Mercury (Hobart)

FLEXIBILIT­Y A STRENGTH, JL INSISTS

- SAM LANDSBERGE­R in Nottingham

AUSTRALIA insists its shuffling batting order and willingnes­s to change selection is a strength built on adaptabili­ty rather than a team that is plugging holes deep in a World Cup campaign.

Captain Aaron Finch admitted that seam all-rounder Marcus Stoinis’s injury helped push spinner Adam Zampa out of the team and then assistant coach Brad Haddin said the setback had disrupted team balance.

But Stoinis is likely to return from a side strain against Bangladesh tonight and coach Justin Langer was confident that several different formulas could win the World Cup.

“It’s actually really exciting, I said at the start of the tour we had lots of options and we’re very adaptable — that’s our strength, not our weakness,” Langer said.

“I get the sense that some people think it’s our weakness, but I just think it’s our strength. We can play according to opposition­s, we can play according to grounds.”

Bangladesh is hunting a semi-final place after stunning South Africa and West Indies and pushing New Zealand.

Yet just three months ago about 10 of its World Cup players were nearly victims in the Christchur­ch mosque shootings, which occurred the day before a Test match that was cancelled. The players were on a bus to that mosque to pray, but media and social activities led to a fortunate delay.

West Indies legend Courtney Walsh is helping Bangladesh plot a shock win as its bowling coach.

It emerged last night that Australia was considerin­g abandoning its 12-month spin project and sticking with the four-pronged pace attack that delivered the 2015 World Cup.

Zampa was hit out of the attack by India and has not played the past two games while Nathan Lyon has been overlooked in all five matches.

Langer said the pitch at Trent Bridge “looks pretty dry” and the Aussies are considerin­g again overlookin­g both specialist spinners.

While Stoinis’s injury helped pushed Zampa out of the team, a deeper analysis has showed the effectiven­ess of pace at the World Cup.

“What was really exciting was how our two quicks took wickets in the middle overs,” Langer said. “We know in oneday cricket you’ve got to take wickets in the middle overs.

“The way our quicks pulled it back in the middle overs against Pakistan and Sri Lanka was brilliant.”

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