The 40-year-old has interesting and fresh views on how the game should be played, as well as what the structure of the domestic season should look like.
“Obviously they don’t have as much power and speed as the male athlete does,” Thornely said. “The keeper is often up at the stumps a lot, so that instantly got me thinking around the tactics of the game. Once I started to discuss and talk to a few players it gravitated me to their format of cricket … and it was a real eye-opener. It was like reinventing my knowledge of cricket.
“It’s like a young kid getting a new toy. My whole life has been cricket and I was blessed to have had a successful career with NSW and then to open the door to a new element of cricket really has been rejuvenating for me.”
Thornely says shifting the WBBL earlier in the year was a smart decision by Cricket Australia because it extends the summer for fans. One day, he would love to see a complete separation between the WBBL and BBL, as well as a full home-and-away competition structure against every state in the WNCL.
Last year the Breakers trained for 36 weeks straight and only played seven proper games of 50-over cricket, something Thornely described as “extraordinary”.
“We’re seeing a shift where international programs do interfere with WNCL a lot and the amount of cricket our Cricket Australia contracted players will play will reduce from now on because of the hectic schedule,” Thornely said. “I went through the same experience with the male program when we had CA players playing more cricket to now where they get the odd game. I think that is where it will eventually end up and it has to.”
NSW have won 13 of the last 14 WNCL titles but won’t have star Ellyse Perry on their side this season. The 28-year-old has decided to play state cricket for Victoria next year so she can be closer to husband Matt Toomua, who plays rugby for the Melbourne Rebels.
“She’s irreplaceable,” said Thornely of Perry. “Ellyse is a player 10 years ahead of her generation. Michael Bevan, Dean Jones, Adam Gilchrist and Ellyse Perry; they’re the kind of players who were ahead of time. She’s an absolute superstar player and terrific individual.”