The Australia allrounder talks about grabbing opportunity when it comes her way

Andrew McGlashan18-Sep-2024Annabel Sutherland has long been marked out as a key part of Australia’s future. It now feels that her time has come.Last year in South Africa she played one match at the T20 World Cup; it would be a significant surprise if her role was as limited this time in the UAE.Sutherland, who will be in action this week against New Zealand during Australia’s final preparation for the World Cup, enters the tournament on the back of a Player-of-the-Tournament display in the Hundred for Northern Superchargers, where she scored 212 runs at a strike rate of 137.66 and claimed ten wickets with a remarkable economy of 4.53. That output came after a maiden Test hundred in last year’s Ashes and a stunning double-century against South Africa in Perth in February.Related

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While those Test hundreds may not be immediately relevant to a T20 campaign, they put on show Sutherland’s class with the bat, which hasn’t often been given a chance to flourish in an Australia batting order so full of world-class players that opportunity, even when you’re in the XI, can be hard to come by.In T20Is, Sutherland’s highest score remains the 22 off 11 balls she made on debut as an 18-year-old against England in 2020, which helped earn Australia a Super Over in a tri-series held ahead of that year’s T20 World Cup. In 31 T20Is, she has only batted 12 times, and it was not until January 2023 that she bowled a full four overs; in ODIs she has got to the crease in just over half her matches, although last year took the chance provided by opening, with a maiden hundred against Ireland.”[There’s] elements of frustration, definitely, but I think that’s a good thing at the same time,” Sutherland says. “If you are a youngster coming through and you aren’t frustrated or wanting to get a crack up the order or bowl more, then you are doing something wrong.Make mine a double: Sutherland followed up her first hundred, in her third Test, with 210 in her fifth, against South Africa in Perth•Getty Images and Cricket Australia”I’ve definitely felt that at times, probably pestered [head coach] Shelly [Nitschke] a little bit too much about what opportunities I can get. But you look at that top order and, who do you come in for? It’s pretty stacked. There are stars all through the line-up and someone performs more often than not, which is the strength of our team – the depth we’ve got, right down to ten and sometimes 11.”It’s part of it as a young player coming through and you can build a fair bit of resilience. I’ve run drinks for a fair share of games and understand it’s a little bit about earning your stripes. It’s important to take an opportunity when it comes, too. You can easily build up the expectation on yourself, and sometimes you’ve just got to let it play out and believe you’ve done the work.”At last year’s WPL auction, Sutherland fetched the joint-highest price of A$364,000 (Rs 2 crore) when the hammer came down in favour of Delhi Capitals. But she would only play four matches in the competition.”It can be a different world at times over there,” she says. “To be honest, I didn’t think too much about the price you go for. You try to keep that out of your mind, it’s just another cricket game. Probably didn’t get the opportunities I was hoping for but trying to fit four internationals into a side when you have six sitting there – any one of us could have played a role.”