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Haisman Shield | Gallery | Clinical Cats put Bombers to the sword in semi-final rout

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No run: Mooroopna’s Brodie McDonald. Photo by Megan Fisher

Mooroopna is now one win away from back-to-back Cricket Shepparton Haisman Shield titles after knocking off rival Waaia by 62 runs in the semi-final at Mooroopna Recreation Reserve.

In-form quick Will Dundon was the star for the Cats, tearing through the Waaia top order with a scintillating nine-over spell of 4-14 as he continued the momentum garnered by a balanced first innings batting performance from his team.

Back in the Haisman Shield decider for the second time in as many years, Mooroopna coach Luke Zanchetta said excitement was high throughout his team after dismantling the competition’s minor premier.

Big day in the field: Waaia captain Brayden Carey has a stretch. Photo by Megan Fisher

“It is an awesome feeling (to be back in the grand final), this year we have probably done it a bit harder having lost a few more games throughout the year, but when it has really mattered over the last month, I feel our cricket has been unbelievable,” Zanchetta said.

“Peaking at the right time is so important in this competition and I feel we have really done that this year, getting wins over Nagambie and Waaia in back-to-back weeks does give us a lot of confidence — but we also understand that it is a one-dayer and anything can happen.”

Eye on the prize: Waaia’s Jesse Trower. Photo by Megan Fisher

Winning the toss and batting first, Zanchetta and the Mooroopna brainstrust put the pressure on the top six to deliver a fast start.

Faced with the arguably the competition’s most accomplished attack, openers Jac Smith-Williams (32) and Brodie McDonald (23) took it to Waaia early with a pivotal 47-run stand, before the recently promoted Paul McDonald came in and anchored the innings with a superb 42.

Zanchetta said he was incredibly proud of how the batters attacked the first innings.

On the defensive: Mooroopna’s Brodie McDonald. Photo by Megan Fisher

‘’A few weeks ago, we really put it on our top five to really go on and get big scores and over the past month they have been outstanding, in stages individuals had done it, but now they are starting to perform together which makes our job as bowlers a lot easier,” he said.

“I’m not sure if any side has hit over 160 against Waaia this season, so to do that in the semi-final and, most importantly, have guys come up from B-grade like Paul McDonald and perform it gives us lots of confidence that on our day we are a very hard team to beat.”

Lifting the spirits: Bombers captain Brayden Carey. Photo by Megan Fisher

A late collapse of 6-28 would give the Bombers some hope heading into the chase, with a target of 172 standing between them and another trip to the grand final.

Enter Dundon.

Whipping it in: Waaia’s Josh O’Dwyer. Photo by Megan Fisher

Bowling in partnership with Zanchetta, the quick made the key early breakthrough of Liam Evans before sending Sam Trower on his way to have Waaia in a world of trouble at 2-11.

Captain Brayden Carey (26) and Luke Quinn (25) did their best to try and turn the tide, but the Cats’ bowlers were out for blood, taking consistent wickets en route to bowling the Bombers out for 109.

“Will Dundon bowled absolutely beautifully, he got Evans with an unplayable delivery and when you do that to their best bat it gives you a massive leg up,” Zanchetta said.

Talking it over: Mooroopna openers Brodie McDonald and Jac Smith-Williams. Photo by Megan Fisher

“Jake Wright then came on and bowled fast to get two wickets and it just snowballed from there, our spinners bowled well and we fielded well, so it was great to put in such a well-rounded performance heading into grand final.”

Steaming in: Waaia’s Mitchell Cleeland. Photo by Megan Fisher

THE GAME

Mooroopna 9-171 (Paul McDonald 42, Brady Mulcahy 33, Jesse Trower 2-18) d Waaia 109 (Brayden Carey 26, Luke Quinn 25, Will Dundon 4-14)

STAR PLAYER

Will Dundon (Mooroopna): Arguably the form bowler of the competition in the past month, quick Dundon was at his brutal best again on Saturday afternoon with a clinical nine-over spell. Hitting his lines and lengths to perfection, he made the key early breakthroughs of Liam Evans and Sam Trower, before coming on again late to clean up the tail and finish with incredible figures of 4-14.