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Good Evans, he's back! Fan favourite returns to Scorchers

Good Evans, he's back! Fan favourite returns to Scorchers

Perth Now19-06-2025
Perth Scorchers championship-winner and fan favourite Laurie Evans is returning to the club after he was pinched from them by Melbourne Renegades last season.
A year after the Renegades snared the English blaster at the Big Bash League's international player draft, Perth brought him back to the club with pick 17 on Thursday afternoon.
Another former Scorcher, English left-arm quick David Payne, will also return to Perth. He was picked up in the final round.
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The Scorchers used pick four to add Finn Allen to their list for the second year of his contract and then passed in the gold round before taking Evans as a silver player.
Evans — who has played 25 matches and scored 653 runs for the Scorchers across the 2021-22 and 2023-24 seasons — was not retained by the Renegades, who instead took Pakistani wicket-keeper Muhammad Rizwan and Hassan Khan.
The 37-year-old has strong relationships with senior Scorchers players and staff, including captain Ashton Turner. He is available for the full season, including finals. Laurie Evans is back in orange. Credit: James Worsfold / Getty Images
'We're incredibly excited to have Laurie back, we missed him last year,' coach Adam Voges said.
'He is a crowd favourite in Perth and performed wonderfully well for us in his time there, so very excited.
'You see with both our picks, with Laurie and with David Payne, both have been with us before, have experienced the success we've had previously and hopefully they can come back and play their roles again and see how we go.'
Pakistani white-ball weapon Shaheen Shah Afridi was taken by Brisbane Heat with the first pick in the draft.
Payne has played six games for the Scorchers, including the qualifier victory against Sydney Sixers which sent Perth through to a home final against Brisbane Heat in 2023.
He played 10 games for Adelaide Strikers in 2023-24, but didn't play at all in last summer's tournament.
The 34-year-old is available for between four and six games and the finals series.
The one-time England international bolsters a pace attack that lost Jason Behrendorff in the off-season. Payne is a new-ball option, who can also bowl key death overs.
It is now likely the Scorchers will use their final remaining domestic list spot on a spinner.
Reigning Laurie Sawle medallist Corey Rocchiccioli, who has previously played for both Melbourne franchises, will become a frontrunner for that role, while Willetton spinner Luke Holt could also be considered.
The Strikers took Luke Wood with pick two to bolster their pace stocks, while Sam Curran landed at Sydney Sixers with their first-round pick.
Teams shied away from picking players who could be in the England squad for the Ashes and neither Jofra Archer or James Anderson were picked up.
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Reports on Thursday linked the NRL's best prop to a change in eligibility, with the Brisbane behemoth set to begin preferencing his Samoan roots over the Kangaroos in future international fixtures. It comes after months of speculation Haas could join the likes of Brian To'o, Stephen Crichton and Jarome Luai as superstar players to have chosen Samoa over Australia in recent years. Under International Rugby League rules, a player eligible for a tier-one nation such as Australia and a tier-two nation such as Samoa can change allegiance provided they do not represent both teams in the same calendar year. Haas's decision would clear him to be available for the post-season Pacific Championships, featuring a mouth-watering clash against Pacific rivals Tonga in Brisbane. The call will also rule Haas out of representing Australia in the first Ashes tour since 2003. The move is a significant boost for Samoa, who underlined their status as a new powerhouse of international rugby league by making the World Cup final in 2022. Having Haas on deck for the 2026 edition of the tournament would strengthen Samoa's case for a first World Cup trophy. "It's fantastic news if you're Samoa, they're setting up for the World Cup," Meninga told SEN. "The attraction for going to Samoa is they believe they will be the first Samoan side to win the World Cup. "If you're wanting to see more competitive games in the international space then it's really good." Samoan representative Tommy Talau said his countrymen would be particularly keen for October's clash with Tonga, who boast Addin Fonua-Blake and Jason Taumalolo in their pack. "All the Samoans that will be at that game will be cheering for him. They'll probably be saying, 'It's about time'," said Manly utility Talau. "If (switching allegiances) is what he's decided to do then that's awesome." The news looms as a blow for new Kangaroos coach Kevin Walters, who had coached Haas during his tenure at Brisbane. On winning the Kangaroos job, Walters had indicated his hopes of convincing Samoa-eligible players such as Haas, Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow and Tino Fa'asuamaleaui to stay put in the Australian set-up. "It's disappointing for the green and gold as he's grown up in our system," said Meninga, who stepped down as Kangaroos coach earlier this year. "(Walters) will be disappointed." Haas represented Australia four times between 2019 and 2023, most recently appearing in the shock loss to New Zealand in the 2023 Pacific Cup final. Outgoing Australia coach Mal Meninga says a call by Payne Haas to defect to Samoa will help make international rugby league more competitive. Reports on Thursday linked the NRL's best prop to a change in eligibility, with the Brisbane behemoth set to begin preferencing his Samoan roots over the Kangaroos in future international fixtures. 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