully in this season for the Strikers. First, as the captain and now as the seniormost bowler in the side, he has led his troops brilliantly, adding deadly Yorkers to his arsenal alongside his other tricks. The support given to him by Wes Agar is invaluable. 

The space for a third seamer is still contested. Harry Conway did well in the last game and is likely to retain his spot. 

On the batting front, the promotion of Matt Renshaw to the opening slot worked a bit. His 35 off 28 showed signs of him getting into the rhythm. The nature of BBL this season has been such that big scores are rare. So, even a 30-odd at the start is a valuable contribution. That’s what Renshaw managed on Tuesday. 

His partner Phil Salt is a dangerous player and has been in good form. However, his opening partner for most of the season, Jake Weatherald, benefitted greatly from a change in his position. From opening the innings, Jake went down to the no. 6 position and scored a half-century. 

The middle order of the team has also assumed a very impressive look. With Alex Carey, Jonathan Wells, and Ryan Gibson, all in good form, and Rashid at no. 7 showing mettle with the bat also, this batting order is among the best in the league presently. 

Renegades vs Strikers: Match Details

Venue: Adelaide Oval, Adelaide

Date and Time: December 8, 12:40 PM IST, 5:40 PM Local, 7:10 AM GMT

Broadcasters: Sony Sports Network, Sony LIV

Pitch Report

The Adelaide Oval has produced good pitches in the two matches it has hosted so far. The sign of a good pitch is that everyone has something to play with. That’s been the case here. Spinners, pacers, and batsmen have all got an opportunity. However, the spinners may play a bigger role with the passage of time since the pitch will have wear and tear. 

Weather and Bat Flip

A nice warm day awaits the two teams on Friday. The temperature in the evening would be around 21 degrees, not uncomfortable for the players. With no cloud cover or rain expected, batting first would be the default option, though chasing wouldn’t be any tougher. 

Probable XIs

Renegades: Aaron Finch (C), Shaun Marsh, Mackenzie Harvey, Sam Harper (Wk), Mohammad Nabi, Beau Webster, Imad Wasim, Jake Fraser-McGurk, Jack Prestwidge, Kane Richardson, Josh Lalor, Noor Ahmad

Strikers: Matt Renshaw, Phil Salt, Alex Carey (C &Wk), Jonathan Wells, Ryan Gibson, Jake Weatherald, Rashid Khan, Danny Briggs, Wes Agar, Peter Siddle, Harry Conway

 

Powered by Froala Editor

Powered by Froala Editor

Powered by Froala Editor

Discover more

Top Stories
news

Inside out | Mayank Agarwal’s technique is a mess, and so is Indian team management

The road to hell is paved with good intentions and by the looks of it, the sentence has come to bite the Indian opener Mayank Agarwal who has been shown the exit door before the third Test at the SCG. The development will surely come as a disappointing one for Agarwal, and rightly so, as he was touted as the number one opener for India in Tests before the tour of Australia started. Some experts went a step ahead and rated him as one of the few batsmen who tick all boxes to become an all-format opener for India. So what happened that left Agarwal on the edge before the MCG Test, and twin failures in the Test actually threw him off the clip before the SCG Test. Agarwal has undergone many transitions in his short international and long domestic career. He first burst onto the scenes with swashbuckling stroke playing for the Royal Challengers Bangalore in the IPL, but he could never cement his position in the star-studded batting line up, but more due to his inability to convert explosive starts into substantive innings, and more often not than not was guilty of being over attacking. He was smart enough to understand his undoing, and he went old-school ways to conquer his frailties. He spent time with a personal coach to balance his mental game with stroke playing and paid special attention o not throwing his wicket away playing loose shots. The move paid dividends and Agarwal started rising through the ranks in the domestic circuit to stake a claim in the senior team. His batting temperament paved the way for his entry in the India A team where he kept on piling runs to bang the selection door down. Ironically, it was the same tour of Australia two years back when he was brought in as an emergency replacement after the first two Tests when the team management had enough of Murali Vijay and KL Rahul, and now he faces the axe after same two Tests on the tour of Australia. There are two aspects of Mayank Agarwal’s losing form in Tests and it includes the technical changes he brought in his game and how the team management handled his case. First thing first. On the technical aspect of his failures in the first two Tests, Agarwal has been found wanting on the balls that came back to him, and his lack of awareness about off stump while being worried about ball shaping back to him. In two of the four innings, he was been pinned in front of the stumps, and Cummins has gone through his gate once while Starc found him late on a ball that swung back considerably from the line outside the off stump. He also got a jaffa from Hazlewood on the third morning of the Adelaide Test, but he was caught back in the crease, and he clearly appeared late on the ball. Experts and close watchers of the game had pointed out his higher backlift, and wider stance as reasons behind him coming late towards the ball. A short analytical video on the host broadcaster of Cricket Australia- Channel 7 clearly emphasized the change Agarwal has brought in the game from his last series in Australia where he looked like the batsman who could do no wrong while in the four innings he batted on this tour, he has barely looked like the batsman he eas two years ago. For sure, Agarwal would have made the changes in his batting stance and backlift to bring power in his game to excel in the T20 format and specifically in the IPL. He had scored runs in the Test format, and as per the demands of the current era of cricket, he intended to own the T20 format as well. Notably, he had revealed his intentions of making a special effort to make the IPL 2020 count. One can’t blame Agarwal to be ambitious and trying to ace all formats, but his well-intended tactics to excel in the T20, has been the probable reason behind his downfall in the Tests. Now comes the point of how did the team management handle his case and was he taken care of in terms of giving proper backing and letting him know about the advantages and advantages of a changed batting stance. The management of the team is being done by professions and hence there should be no doubt about the latter, but questions must be raised on he has been handled by the team management in Australia. There are enough shreds of evidence available with respect to other players that establish the callousness of the team management in terms of managing players who start losing their shine after making a grand entry on the big stage. Prithvi Shaw was backed to come good against Pink ball in Adelaide but was dropped just after two failures against high-quality bowling. Yes, he was exposed by the quality of the Australian pacers, and should never have been picked, but the fact he got the backing to come good even with a loose technique in the first Test and then being given up just after one Test begs questions that if the team management is cutting down the length of ropes for players, especially the younger ones. Prithvi Shaw, Karun Nair and now Agarwal have faced this problem with the team management while on other hand the likes of KL Rahul has received a far linger rope from the team management and he was also included in the squad even without playing the domestic first-class cricket and earning his place back. Shaw was replaced by Shubman Gill, who by all means looked more assured in his footwork and looked solid in defence but so was Agarwal on the last tour. What if Shubman Gill loses his patience and keeps edging the ball to slip cordon while attempting to drive without moving his front foot like the way he got out in the first innings at the MCG after a good start. If the yardsticks that were followed to drop Agarwal and Shaw would be followed, Gill too will face the axe after few failures and it will leave the team management with a Frankenstein monster with too many contenders for the opener slot but not enough batsmen in a right frame of mind to bat freely and without the feeling of a cut-throat competition where one edge to slip will work as a sword a career built on the back of years of hard work in domestic cricket. What has happened with Agarwal was an inevitable event with Rohit Sharma returning to the team, but the team management needs to remind itself the story of Murali Vijay that how the policy of horse for courses and continuous chopping and changing ruined his game that once an opener who could leave the balls outside off stump for days kept on edging the ball to slip cordon in pursuit of driving balls so far away from his reach, in real uncharacteristic fashion showing nothing but mental brittleness.