Matches (25)
BAN vs SA (1)
WBBL (1)
Super50 (2)
IND Women vs NZ Women (1)
WCL 2 (1)
Ranji Trophy (16)
Ranji Trophy Plate (3)
News

Tim Paine working through 'deep challenges' - Tasmania coach

Although out for two low scores he came through his return to play

AAP
25-Nov-2021
Tim Paine celebrates his second first-class century, Western Australia v Tasmania, Day 3, Sheffield Shield, Round 1, October 12, 2019

Tim Paine will play a one-day game before heading into the Australia camp (file photo)  •  Getty Images

The priority of Tasmania coach Ali de Winter has been Tim Paine's welfare as he prepares to help the wicketkeeper take another significant step towards the first Ashes Test.
Paine, who underwent neck surgery in September, will bat at No. 3 on Friday while playing his first game for Tasmania since April. The one-dayer against Western Australia in Hobart comes after a low-key return for Tasmania's 2nd XI at Lindisfarne Oval, where Paine was out for 1 and 7.
The one-day game will also mark one week since Paine tearfully resigned as Australia's Test skipper amid revelations of an explicit text-message episode in 2017.
De Winter, the state's interim head coach, can't wait to welcome Paine back but noted cricket has not been the focus of recent conversations with the disgraced wicketkeeper.
"I've known Tim since he was 13 years old, [it's about] making sure that he's okay in all of this," de Winter told reporters in Hobart. "His own health through this is first and foremost.
"He's obviously having some deep challenges but I think having good people around him and his cricket mates is the best tonic he can have, aside from his family. He's got that ability to just have a fine focus and keep things externally out that can affect his cricket. He's been very good at doing that.
"That would have been the biggest challenge I sense, for him to be able to shut that out knowing the spotlight was on."
De Winter added the support for Paine throughout Tasmania's squad had been "overwhelming".
"We're rallying around in strong support of Tim because we know people are fallible," he said. "People make mistakes. We also know deep down the kind of person Tim Paine is."
Paine finished this week's four-day match with nine catches but, far more importantly, navigated his return without any obvious setback.
"He's managed himself through this game quite well. He's a little bit heavy in the legs, having had a couple of days in the field," de Winter said. But that was the expectation."