New South Wales  

For a team that found itself at possibly its lowest ebb in history only 18 months ago, New South Wales has done a remarkable job in retrieving the situation. Less than two years on from those dark days, the Blues will enter a new domestic season not just as defending one-day champions but also secure in the knowledge that they are backing up a fine first-class summer too.

Crucially, the tension between administrators and players that spilled to the surface back then - not to mention some simmering resentment over the team's leadership structure - has been quelled. Even more impressively, the transition has occurred without much evidence of blood-letting or recrimination.

The result at the end of all is a squad not only brimming with confidence and expectation again but also one blessed with an impressive set of resources.

It is by no means an accident of fate that the starting point of the turnaround coincided with the return to the state of coach Steve Rixon, whose ability to effectively identify and develop young talent has long been exceptional. His direction over the team was profoundly important last summer, and will continue to prove so again.

Where this squad was once struggling for depth and experience in the absence of its international representatives, it no longer encounters the same problem. Greg Mail and Michael Clarke have emerged as batsmen of immense potential; Nathan Bracken and Don Nash have become frontline pace bowlers; Brad Haddin adds hearty aggression with the bat to his qualities as a wicketkeeper; and Mark Higgs is emerging as one of the country's best young all-rounders.

Throw in to the mix the notion that now-erstwhile Australian players Stuart MacGill and Michael Slater might be available for much of the summer and suddenly it's not difficult to see that captain Shane Lee has a welter of riches at his disposal.

Perhaps the most crucial player of all to the Blues' plans, though, remains Michael Bevan. Barring injury, he's certain to be confined to one-day international commitments during January and February, of course.

But this season's schedule should allow him to play at least 11 of the Blues' games. And possibly up to 16, depending on exactly when Australia plans to fly its one-day squad into South Africa in March.

Bevan was the key behind the state's Mercantile Mutual Cup triumph last summer - its first title for seven years - and should lead another concerted assault again. Just possibly, he might be the man to force enough positive results to have the Blues heading in the direction of a Pura Cup Final too.

Lying before New South Wales is the chance to forge another era of sustained success. If it transpires, given all the drama of the late 1990s, then it's a certainty that ascendancy will rarely have tasted so sweet.

The key player: The ever-unlucky Stuart MacGill looks no closer to a regular spot in Australia's team than he did when his international career began four years ago now. That said, his presence in its team for a large number of games this season means New South Wales is likely to be a real beneficiary of his misfortune in being cast in the role of playing second fiddle to Shane Warne. An excellent leg spinner, he broke a longstanding record by taking the most wickets in a single domestic one-day season last time around. As his rise to giddy heights on the Blues' list of all-time wicket-takers continues, he can be expected to exert a decisive impact in both forms of the game again.

The up-and-comer: Young batsman Phil Jaques will likely need to cool his heels during the first month of the season, when the battle for batting positions will be at its most intense. But, once the duties of the Blues' international representatives take them elsewhere, he has a genuine chance of establishing himself. Not necessarily powerfully built but hits the ball with great authority and is equally at home on the front and back foot.

The draw: The Blues will face another hectic start to the summer, cramming four first-class and five limited-overs games into the first two months of their program. In theory, that's not a bad thing, though, because each of their opening four games is played at home and this is also the only part of the season during which the bulk of Australia's international representatives will be available. In a reverse of last year's draw, only one of the Blues' last five games this season is played at home, which adds to the impression that a good beginning to the summer is probably crucial.

Predicted Pura Cup finishing position: 2nd

Predicted ING Cup finishing position: 1st



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Date-stamped : 07 Oct2001 - 02:24