Paceman Jhye Richardson has targeted a Test recall after returning career-best one-day figures as WA strolled to a nine-wicket win after dismissing NSW for 76, their lowest-ever limited-overs score.

WA cruised to a bonus-point victory at the WACA, reaching their modest target with a whopping 33 overs to go in a rematch of last year's final.

The Warriors also won that, and Saturday's comfortable victory moved them to within a point of early pacesetters Tasmania.

NSW, who were dismissed in 21.4 overs, have lost both of their games.

Richardson finished with 4-24 off eight overs in his first local hitout of the season after recovering from hamstring soreness.

"The work you have to put in to get back from a couple of niggles is always pretty tedious and things don't always go your way," he said.

"So to see the ball swinging as much as it was, was really exciting."

The 26-year-old, who has represented Australia in all three formats, has missed out on selection for the T20 squad for this month's World Cup.

His international priority now is Test cricket, having played three times in that format, including taking 5-42 against England in the second innings of his most recent appearance, in Adelaide last December.

"Getting back to Test cricket is quite reasonable and reachable," Richardson said.

"That would be the major goal for me this season - to put some performances on the board in Shield cricket and play Test cricket again."

Blues captain Kurtis Patterson opted to bat first in Perth, but must have been ruing his decision after NSW slumped to 6-20 in the ninth over.

Richardson and new ball partner Jason Behrendorff (3-17 of seven) wrecked the Blues innings, each taking three wickets in that period.

Three Blues batters were dismissed for a duck, and 12 of their first 20 runs came from extras.

A seventh-wicket stand of 38 between Australian short-form representatives Daniel Sams (26 off 31 balls) and Sean Abbott (12 off 20) spared NSW from total embarrassment.

However, the last four wickets added just 18, leaving NSW 16 runs shy of their previous lowest one-day score of 92 back in 1972/73.

The innings hit the skids when NSW lost 3-0 in 10 balls with the carnage starting in the third over when Richardson bowled Patterson (4) and Matthew Gilkes (0).

Behrendorff chimed in by claiming a wicket in three successive overs.

Opener Josh Philippe, who scored a century in last weekend's win over Victoria, paced the WA chase, with 37 not out against a NSW attack which struggled to find line or length.

The two teams square off again in a Sheffield Shield match starting at the WACA on Monday.

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Parramatta five-eighth Dylan Brown has pledged to right the wrongs from his team's qualifying final loss to Penrith when the western Sydney rivals meet again in Sunday's grand final.

Brown couldn't make his mark in that defeat by the Panthers, who ran away with the contest once Brown's halves partner Mitchell Moses left the field concussed after an hour.

Known for his dynamic running game, Brown finished the 27-8 loss with only 49 metres to his name and exerted limited influence on the contest with the boot.

But Brown has lifted his game in the two weeks since, and was especially potent in the semi-final demolition of Canberra, where he set a new personal-best record for running metres in a game (321).

When the Eels meet the Panthers in their first grand final appearance since 2009, Brown will go looking for the footy more than he did the last time the sides met.

"You can't not be in the game, especially in the position I'm in. I'm not a winger," Brrown told AAP.

"I've got to put myself in the game and I've got to put others in the game as well. If that left edge is on, I'm usually playing well, and if they're not on, it's usually my fault.

"I've got to get them the ball and make sure it's quality."

The last time the Eels played in the grand final, Brown was only nine years old and not yet a fan of rugby league, having grown up in an All Blacks-mad household in Auckland.

But come Sunday, if he makes good on his promise to ignite the Eels' left edge, the 22-year-old could become just the second five-eighth in history to win a premiership with Parramatta.

"It's honestly not a personal thing though," Brown said.

"You do it for the club, you do it for the fans. When it gets to stuff like this, it's an opportunity you've got to take and it's a responsibility as well."

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When Kevin Paltridge's son Corey was killed in the 2002 Bali bombings, the devastated father turned to other Australians whose children had died suddenly to try to cope with his own loss.

He quit his job as an airline supervisor and went to work at a funeral home, where he worked until his retirement a decade ago.

"I wanted to meet people who had lost kids," he tells AAP.

Mr Paltridge and his wife Patricia found it cathartic to talk with those who had also suffered.

"Kids get taken in road accidents, but this was different ... it was premeditated, (the terrorists) had crazy beliefs, and Corey was just a tourist," he says.

Corey Paltridge was 20 when he was killed as multiple blasts tore through the Sari Club and Paddy's Irish Bar on Kuta's nightclub strip on October 12, 2002.

The bombings killed 202 people, including 88 Australians and six of Corey's teammates from Perth's Kingsley Football Club.

It wasn't until two days after the bombings when Mr Paltridge, now 75, learned his son was in the morgue.

