McAndrew five-for knocks Stars out, sets up Sydney derby in Challenger
Sydney Thunder defended 135 – the second-lowest total defended in a BBL playoff game – to go through to the Challenger
Tristan Lavalette22-Jan-2025Legspinner Tanveer Sangha thwarted Glenn Maxwell on a tricky Showground surface and quick Nathan McAndrew claimed five wickets as Sydney Thunder superbly defended a modest total in the BBL elimination final.Melbourne Stars had high hopes of chasing 136 in 19 overs, but lost regular wickets including Maxwell for 28 off 21 balls. McAndrew started the damage with a brilliant new ball spell and finished with 5 for 16 on a spin-friendly pitch.The match was reduced to 19 overs per side due to lightning early in Thunder’s innings, which led to a brief delay.Thunder will play crosstown rivals Sydney Sixers at the SCG in Friday’s Challenger with the winner to meet Hobart Hurricanes in the final.It was a disappointment for Stars, who were riding a five-game win streak but their title drought extends by another season.
McAndrew, spinners crush Stars
Thunder were under pressure defending what appeared a below par total. They needed early wickets and McAndrew delivered by dismissing openers Sam Harper and Thomas Rogers.The match boiled down to how their spinners would fare against Maxwell and Stars skipper Marcus Stoinis. Offspinner Chris Green stepped up and lured Stoinis into a mishit on the legside, where George Garton claimed a brilliant catch diving forward at deep midwicket.After copping early punishment, Sangha produced the key wicket of Maxwell, who tried to work it to the legside but got a top-edge and the bowler held on with glee.Sangha was on a hat-trick when he dismissed Tom Curran first ball before McAndrew claimed late wickets to ensure Thunder avoided any late nerves. After leading superbly and making all the right moves in the field, skipper David Warner fittingly took the final catch to trigger jubilation for Thunder’s players and fans.Maxwell shines briefly after top-order collapse
It always felt that the match would be decided one way or another by Maxwell. He was at the crease within five overs after Stars’ top-order struggles continued as they crashed to 27 for 3.In his season debut, as a late replacement for Beau Webster, veteran Peter Handscomb had a tough initiation. Having missed out on the Test tour of Sri Lanka, Handscomb was keen to showcase his prowess at facing spin but never looked comfortable and on 11 he was trapped lbw by left-arm spinner Tom Andrews.Glenn Maxwell took the pressure off after early wickets•Getty ImagesIn came Maxwell on the back of a purple patch where he almost single-handedly lifted Stars into an unlikely finals berth. While other batters had struggled mightily, Maxwell made it look easy with a hat-trick of boundaries off Andrews.The first two were trademark reverse sweeps before whacking a boundary through midwicket – where a fielder had just been moved from.Maxwell then hit Sangha for a monstrous six over deep midwicket to race to 23 off 11 balls. But on this occasion Maxwell couldn’t put the cape on and Stars fell apart without their talisman despite some late hitting from Mark Steketee.