As it happened: Mitch Owen’s stunning 39-ball 100 breaks Hobart’s BBL drought

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As it happened: Mitch Owen’s stunning 39-ball 100 breaks Hobart’s BBL drought

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Report: Owen’s masterclass delivers Hurricanes first title

By AAP

An inspired Mitchell Owen has produced the innings of his career, thrashing a mighty century to rout the Sydney Thunder and deliver the Hobart Hurricanes a maiden Big Bash League title.

Owen struck 108 in 42 balls, including the competition’s equal-fastest century on Monday night as the Hurricanes delighted a capacity crowd at Bellerive Oval.

Set 183 to win, Hobart reached the total with 35 balls to spare, with Matthew Wade (32 off 17) also superb late on.

While Ben McDermott struck the winning runs with a ramp over the wicketkeeper, sparking purple fireworks in the Tasmanian capital, there was no doubting the night belonged to Owen.

The Thunder came into the final as underdogs and were sent in after losing the toss, but had every right to be pleased with their tally of 7-182, powered by a 97-run opening stand between Jason Sangha and David Warner.

That was, until Hobart’s hometown hero began fireworks of his own.

Owen raised his bat for a half-century in just the fourth over, powering on with 11 sixes - a BBL final record - and six fours as he reached triple figures.

Mitch Owen celebrates his hundred.

Mitch Owen celebrates his hundred.Credit: Getty Images

Wes Agar went for particular punishment, three sixes in four balls in an early sign of intent.

The innings also confirmed Owen’s place as this BBL’s leading run-scorer, the unheralded 23-year-old overtaking Warner mid-way through his huge score.

Owen had a chance to strike the fastest outright century in BBL history, only for a boundary to fall just short of the rope.

Instead, he tied Craig Simmons’ 39-ball century from 2014, winning plaudits from his teammates.

“That was next level hitting that made it pretty easy for us at the end,” Wade said.

The state’s favourite son Ricky Ponting, also the team’s head of strategy, called Hobart’s achievement “astronomical”.

“Take a bow you boys in purple,” the former Test captain said in commentary.

Riley Meredith celebrates a Hurricanes wicket.

Riley Meredith celebrates a Hurricanes wicket.Credit: Getty Images

The Thunder were sent in by Ellis, with opening pair Sangha and Warner making it look easy early.

Both looked set to notch half-centuries but Warner fell in the 11th over as Nathan Ellis arrested the Thunder’s innings with two wickets in two balls, falling agonisingly short of a hat-trick.

Warner edged a slog to Matthew Wade, who caught well, before Matthew Gilkes lowered his colours a ball later, dangling his bat and playing on for a golden duck.

Ellis was just metres short of a triple, with Sam Billings prodding at a ball which landed just shy of Tim David at mid-off.

The Hurricanes captain was superb, conceding not a single boundary on his way to 3-23, with Riley Meredith also sharp with 3-27 including two 19th over wickets in a late innings squeeze.

It was impossible to wipe the smile off Meredith, another Tasmanian, as celebrations began.

“I’ve been a fan of the Hurricanes since BBL1,” he said.

Hobart’s success, in the 14th edition of the revamped domestic T20 competition, leaves the Melbourne Stars as the only side without a title.

After an opening-round loss, the Canes won seven straight to claim the minor premiership, before two final victories at home to lift the trophy.

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Meanwhile, Matthew Wade and Ben McDermott are cruising. Sam Billings and Wade with a bit of tongue-fu, Billings trying to get under his skin.

Wade happy to knock off these last few runs on the way to Hobart’s first BBL title. Pumps Wes Agar for six - the 12th of the innings. Follows up with four more through cover.

And there it is, Ben McDermott hits one last boundary from Nathan McAndrew and the Hurricanes cruise to their first BBL title with time and a half to spare (35 balls no less) thanks to Mitch Owen’s 39-ball hundred.

Happy days for the Hurricanes.

Happy days for the Hurricanes.Credit: Getty Images

KFC at 20 paces: High praise from Craig Simmons

Craig Simmons, always watching.

Hobart Hurricanes: 3-152 after 12 overs, need another 31 runs from 48 balls.

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Wicket: Owen falls for 108

All good things… Mitch Owen goes after 42 balls, 11 sixes, six boundaries and 108 runs at a strike-rate of 257. Hits Tom Andrew straight up in the air and he’s easily caught by the sub fielder.

