The Gold Coast Bulletin

SMITH GONE FROM THE WINDIES ‘MUSCLE MEN’ LEAVE SMUDGE BEHIND

- Robert Craddock

The problem for Steve Smith’s Australian Twenty20 career is that his game has been lacking crunch at a time when teammates and rivals seem to be growing muscles.

That’s one of the reasons why his prospects of making cricket’s T20 World Cup in the US and Caribbean in June are hanging on by a thread after his dismissal, caught behind for four after opening the batting, against New Zealand in Auckland on Sunday.

With an internatio­nal strike rate of just 116 runs per 100 balls since mid-2020, as revealed by Fox Cricket, Smith is lagging behind most of his dam-busting, top-order mates who have soared into the 140s-50s and 60s in the same period.

There was a time when being the prince of placement and a hustler extraordin­aire, with the occasional big hit thrown in, was enough to earn Smith million-dollar deals in the IPL and a permanent place in the national T20 scene.

Now you need a bit more. Magnum force is greater than it’s ever been in T20 cricket. The muscle men are getting stronger and braver.

Where once teams used to rely on an anchorman, now there is a feeling that they often just get in the road.

Smith would have known his next stop, after being given the chance to open the innings in this series, was out of the side if he didn’t perform.

As Mitchell Johnson said in his Sunday column, opener is now the only spot Smith can bat in the current Australian team given the firepower stacked beneath him in the order.

That said,

Cup chances cooked.

When the selectors pick the team, they will consider three points in his favour … the slow decks of the Caribbean may suit Smith’s style, big tournament­s are won by heavy duty players, and there’s the simple fact he is one of Australia’s best players since Don Bradman.

But to make the plane to the Caribbean he must win a brutal numbers game and the odds against him are imposing.

When all the numbers are crunched, he will likely duel with Matt Short and Marcus Stoinis for two spots given David Warner and Travis Head should open the innings.

Short’s blistering 27 off 11 balls in Auckland was a timely snapshot of his power and poise and while Stoinis’ form has not been great, he can also bowl and is an experience­d T20 player.

Significan­tly, Stoinis and most of the Australian top order will soon head to India to have potentiall­y 14 IPL games against the world’s top players to get them ready for the World Cup.

Smith, it appears, is unlikely to play in the IPL so he won’t have that luxury of being match-hardened.

Throughout his career a challenge has often brought the best out of him – but it’s far from certain the selectors will give him the chance he craves.

Smith’s are not

World totally

 ?? ?? England’s Joe Root plays a shot.
Aussie opener Steve Smith walks off after being dismissed cheaply during the third T20 match against New Zealand in Auckland yesterday; and (inset) Matt Short made a sparkling 27 off 11 balls at Eden Park to boost his hopes of selection for the World Cup starting in June. Pictures: AFP and Getty Images
England’s Joe Root plays a shot. Aussie opener Steve Smith walks off after being dismissed cheaply during the third T20 match against New Zealand in Auckland yesterday; and (inset) Matt Short made a sparkling 27 off 11 balls at Eden Park to boost his hopes of selection for the World Cup starting in June. Pictures: AFP and Getty Images

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