<
>

Wade, Jewell, Meredith end Thunder winning streak in see-saw contest

Hobart Hurricanes 6 for 177 (Wade 83*, Jewell 51, Sandhu 2-27) beat Sydney Thunder 9 for 168 (Hales 38, Thompson 3-24, Meredith 3-29, Lamichhane 2-26) by nine runs

Matthew Wade made an unbeaten 83 on return, then Riley Meredith lit a fuse with the ball as Hobart Hurricanes ended Sydney Thunder's six-match winning streak with a nine-run victory at Marvel Stadium.

After missing two matches due to personal reasons, Wade's 54-ball knock held Hurricanes' innings together after they elected to bat before speedster Meredith tore through Thunder's vaunted batting order with three wickets in a see-saw contest.

Fourth-placed Hurricanes (24 points) exacted revenge after losing by nine wickets just three days ago and tightened their grip on a playoffs berth, while Thunder (31 points) remained second behind Perth Scorchers.

Wade returns in style

Having hit two of his three BBL tons at Marvel Stadium, Ben McDermott eyed another big score but Thunder had his number again as he fell for 18. For the second straight match, he fell to a slower delivery after being deceived by Daniel Sams in the fifth over.

It brought Wade to the crease, who returned after missing two matches due to personal reasons and he came in at No. 3 instead of his customary position at the top. Having struggled for most of the season, Wade's timing was impeccable with a powerful boundary second ball and then smashed legspinner Tanveer Sangha for two boundaries in the seventh over.

Wade received a life on 18 when Sangha dropped a sitter at short third man and made Thunder pay along with Caleb Jewell, who justified the faith to keep him as an opener with a 32-ball 51. Hurricanes appeared set to push for 200 until Jewell's wicket in the 13th over sparked a collapse of 5 for 22.

Having watched the carnage around him, an unperturbed Wade lifted Hurricanes with a late flurry. Hurricanes still haven't quite got the balance right in their batting order but a rejuvenated Wade at No. 3 appears a winner.

Thunder hit back after ragged start

Thunder appeared to be wilting amid the Wade and Jewell carnage marked by ragged bowling and sloppy fielding. But they weren't rattled and impressively fought back to spectacularly flip the script. In-form seamer Gurinder Sandhu claimed two wickets in a momentum-shifting 13th over as Thunder tore through Hurricanes' susceptible middle order.

They claimed five wickets in a devastating 25-ball burst punctuated by a scintillating yorker by Mohammad Hasnain to clean up an ashen-faced Jordan Thompson in the 17th over. Apart from leaking 16 runs in the 12th over, Hasnain was again irrepressible with full, and fast, bowling.

But the disciplined Thunder would have been disappointed with their bowling and fielding in the first 10 overs which ultimately proved costly.

Meredith sizzles with pace

Apart from taking the wicket of Matthew Gilkes in the first over, Meredith was struggling with his rhythm and his wayward bowling promptly suffered a hammering from Alex Hales. Fellow seamer Tom Rogers, their leading wicket-taker this season, didn't fare any better as an under-siege Hurricanes lost their nerve with Thunder's 1 for 56 the most runs scored by any team in the powerplay this season.

They clawed back through Thompson claiming the key wickets of Hales and stand-in skipper Jason Sangha, who fell to a superb slower ball. Then Meredith swung the match spectacularly in the 11th over by clean bowling Ollie Davies and Ben Cutting with sheer pace as Hurricanes gained a stranglehold.

Meredith, who played five T20Is for Australia last year, had an interrupted start to the BBL season and only took three wickets in his last five matches. With his lethal pace and full-length prowess on song, the 25-year-old issued a timely reminder to national selectors.

Thunder rocked by middle-order collapse

Chasing 178, Thunder looked supremely confident under the closed roof as they dominated the powerplay. Hales was patient early during his unbeaten 80 against Hurricanes the last time but he was in a hurry here.

Hales smashed David's spin for five boundaries in the second over and raced to 27 off just 10 deliveries after he flicked a fast delivery from Meredith for six. His whirlwind 17-ball 38 ended in the fifth over but Thunder still looked on course until they lost 4 for 10 mid-innings.

Nathan McAndrew tried his best at the end to conjure a miraculous victory but it wasn't enough as Thunder lost for the first time since December 26.

Thunder 2nd innings Partnerships

WktRunsPlayers
1st5AD HalesM Gilkes
2nd62AD HalesJJS Sangha
3rd25DR SamsJJS Sangha
4th10DR SamsO Davies
5th0BCJ CuttingDR Sams
6th0DR SamsBJ Holt
7th45N McAndrewBJ Holt
8th4GS SandhuN McAndrew
9th10GS SandhuT Sangha
10th7GS SandhuMohammad Hasnain

Big Bash League

TeamMWLPTNRR
PS14113400.926
SS1494351.027
ST1495350.725
AS1468280.237
HH147727-0.332
MS147726-0.222
BH1431116-0.91
MR1431016-1.477