MacGill in line for comeback

MacGill in line for comeback

19.05.2008
AFTER an aborted attempt six months ago, Stuart MacGill finally appears set to emerge from the shadow of Shane Warne for one final fling in Test cricket.

A seven-wicket match haul in Australia`s opening game of their West Indies tour confirmed the 37-year-old leg spinner was over the wrist and knee injuries that threatened to end his career during the summer, and poised to wreak havoc during an expected one-sided three-match series beginning Thursday at Sabina Park.

"I thought he was great, I thought Stuey just got better and better as the game went on," said coach Tim Nielsen after MacGill added figures of 3-50 to his four-wicket haul from the first innings of Australia`s rain-shortened three-day match against Jamaica XI.

"It showed with a bit of work in match conditions that he is headed in the right direction, and that is fantastic for us."

MacGill finished with a match haul of 7-129 to be the pick of the Australian bowlers on a slow wicket.

But as good as his figures were at the Trelawny Multi-Purpose Stadium, it was more the manner of his dismissals that most pleased Nielsen, with MacGill clean bowling two left-handed batsmen with vicious turning leg breaks.

With several left-handers in the Windies top order - and the Sabina Park wicket usually conducive to sharp turn - it was a promising sign for 42-Test veteran, who only six months ago had many questioning whether he would ever return to the national team after undergoing wrist surgery to correct carpal tunnel syndrome.

That surgery followed a poor, injury-hampered, performance in Australia`s two-Test series against Sri Lanka in November - Australia`s first series since the retirement of Warne.

But with the retirement of chinaman bowler Brad Hogg in March, MacGill is again the clear spin candidate for the Australian team, and appears set to make the most of finally being rated No.1 after more than a decade playing second fiddle to Warne.

Every match of Australia`s tour of the Caribbean will be screened LIVE and EXCLUSIVE on Fox Sports.



AAP

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Yes Sarah - we are paid by basking in their reflected glory when they win gold. These "divers" sound like they had a plan to scam!

Posted by: Janet of Coffs Harbour 8:00am today

These guys need to be held accountable for their utter stupidity - or worse, their cunning plan to make a few quick bucks. With the amount of dives and experience they should`ve known way better! Do not hold the dive boat responsible - these people need to be responsible for their own actions and disobeying the rules set in place to prevent this scenario from occurring. They shouldn`t have to pay specifically for their rescue, as it makes for good training, however they should have to donate a substantial amount to the volunteer marine services or similar that operate in the area. Stupid, stupid people!

Posted by: KC of Whitsundays 7:58am today

For all those saying that the rescuers risked their lives, and the divers should pay. I hope next time you need an ambulance to take you to the hospital you are slugged for every dollar that it costs them. The rescuers get paid to do their job what ever the risks are. This is just a money grab by the labor government.

Posted by: voter of syd 7:58am today
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  • Divers rescued after 19 hours lost at sea
  • Tabloids bidding for story and pictures
  • Calls for couple to pay back cost of rescue

AN international bidding war has broken out, offering Richard Neely and his partner Allyson Dalton as much as $250,000 for interviews and pictures of their survival against the odds, as fellow divers cast doubt on their story.

Authorities have called on the couple to pay back some of the estimated $100,000 cost of their rescue operation.

A massive air-and-sea search involving seven helicopters, three planes and a flotilla of boats was used to find the divers, who spent 19 hours lost at sea.

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh suggested the couple could make a contribution to their rescue costs: "If they are going to profit from their story I don`t think a contribution would go astray."

Rules broken

Mr Neely, a dive instructor and Ms Dalton, a dive master,  have been accused of deliberately flouting an onboard dive briefing which may have resulted in them spending 19 hours adrift in shark-infested waters.

Mr Neely, 38, and Ms Dalton, 40, both with 2000-plus underwater dives, tied themselves together and filmed each other waving desperately to rescuers.

The couple miraculously survived being swept 15km out to sea after surfacing at the wrong spot 200m away from the dive boat Pacific Star following a dive at Bait Reef, near Hayman Island in the Whitsundays, about 2.30pm on Friday.

