The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

How Australia turned it all around

-

AUSTRALIA have won eight matches in a row to feature in today’s ICC Cricket World Cup final where they will come up against hosts India.

It has been a remarkable turnaround after a disastrous lead-in to the tournament and a poor start to the campaign itself.

They had lost five of their last six ODIs heading into the event and were comprehens­ively beaten in their opening two matches of the tournament itself.

However, they have somehow managed to turn it around in stunning fashion, thanks to some amazing individual performanc­es and a couple of incredible selection gambles.

Below are some of the key factors that saw the former champions turn it all around.

Problemati­c preparatio­n and early losses

Australia’s start to the tournament could not have been worse.

Having lost three games to South Africa and two more to India to lose a back-to-back series in the lead-in to the tournament, nothing was going right.

Travis Head was at home nursing a broken hand and their second spinner Ashton Agar had been ruled out of the tournament.

Australia opted to replace him with a specialist batter in Marnus Labuschagn­e, who had not been named in the initial 18-man squad.

Glenn Maxwell, Mitchell Starc and Steven Smith were all underdone due to injury-riddled preparatio­ns.

Marcus Stoinis had a hamstring issue, Adam Zampa was ill, Cameron Green and Alex Carey were out of form and Pat Cummins had captained just two ODIs in his career heading into the

World Cup.

They limped to 199 in the opening game against India.

There was a moment where they could have had India 20 for four, but Mitchell Marsh dropped Virat Kohli and India cruised to victory.

Against South Africa, they were annihilate­d, conceding 311 for seven and making just 177 in reply.

Australia’s tournament looked all but over when Sri Lanka cantered to 125 without loss after 21 overs in their third game in Lucknow.

Zampa, Cummins, Warner and Marsh spark them to life

It took four players to spark the turnaround, but the transforma­tion was swift and startling.

Head gamble pays dividends

Picking Head in the 15-man squad when he was unavailabl­e for Australia’s first five games due to a broken hand could have been a disastrous gamble if Australia had not recovered from their first two losses.

But even having done so, the form of the Warner-Marsh combinatio­n at the top of the order, and the fact that Australia had scored 350-plus in consecutiv­e games, did spark some different questions when Head finally returned.

Smith made his displeasur­e about shifting to number four known, while Marsh would have also preferred to remain at the top.

But Head proved why the selectors had shown faith in him in his first game back, smacking a stunning 59-ball century against New Zealand in a vicious assault with Warner.

Australia’s long-term plan to pulverise their opponents in the powerplay with the use of three power-hitters in

Head, Warner and Marsh was back in place.

However, it did take a little while to gel properly.

Marsh had trouble readjustin­g to life at number three against New Zealand and then missed the match against England due to the death of his grandfathe­r.

Head missed out several times as the top order, misfired against Afghanista­n, but it finally clicked against Bangladesh.

Head fell cheaply again but Marsh picked up the slack with a thumping 177 not out.

Then in the semi-final, in a low-scoring game on a tricky pitch, Head proved again why his role is so vital, picking up two crucial wickets with the ball and then putting Australia ahead of the game with a blistering half-century that allowed some room for a middle-order wobble.

The Big Show’s biggest show

The fastest century in World Cup history was not enough for Maxwell.

He somehow trumped his 40-ball century against the Netherland­s with the greatest ODI innings of all-time against Afghanista­n.

Words cannot do justice to his 201 not out off 128 balls.

Australia were on 49 for four in the ninth over when Maxwell arrived at the crease in chase of 292.

His epic innings sealed Australia’s semi-final spot and proved that they can always find a way to win, given the quality of match-winners they possess.

Maxwell is the most extraordin­ary of them and has been a vital cog for Australia with both bat and ball.

Starc stands up

Starc was under some pressure heading into the semi-final.

He had been a World Cup wonder in the last two editions of the tournament, but had hardly fired a shot in this campaign, and Australia had been one of the worst-performing powerplay bowling teams as a result.

But cometh the hour, cometh the knockout king.

Starc sizzled and South Africa were stunned.

Starc and Josh Hazlewood loom as India’s biggest threat.

They reduced India to two for three in the opening game of the tournament and Starc blew away India’s impregnabl­e top order in Visakhapat­nam earlier this year.

He has taken out the opposition captain and tone-setter in the first over of the World Cup final before.

He will be aiming to do it again today. — Cricinfo

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe