Question marks as Sixers host BBL grand final qualifier

Jasper Bruce |

Jack Edwards is uncertain what to expect of the SCG wicket when the Sixers host the Hurricanes.
Jack Edwards is uncertain what to expect of the SCG wicket when the Sixers host the Hurricanes.

There’s more than one unknown quantity for the Sydney Sixers to consider as they host the Hobart Hurricanes for a spot in the BBL final against Perth.

The sides’ previous clash this summer was the only match of 40 in the regular season to have been abandoned because of inclement weather.

Steve Smith made a positive start before Sydney’s infamous January rain curtailed the Sixers’ rare chance to measure up with the reigning champions at the SCG.

Steve Smith
Steve Smith has been in stunning form for the Sydney Sixers, hitting a ton against the Thunder. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS)

In a fixturing quirk, the Sixers and Hurricanes have not played a full game at the SCG, the venue for Friday night’s challenger final, since December 2022.

By comparison, the Sixers have hosted the other team they could have drawn – the Melbourne Stars – four times since that last full meeting with the Hurricanes.

“We seem to play them down there a lot. It’s been a while since we’ve had them here,” said Sixers allrounder Jack Edwards.

It would be easy to surmise that the Sixers would have a significant home-ground advantage, but pitch conditions loom as another unknown quantity.

Runs flowed in the SCG’s most recent BBL clash between the Sydney Thunder and Sixers, who successfully chased 189 for victory as Smith and rival David Warner each tonned up.

But first-innings totals of 144 and 159 in the other two full games played at the SCG this summer have left Edwards to wonder what will be in store.

“The unknown here is the wicket, what we’re going to get. It’s up to both teams to try and assess that as well as they can,” he said.

“It was quite a good wicket last game, but some of the games were not quite so good.”

Hurricanes legspinner Rishad Hossain
Hurricanes legspinner Rishad Hossain has claimed some high-profile scalps this season. (James Ross/AAP PHOTOS)

Edwards could see spin playing a defining role, with the match-up between Hurricanes import Rishad Hossain and Sixers allrounder Joel Davies shaping as pivotal.

Legspinner Hossain has taken 13 wickets at 21.53 this summer, counting Marnus Labuschagne, Matthew Renshaw and Aaron Hardie among his high-profile victims.

“Here at the SCG, they’ve shown throughout the tournament and the years that spin’s important,” Edwards said.

“How we tackle Hossain is going to be really important.”

Joel Davies
Joel Davies has had a career-best campaign, but wasn’t named in the BBL team of the tournament. (Pat Hoelscher/AAP PHOTOS)

Davies has been working closely with Sixers great Steve O’Keefe during a career-best BBL summer that has featured 12 wickets at 12.58.

Edwards said it was a bit surprising Davies was not selected alongside him for the official BBL team of the tournament.

“The thing that stands out is his composure. For such a young guy, he doesn’t seem flustered at all,” Edwards said.

AAP