Snakes and sharks

In a paid interview with the UK`s Sunday Mirror, Mr Neely and Ms Dalton told how they came face-to-face with venomous sea snakes during their ordeal.

Mr Neeley said: "I truly thought we were going to die. Sharks were on our mind the entire time - but neither of us mentioned the `S` word. We just had to stay positive and calm to help each other through the ordeal.

"We were shouting and whistling but nobody saw us. We saw other divers climbing back on to the boat. The boat stayed where it was, on a mooring, but we just kept drifting further away. There was nothing we could do."

Both divers - with the only visible signs of their ordeal red chaffing on their necks from wetsuits - stayed bunkered down in a friend`s Townsville home last night and declined to speak to the media.

They have retained the services of publicist Max Markson.

Couple `upset`

Friend Danielle Scott-Flanders, speaking on behalf of the couple recuperating in her home, said they had been upset by reports "they did anything wrong".

But fresh evidence indicates the buddy pair ignored strict briefing rules to immediately surface if they left the dive site - in a protected reef known as Paradise Lagoon - and got caught in strong current on the outer reef wall.

Another passenger onboard the Pacific Star has cast doubt over the couple`s version of events, saying it was unlikely the couple surfaced anywhere near the boat before being washed away and that they had been dismissive of safety instructions prior to the dive.

Matt Cawkwell, one of 18 tourists aboard the dive boat, told The Australian it was unlikely the couple could have surfaced 200m from the vessel as claimed and not been seen.

"There were about 22 people standing on the roof looking for them," he said.

"There were at least four pairs of binoculars, and it wasn`t that rough. There`s no way they came up near the boat or still in the lagoon."

Diver`s boasts

Mr Cawkwell said Mr Neely had boasted to other tourists on the three-day, three-night diving charter about his experience, and had insisted on diving alone with Ms Dalton, not four other people as had been reported.

Mr Cawkwell also told The Australian he heard Ms Dalton pressuring her partner to take their third dive of the day, even though conditions were getting worse.

"There were things he wanted to do and nothing was going to stop him. He was told to stay in the lagoon, but there`s no way he could have done that and got lost. The other four divers came back when the currents started to pick up, but you got the impression he thought he knew better."

The incident is the second time Mr Neely has been lost at sea, once spending eight hours in the water off Thailand after the boat he was on sank. He also survived the Boxing Day tsunami.

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Today`s Top Picks

Peak of success

TWO Sydney women have reached the summit of Mt Everest, making history as the first mother-daughter team to conquer the mountain.



Font size: +-

Send this article:PrintEmail

Have Your Say

Latest Comments:

Yes Sarah - we are paid by basking in their reflected glory when they win gold. These "divers" sound like they had a plan to scam!

Posted by: Janet of Coffs Harbour 8:00am today

These guys need to be held accountable for their utter stupidity - or worse, their cunning plan to make a few quick bucks. With the amount of dives and experience they should`ve known way better! Do not hold the dive boat responsible - these people need to be responsible for their own actions and disobeying the rules set in place to prevent this scenario from occurring. They shouldn`t have to pay specifically for their rescue, as it makes for good training, however they should have to donate a substantial amount to the volunteer marine services or similar that operate in the area. Stupid, stupid people!

Posted by: KC of Whitsundays 7:58am today

For all those saying that the rescuers risked their lives, and the divers should pay. I hope next time you need an ambulance to take you to the hospital you are slugged for every dollar that it costs them. The rescuers get paid to do their job what ever the risks are. This is just a money grab by the labor government.

Posted by: voter of syd 7:58am today
Read all 38 comments

We welcome your comments on this story. Comments are submitted for possible publication on the condition that they may be edited. Please provide your full name. We also require a working email address - not for publication, but for verification. The location field is optional.Read our publication guidelines.

Submit your feedback here:

(So you don`t have to retype your details each timeyou send feedback.)

Video

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NAB Investment Loan.Limited time discounted rate on fixed interest only options.
 
Overflowing with benefitsExperience life the Platinum Way With American Express Platinum
 
Online Auctions Online auctions on a range of big brands. Bid Now! Dontmissout.com.au
 
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