"We celebrated his 21st the day after his funeral. It was a big party, happy and sad," he says.

"Two years later, I had a couple of the (Kingsley football club) boys take me up to Bali and retrace their last day.

"They pointed out exactly where Corey was and where they were. There were quite a few tears because we were there at the time the bomb went off, at 11.08pm. It was difficult, but the trip helped."

In 2022, on the 20-year anniversary of the bombings, the Paltridges will again pay homage to Corey - whose name is engraved on a wall of remembrance with 15 other West Australians killed in the Bali attack - at an annual dawn memorial service at Perth's Kings Park.

A ritual visit to their son's grave will precede an evening service at the Kingsley Football Club.

Mr Paltridge says it will be "a tough few weeks".

"To us it doesn't feel that long, it's another year but it's the 20th anniversary, it's special, I guess.

"The grief doesn't change, particularly on special days like birthdays. Corey never got to meet his nieces.

"I talk to him every day. Hardly a week goes by when you think what might have happened in his life - would he have kids now?''

And like many of those still grieving for lost loved-ones, it has been made harder by the news a senior member of the Jemaah Islamiyah terrorist group is due to be released before the anniversary.

Umar Patek - dubbed "demolition man" for his role in assembling the deadly Bali bombs - is set to be freed from Parong prison in east Java after his sentence was halved.

Recently, the 52-year-old declared in a YouTube video his involvement in the bombings was a mistake and he had disagreed with the plot.

Irfan Idris, director of prison deradicalisation at Indonesia's national counter terrorism agency, BNPT, is not sure if Patek will be freed before October 12.

But he confirms the agency has signed a letter for Patek's release, adding the bomb-maker has "deradicalised totally in the prison and he has prepared himself for helping others outside jail".

Greg Barton, professor of global Islamic politics at the Alfred Deakin Institute, says Patek has disengaged from his former radical networks, but his expressions of remorse are also tainted with a "defensive attitude".

"The effrontery of Patek walking free ahead of the 20th anniversary ... is deeply troubling," he says.

"We can debate whether he should have been given a life sentence back at the beginning. (Indonesian authorities) are making the case Patek is rehabilitated ... and he's not doing this just to get early release."

Professor Barton says back-room discussions will also have taken place about the possible release of jailed bomber Ali Imron, but there has been silence surrounding those deliberations.

Like Patek, authorities hail Imron as a model of deradicalisation. He is the brother of Amrozi bin Nurhasyim and Ali Ghufron, who were executed in 2008 for their roles in the bombings along with Imam Samudra.

Indonesian counter-terror specialist Noor Huda Ismail says it's unclear if Patek is rehabilitated, adding his behavioural change may differ from his ideology.

"Deradicalisation is a life-time's work. Perhaps he has only disengaged from the use of violence now, here, in Indonesia for survival reasons," he says.

"Patek's release will be offensive for many victims. However, sadly, according to Indonesian law, he must be released because he has undergone his sentence."

The Australian government continues to make representations to Indonesia about Patek's release.

A spokesperson for the Department of Foreign Affairs says those representations have noted the distress his release would cause victims and families, particularly so close to the 20th anniversary.

Three weeks after the bombings, Mr Paltridge had Corey's face tattooed on his left arm, a symbolic act to bring some solace.

"I put my hand on it and speak to him every day. It's very comforting," he says.

On his right arm are etched the names of the football members who didn't return. His own journey has included a battle with alcohol.

"I can only imagine what those boys over there saw because it did affect them very badly," Mr Paltridge says.

"It's taken a long time to get through it - a couple didn't, they suicided.

"The grief doesn't change, particularly on special days like birthdays ... it doesn't go away. You get by remembering the good times."

A commemorative service for the bombing victims will be held on October 12 at the Australian Consulate-General in Bali.

© AAP 2022

Most Australians will lose an hour of sleep but gain - in theory - warmer weather, as clocks move forward for daylight saving.

At 2am local time on Sunday, Victoria, NSW, Tasmania, South Australia, and the ACT will fast forward to 3am.

Queensland, Western Australia and the Northern Territory do not observe daylight saving and the sunshine state is the only jurisdiction on the east coast that does not change time.

There have been renewed calls for another vote on daylight saving in Queensland, however, in February state government minister Yvette D'Ath rejected the idea.

At the time she said the issue was not a focus after a suggested referendum by the Brisbane lord mayor.

"We have listened to the people Queensland who have previously said they do not want daylight savings," Ms D'Ath previously said.

Daylight saving ends when clocks are turned back one hour on the first Sunday of April.

DAYLIGHT SAVING

* Where? ... NSW, Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania and the ACT

* Why? ... To extend daylight hours during conventional waking time in warmer months

* When? ... Clocks go forward one hour on Sunday and back an hour on the first Sunday of April.

© AAP 2022