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Oliver Caffrey

WA into third straight Shield final, Vics shattered

WA spinner Corey Rocchiccioli (2-26) tore through the Victorian lower order to be on a hat-trick. (Morgan Hancock/AAP PHOTOS)

Western Australia have booked a third straight home Sheffield Shield final after defeating a wounded Victoria and leapfrogging Tasmania to top spot on the ladder.

The dual defending champions needed everything to go right in their last regular-season game to keep alive their hopes of a Shield three-peat.

WA rose to the challenge, defeating the Vics by 138 runs in a virtual elimination final at the Junction Oval in Melbourne.

Set 269 to win, the Vics were skittled for 130 late on a rain-affected day three of the match.

WA finished the campaign on 47.93 points, pipping Tasmania (47.36) in a nail-biting final round.

Victoria never looked like pulling off the unlikely run chase on a difficult pitch, stumbling to 3-31 with their three most experienced batters - Nic Maddinson, Marcus Harris and Peter Handscomb - already dismissed.

Campbell Kellaway
Victoria's Campbell Kellaway plays a shot on his way to top-scoring against Western Australia.

Young left-hander Campbell Kellaway showed why he has a bright future, hitting 53 from 136 balls for his fifth first-class half-century.

After coming in at No.3, Kellaway survived the carnage around him as WA's bowlers worked in tandem to complete the match on Wednesday.

Spinner Corey Rocchiccioli (2-26) tore through the lower order to be on a hat-trick after dismissing Fergus O'Neill and Todd Murphy in consecutive balls.

Liam Haskett (3-12) finished with the best figures of his first-class career and ended the match after Kellaway was caught going for a slog pull shot.

Liam Haskett (centre)
WA teammates rush to congratulate Liam Haskett (centre) after the wicket of Campbell Kellaway.

Victoria captain Will Sutherland almost broke down when describing the pain of the defeat.

"Our batting let us down ... the boys ran out of steam a little bit with the ball," he said.

"We're still a young group, but I think this one does hurt quite a bit ... almost hurts more than making the final and losing, I don't know why."

Sutherland (back), Test quick Scott Boland (knee) and O'Neill (illness) all struggled through the match.

WA will host the five-day final against Tasmania at the WACA Ground, starting on March 21, after the Tigers blew a golden opportunity to ensure the decider was played in Hobart.

Tasmania started the round in the box seat to secure a home final, only needing to defeat South Australia at Blundstone Arena to lock it in.

But the Tigers suffered a shock 134-run loss - just their second defeat of the season - against the Redbacks to consign them to a trip to Perth.

WA are aiming to become just the third team this century, after Queensland (2000-02) and Victoria (2015-17), to win three straight Shield titles.

"The pleasing thing about this group is there's no real talk about three in a row," WA captain Sam Whiteman said.

"It's just about winning this year, and we've found this year that Shields are so hard to win, a lot of things need to go your way." 

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