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Australian cricketer enters record books with 309 off 140 balls

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“Sometimes in an over I decide, ‘OK I’m going to try to take this guy downtown and hit him out of the park’,” Nero said. “This ball hit the right spot. One of my strengths is the reverse. I’ve built that up over the years, playing that reverse sweep all the time.

“When it went over the boundary for six I was very happy with that. But I was also annoyed I hit the ball in the air, because when you verse the best nations in the world, they’ll most likely catch you.”

Needless to say, after Nero’s innings propelled his side to a total of 541-2 off 40 overs, Australia won the match by a mammoth 269 runs. The host nation leads the series against New Zealand 6-0, with two further ODIs to be played before the series concludes on Friday.

The tournament in Brisbane is the first time since 2019 that all three Australian squads – blind, deaf and intellectual disability – have competed at international level. Due to the disruption of Covid-19, Nero has not represented Australia since 2018 at the ODI World Cup in Dubai.

“It’s been a long time,” he said. “But no matter who we are playing, we always like to put in 100% and put the Australian spirit on show. All we really want to do is play cricket.”

Nero said the secret to his success was a lot of hard work and dedication. “It’s a lot of evenings, weekends, along with university and work it can be quite a lot at time,” he said. “But also the support around me. There have been days when I didn’t want to train but [coach Jason Stubbs] said ‘keep going’ and pushed me through.”

Blind cricket is much like the conventional form of the game, with a few key differences – the ball is plastic and makes a noise when it moves, and the stumps are made of metal to generate more noise when stuck by the ball. Bowling is underarm and the ball must bounce at least twice before it reaches the batter.

ODI matches are 40 overs, which takes not only a physical but also a mental toll on visually impaired players, Nero said.

“I imagine it’s a big mental strain concentrating for any fully sighted person for that length of time,” he said. “But with vision impairment we have to expend a lot more energy to concentrate, especially if the ball is moving around and the glare, it’s really hard.”

Nevertheless, after his impressive innings, Nero went on to keep wicket and promptly completed five run outs.

“It’s been a whirlwind but a fantastic experience,” he said.





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