Otago Volts toiled hard throughout the Ford Trophy only to be torched by an Auckland Aces outfit that kinda lived up to all Auckland sporting stereotypes. Adding a layer of funk to this for the Volts is that last summer, the Volts finished 1st on the Ford Trophy ladder only to lose to Wellington Firebirds in the final. This summer, the Volts finished 3rd and defeated Canterbury in the elimination final to then face 1st-placed Auckland in the final. Two solid Ford Trophy campaigns, only to fall short in the final ... twice.
This compounds in relevance considering where the Volts have come from and cracking the Ford Trophy final two years in a row, after finishing last (6th) for two Ford Trophy tournaments in a row is a complete flip for Otago cricket. The Volts have also struggled in the Plunket Shield, finishing 6th in 2015/16 and 2016/17 before finishing 5th in 2017/18, then sliding back down to 6th in 2018/19. Right now, prior to the Plunket Shield's second stanza this summer, the Volts sit in 5th.
It doesn't take much to fall off the pace in domestic cricket and the difference between a solid summer and crappy summer can simply be too much success. Producing one or two Blackcaps who impress and graduate from domestic cricket to steady Blackcaps duty can alter the entire course of a summer, let alone all and any other variables.
Northern Districts Knights have previously done a great job of competing at a high level via their production line of talent, enabling them to absorb the ins/outs of their Blackcaps army. This summer though, the Knights sit 6th in the Plunket Shield and finished 5th and 6th in the Ford Trophy and Super Smash respectively. I use this as an example of how volatile things can be in domestic cricket the circuit is a unique beast, heavily impacted by what's going on around it.
The Volts enjoyed notable contributions from some key blokes and the level of these contributions, along with who offered these contributions could be reason to pay far more attention to what is happening in the deep south. This immediately has me skewed towards the younger lads in the Volts set up, making it important at this point to highlight that Otago's leading run-scorer in the Ford Trophy last summer was Hamish Rutherford and this summer it was Neil Broom.
Broom and Rutherford, along with experienced troopers such as Anaru Kitchen form the foundation of Otago cricket right now. Then we have a younger bunch of cricketers, some of whom are products of the Volts development pathways and some are blatant examples of nifty recruitment.
Last summer's Ford Trophy saw Jacob Duffy finish 2nd in wickets behind Hamish Bennett, one of three bowlers to take 20+ wickets in the competition. Duffy took 25w @ 19.40avg/4.83rpo and this summer, Duffy again finished 2nd in wickets with 21w @ 19.19avg/4.85rpo and was only joined by Auckland's Ben Lister in taking 20+ wickets.