Sangha and Carey tons hand South Australia first Shield title in 29 years

Carey made 105 while Sangha finished 126 not out as they produced the highest fourth innings chase in final history after coming together at 28 for 3

Alex Malcolm29-Mar-2025

Jason Sangha and Ben Manenti embrace as the Shield is secured•Getty Images

Stunning centuries from Alex Carey and Jason Sangha have helped deliver South Australia their first Sheffield Shield title in 29 years after they beat Queensland by four wickets at Karen Rolton Oval.The pair produced a brilliant rearguard 202-run stand to help the hosts run down the highest fourth innings chase in Shield final history, 270, on the fourth afternoon with Sangha finishing unbeaten on 126 while Carey was dismissed for 105 with 40 runs still required. Carey’s innings was a masterclass in rotating the strike under pressure. His 105 came off just 132 balls with only nine fours and a six.Sangha found the boundary freely at the other end striking 16 fours and two sixes in his 126 not out from 192. When he hit the winning runs it sparked wild celebrations that were reminiscent of 1996 as most of the 4000-strong crowd, the biggest at a Shield game in decades, stormed onto the field to celebrate as Sangha charged towards the rooms.Related

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Brendan Doggett was named player of the match for his 11-wicket haul, finishing with the best match figures in Shield final history. The title also means South Australia, under first-year captain Nathan McSweeney and coach Ryan Harris, claimed the Shield and One-Day Cup double for the first time in the state’s history.South Australia’s drought looked like it might extend to three decades when the home side slumped to 28 for 3 in the morning on the back of some exceptional new ball bowling from Mark Steketee and Michael Neser.It should have been 37 for 4 when Sangha indecisively tried to play and then leave another probing delivery from Steketee. He didn’t get his bat out of the way in time and the edge flew low to Usman Khawaja’s right at first slip. Ben McDermott dived full length from second slip with the left hand infront of Khawaja but could not hang on.