David Warner walks out to bat for the final time in Test cricket.Credit:Dion Georgopoulos
Randwick Cricket Club had already produced Test opener Alan Turner,another Matraville boy,and Whitney added a deeper cricket flavour to a suburb that was better known for league and union players. Whitney grew up a few hundred yards from the Warners and favoured the myrtle and cardinal of the South Sydney Rabbitohs,but the sliding doors event of a knee injury sent him cricket’s way and eventually into the hall of fame.
Dyson was a Sutherland Shire boy originally and T20 wasn’t invented when he faced the new ball. His near 10,000 first-class runs were made at a somewhat slower tempo than Warner’s;preserving your wicket at a premium in that day of slim-edged bats,rare helmet use and fast bowlers who were happy to challenge a batsman’s back-foot technique.
So back to the Warner return to club cricket. Steve Smith and Dave were to serve their suspensions for the ball-tampering affair by returning to the grassroots:Smith at Sutherland and Warner at Randwick. To their eternal credit,they embraced the club scene.