Hobart cantering toward their first-ever BBL title as a result. Absolutely incredible hitting from a man who was nowhere near anyone’s radar until the start of this summer.

Hobart Hurricanes: 3-144 after 11 overs, need another 39 runs from 54 balls.

100: Owen equals BBL’s fastest ton

Slightly slower going now as McDermott works his way into the contest. Nine from the last two overs of spin. Tanveer Sangha again with Owen on 88 from 35 balls. Make that 94 from 36.

Hammers Sangha’s first ball over the mid-wicket boundary. Bottom of the bat, but it still flew 96 metres for his 10th sixth of the innings.

Outside off, thick edge that balloons, but falls short, of short third man.

Thirty-eighth ball, Owen’s pumps it flat and hard to mid-wicket, four runs. Gets two from the next ball and equals the fastest-ever hundred in BBL history. Next ball, humongous six over mid-wicket, again.

Hobart Hurricanes: 2-138 after 10 overs, need another 45 runs from 60 balls.

Wickets: Sangha takes two scalps in quick time

Owen finishes Chris Green’s over with yet another six and now we’re genuinely looking at the fastest century in BBL history.

Perth Scorchers Craig Simmons holds the record with a 39-ball ton in 2014, Owen is closing fast with 85 from 32. A couple of dot balls from Green calms the madness, briefly.

Caleb Jewell goes, 13 from 12 as he pulls Tanveer Sangha straight to Dave Warner at mid-wicket. Sharp catch. Nikhil Chaudhary gets promoted up the order to No.3. He doesn’t last long though, sweeps but can only top edge to the man at short fine leg. Nathan McAndrew takes the catch.

Ben McDermott goes in ahead of Matthew Wade, just two from the over.

Hobart Hurricanes: 1-111 after eight overs, need another 72 runs from 72 balls.

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Owen crashes BBL’s third-fastest 50

There’s no stopping him, Mitch Owen rattles up the equal third-fastest 50 in BBL history. Easily the fastest in a BBL final - Kevin Pietersen held the previous record from 25 balls.

Owen just eating Nathan McAndrew for breakfast. A boundary sliced over a short third man to bring up his half-century, next ball hammered over cover for six.

There was a dropped catch in there too at cover, Gilkes letting Caleb Jewel off the hook. Owen then smacks his seventh six of the night, flat and hard over mid-wicket, George Garton leaping but can’t stop it. Jewell with a gentleman’s seven from seven balls as Tanveer Sangha enters the attack.

Owen duly slog sweeps him for six as well down past fine leg. Poor bowling, and then Jewell joins the fun, hits a boundary through cover. Hobart crowd going bananas - ‘MITCH-ELL OW-EN’ the chant going around the joint now.

Hobart Hurricanes: 0-98 after six overs, need another 85 runs from 84 balls.

Six: Owen thrashes 47 from 14 balls

Mitch Owen. My oh my. He launches Tom McAndrew as easy as you like, an 88-metre six over mid-wicket. Poor bowling from McAndrew as he drops another one short. Owen obliges by thumping it again in the same region for four more. Didn’t middle it. Didn’t matter.

Seventeen from that over too. Carnage. Wes Agar into the attack… not exactly the most economical bowler in the BBL. Owen takes him over mid-wicket first ball, another six and the cleanest one yet. Fifty up as Owen sends two more over the rope from Agar. All too easy, it’s right in his hitting zone. Both over mid-wicket and then another boundary over cover.

Hobart Hurricanes: 0-62 after 3 overs, need another 121 runs from 102 balls.

Hurricanes take 23 from first over in chase

The Hurricanes batters are in the middle and ready to go. Mitch Owen the one to watch at the top of the order here. He’s been fantastic all summer. Strikes at 220 across the four-over power play. Caleb Jewell at the other end, and if Hobart pulls this off, it will be the highest successful run chase in the BBL.

Nathan McAndrew with the new ball. And he sprays it down leg for five wides to start the innings. Not ideal. Four more via leg byes as McAndrew and Sam Billings appeal for LBW. No chance, and it races to the boundary after swinging down leg.

Owen then thrashes six over mid-wicket, all too easy. And then a bit more luck, French cut through fine leg for four too. Owen then finishes with a thumping boundary over cover. Twenty-three from the first over.

Hobart Hurricanes: 0-23 after one over, need another 160 runs in 114 balls.

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