06/01/2019
Adelaide Strikers v Sydney Sixers
The Strikers are hot favourites here and rightly so. Their main man Rashid Khan has narrowly missed out on a couple of man-of-the-match awards and may be due, says Jamie Pacheco.
Strikers looking a real threat for the title
There's no doubting how impressive the Hobart Hurricanes' start to the season has been but seasoned Big Bash punters may be eyeing up the Adelaide Strikers instead of the Hurricanes. Not just on price but because, quite frankly, the Hurricanes have had it all their own way so far. They've played four out of five in Tasmania and got to chase in each of their last four, which is what they like doing.
In the process of making it three wins from five, the Strikers have played in different conditions, won both chasing and defending, adapted to varied par scores and relied on different players to make key contributions. In other words, they look a more balanced side with more strings to their bow. At 4/1 at the time of writing, they'd be my pick from the winner market if I were to have a bet at this stage.
Last time out it was Jake Weatherald doing the damage with the bat with a brilliantly-paced 71 off 44. But absolutely crucial in turning a par score into a good one was Rashid Khan's 21 off seven balls which meant the Renegades were under more pressure to score quickly which in turn led to wickets.
A tale of two overseas players
The Sixers are three from er...six. That's not bad given they were the outsiders at the start of the tournament but they're not fully convincing.
Their main problem is at the top of the order (see below) and it's crazy that they haven't batted Daniel Hughes in his regular position as an opener. They need to shift him up top from three or four and give him as many balls to face as possible.
That could be at the expense of Joe Denly. It's just not working for the Kent man who has just 61 runs from six knocks so they could either swap places in the batting order or they could be really brave and drop Denly entirely.
It's been a very different story for their other overseas player. Tom Curran has taken 10 wickets at a superb economy rate of 6.42 and added a valuable 111 runs at a very impressive strike rate of 144, the second highest of anyone in the side. He's forcing the selectors to stand up and take note with a T20 World Cup coming up next year.
Odds compilers taking no chances on the Strikers
If you've read the two previous sections, you'll know by now that it's hard to make a case for the Sixers. The Strikers are a better outfit, they're at home and are carrying more momentum.
We'd certainly be wanting bigger than 5/4 about Moises Henriques' men before taking the plunge. If backing favourites who deliver as jollies are your thing then you could do far worse than piling into the Strikers at 8/13. But we don't want to be tipping at that sort of price.
Hughes the stand-out choice for the Sixers
I've already said that I'm not quite sure what the Sixers are thinking by not opening with Daniel Hughes. If they make the change and let him open, that 4/1 will look very big indeed before a ball has even been bowled.
But even if he doesn't, there's plenty to like about him and that price. He's fresh from hitting 61 against the Hurricanes, he's the team's second highest runscorer behind only Jordan Silk and he really doesn't have much to beat with Denly, Henriques and J Avendano so badly out of form.
Silk is a threat at 11/2 but Hughes is likely to bat two places higher than him and that could make all the difference. If Hughes gets in and one other player hangs around with him then Silk may just not have enough deliveries to give him a chance.
Khan has to win it again sooner or later
Rashid Khan has played five matches so far and has one man-of-the-match award to show for his efforts, which he got in his first outing. Had the Strikers won the two they lost, he could easily have got the award in those two as well because he was the Strikers' outstanding player on both occasions. And he could easily have got in the last match too.
His cameo with the bat made a huge difference and alongside his spell of four overs, one wicket and just 18 runs conceded, could have earned him the gong. He also had two very strong LBW decisions turned down. Had one of them been given he would surely have got the nod over Weatherald.