BRISBANE - Queensland proved a pest for Western Australia tonight when it
sent its arch-rival limping into next weekend's one-day cricket final with a
loss at the Gabba.
The Bulls - and the Warriors for that matter - had little to gain from
tonight's contest but Queensland ignored the points table and cruised to a
65-run win in their final preliminary match of the Mercantile Mutual Cup.
With Martin Love (124) and Jimmy Maher (87) stoking the fire, the Bulls
surged to 8-306 from their 50 overs before dismissing the Warriors for 241
in the final over.
The visitors were already assured of hosting next weekend's final before
they walked on to the Gabba but they will need a better showing at home to
defend their title.
They were down and virtually out in the second over after the dinner break
when Ryan Campbell (four) and Simon Katich (zero) fell within three balls.
The small crowd then watched the Bulls end their disappointing season on a
sound note, defusing a century stand from Murray Goodwin (59) and Mike
Hussey (57) to record their third consecutive win.
The Bulls batsmen had hoped to hit one of the eight sponsor's signs around
the boundary to collect a $250,000 jackpot but they at least garnered some
confidence ahead of Sunday's first-class match between the teams.
Love's innings could yet prove lucrative if it pushes the talented
right-hander closer to his first Australian touring berth.
The Ashes trip in four months isn't out of the question if Love continues
the form which delivered his maiden domestic one-day century in front of
national selector Trevor Hohns.
The 26-year-old played a typically calm but effective innings, reaping
plenty of runs from the pull shot he added to his artillery this season.
His 174-run partnership with Maher laid the foundations for the Bulls,
enabling Maher to pass a significant milestone.
The colourful left-hander became just the fourth batsman to reach 2000 runs
in Australian domestic cricket, moving to 2,035 runs behind Matthew Hayden
(2,162), Darren Lehmann (2,130) and Dean Jones (2,122).
The Bulls were well on the way to a big total when Maher was the second
batsman out after skying a catch to Murray Goodwin from the bowling of Brad
Hogg (1-54 from 10 overs).
Kade Harvey (3-47 from 10) and Jo Angel (2-52 from nine) also chipped in but
an expensive three-over stint from Brendon Julian (0-32) did nothing for the
Warriors' cause.
The Warriors were even spared the venom of Australian all-rounder Andrew
Symonds, who was pushed down the batting order in a mysterious reshuffle.
Instead of coming in at 2-178 in the 29th over, Symonds was held back until
the 43rd over with Queensland 4-254.
He added just 10 runs in seven balls while Love completed his 129-ball
knock.
The Bulls were then well-served by returning paceman Joe Dawes (2-29 from
10) and rookie off-spinner Nathan Hauritz (2-56 from 10) as the bowlers
shared the wickets.