The National Performance Squad , also known as the Australia National Performance Squad , is a cricket team established by Cricket Australia in 2014 to give experience for young Australian state contracted players in international List A cricket . Since 2016 the squad has played no List A matches, but has concentrated on its winter training program which runs from May to August.
7-1086: In February 2014, 22 players aged between 18 and 23 were selected to undertake training at the National Cricket Centre in Brisbane during the Australian winter, when the weather in southern Queensland is generally mild and dry. Some of the squad also played club cricket in England and Sri Lanka. Seventeen of the players later represented the National Performance Squad in the quadrangular List A tournament in Darwin in July and August 2014, competing against Australia A , India A and South Africa A . The National Performance Squad played seven matches, winning one (against Australia A by 52 runs) and losing six. The most successful batsman
14-727: The Allan Border Field in Brisbane , Queensland in 2004 and renamed the " Commonwealth Bank Centre of Excellence ". It was designed to be a finishing school for leading young cricketers and is a program within the AIS. It was for some time known as the Commonwealth Bank Cricket Academy as part of a sponsorship arrangement with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia . The current manager is
21-862: The Australian Test team . In 2017, 18 players were selected to train in Australia over winter, along with a visit to India. There were no List A matches. National Cricket Centre in Brisbane The Australian Cricket Academy was founded in 1987 as a joint initiative of the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) and the Australian Cricket Board (ACB). It was initially located at Henley Beach in Adelaide before moving to
28-419: The first two – against South Africa A by 17 runs and against Australia A by 12 runs – and losing the last four. One other match was not played owing to rain. The most successful batsman was Sam Heazlett , who scored 289 runs at an average of 72.25, including the only century, 101 in the victory over South Africa A. The most successful bowler was Tom O'Donnell , who took 6 wickets at an average of 20.16, including
35-504: The side's best figures, 4 for 28 in the second match against India A, when only four wickets fell. Abbott captained the side to victory in the first two matches before an ankle injury forced him out of the tournament. Short was the captain for the last four matches. Neser also played one match for Australia A in the tournament. In the 2016-17 season that followed, Renshaw and Cartwright played their first Tests , Heazlett played his first One Day International , and Swepson toured India with
42-771: The tournament. In 2015, 13 players trained in Australia over winter, and four others played club cricket in England. There were no List A matches. In 2016, as well as spending three months at the National Cricket Centre in Brisbane, the squad visited India and Sri Lanka. The main part of the squad's off-season was participation in the international quadrangular List A tournament, held in Townsville and Mackay in August and September, when they once again competed against Australia A, India A and South Africa. The National Performance Squad played six matches, winning
49-447: Was Travis Head , who scored 258 runs at an average of 43.00, including the only century, 108 in the second match against South Africa A. The most successful bowler was Sean Abbott , who took 11 wickets at an average of 16.90, including the side's best figures, 4 for 36 in the first match against South Africa A. Silk and Keath each captained the side in three matches, Turner in one match. Sandhu also played three matches for Australia A in
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