The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

A tale of two skippers

- Tinashe Kusema Deputy Sports Editor Read more on www.sundaymail.co.zw

IT is funny to think that Aaron Finch and Regis Chakabva were still in their late teens when Zimbabwe last toured Australia for a cricket series in 2004.

It was during the VB Series, a triangular series featuring Zimbabwe, India and hosts Australia.

And Chakabva was seven months shy of his 17th birthday and still four years off his internatio­nal debut.

Finch, on the other hand, was looking forward to his 18th birthday and still seven years away from bursting onto the internatio­nal scene.

Since then both men have gone on to carve careers so distinctiv­e that they now hardly need a comparison.

Finch built a reputation for himself as a white-ball cricketer and one of the top Twenty-20 players of his generation.

Now 35, he is approachin­g the twilight of his internatio­nal career, having played 140 ODIs and scored 5 375 runs and 17 centuries.

Chakabva has only played a modest 58 ODIs, with his maiden century arriving last month.

Under normal circumstan­ces, no comparison should be made between the duo.

But, for some reason, here we are Today marks the beginning of the longawaite­d three-match ODI series between the two nations, a match-up slated for August 28-September 4 and one that has serious Super League and 2023 Cricket World Cup ramificati­ons for at least one of them.

Australia and Zimbabwe find themselves at opposite ends of the Super League log standings, much like their respective captains, who find themselves at different ends of the spectrum.

The hosts are in eighth position with 70 points from 12 games and still have a realistic chance of sealing one of the eight available automatic slots for next year’s ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup in India.

Zimbabwe are 12th with 35 points from 18 matches and their hopes have been fading with each ODI encounter.

It’s one of many sub-plots of the Chevrons’first visit to Australia in nearly 20 years.

Among the more glaring stories is the batting frailties of the teams’captains Chakabva and Finch.

This has also been a major talking point in Australia. While Finch fields questions about it with respect, he insists he is not bothered about what has been written or said.

“What other people think of me personally or how I’m playing, it’s actually irrelevant to me,’’he was quoted as saying by cricket. com.au

Finch’s form has remained an issue of interest. In four of his last seven ODI innings, he has fallen for a duck (two of the other innings have been 44 and 62) and there is probably enough evidence to suggest he is past his prime.

However, it would take a big change now for him not to be captain in India next year, a tournament that could define his internatio­nal swansong.

Unless something drastic happens in the next few months, questions about his form and place in the team are set to persist until the World Cup.

Still, with Travis Head - who is missing the Zimbabwe and New Zealand series on paternity leave - making a strong case for a permanent spot, it would be timely for Finch to put a couple of big scores on the board. Chakabva’s batting numbers are also complicate­d

His century against Bangladesh has gone some way to waylay some of the concerns over his place in the team, and captaincy to some extent.

However, the team’s batting performanc­es, particular­ly as it pertains to the top-order, remain the Chevrons’ Achilles Heel.

“It’s not a secret that we have struggled a bit lately with getting good starts, and it is something that we have been constantly talking about and constantly working on.

“At the end of the day, cricket is still a team sport, and the batters know that they are responsibl­e for putting runs on the board.

“The only thing we can do at the moment is to continue to back the guys to work out a plan to do that and put the team in a good starting position.

“It’s been a bit of a struggle, we are not running away from that, but it’s important to note that the guys are constantly working on that and trying to come up with answers,” Chakabva said.

To put into perspectiv­e Chakabva’s argument, one would need to look at the justended three-match ODI series against India.

In that series the Chevrons opened the batting with Takudzwa Kaitano, Innocent Kaia and Tadiwanash­e Murumani and none of them managed to make so much as a dent on the scoreboard as they finished with a total of 54 runs collective­ly.

In fact, much of Zimbabwe’s runs came from the trio of middle-order batters Sikandar Raza (143), Sean Williams (88), and, surprising­ly, lower-order batter Brad Evans (70).

This is juxtaposed to India’s top order, and in particular, openers Shikhar Dhawan (154) and Shubman Gill (245) doing much of the donkey work for their team.

The two even featured in an opening stand of 192 off 185 balls that saw India race to a 10-wicket victory over Zimbabwe in the first match.

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