Good hands with the bat from Nielsen and Short kept the Strikers in the hunt before they were pipped to the post
Melbourne Renegades 9 for 153 (Harvey 56, Siddle 3-42, Garton 2-23, Worrall 2-26) beat Adelaide Strikers 8 for 151 (Nielsen 30, Zahir 3-24, Sutherland 2-13) by 2 runs
Melbourne Renegades banished the ghosts of their wooden-spoon finish last season with a stirring two-run victory over Adelaide Strikers, a triumph marked by eye-catching performances from their youngsters.
The highly touted Fraser-McGurk, who missed out with the bat, has been likened as a fielder to Glenn Maxwell – a lofty comparison he well justified with an incredible acrobatic one-handed catch on the boundary to dismiss Jake Weatherald. Quite fittingly, he was wearing No. 23 because his high-flying heroics were reminiscent of NBA greats Michael Jordan and LeBron James.
Renegades’ young openers stand up
Without new skipper Nic Maddinson, Aaron Finch and Shaun Marsh, the Renegades’ batting line-up looked fragile and they needed a good start after electing to bat. Harper and Harvey obliged with a 65-run partnership.
It wasn’t necessarily pretty, with the pair mustering just 22 runs in the four-over powerplay. Harper, who has struggled in the Sheffield Shield this season, was out of sync and his innings was a bit frenzied, marked by a slew of swings and misses.
Strikers’ quicks dominate at the death
The Strikers, as per the norm, have been mostly overlooked in the lead-up to the season marked by the expected lengthy absences of Carey and Travis Head. Concern also revolves around an unfancied attack reliant on the brilliance of Rashid, but they limited the Renegades to a total under the average score of 165 batting first at Marvel Stadium.
Short has teased for some time but underachieved with an average of less than 15 across 34 innings, but here, the 26-year-old torched English quick Reece Topley and Pattinson with two massive sixes sailing into the second tier.
But, in a close game, the Strikers will be left pondering whether they utilised the power surge too late.
Tristan Lavalette is a journalist based in Perth and writes on sports for the Guardian and mailerreport