Slow and spinning will win the race at World T20

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

In the last World T20, Australia relied on pace in spin-friendly conditions and it backfired spectacularly. Now, with their fast-bowling stocks decimated, they must learn from this mistake and bank on spin in India.

A spate of injuries has robbed Australia of their best four T20 pacemen – Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins, Nathan Coulter-Nile and Jason Behrendorff. Picking a pace-heavy attack from the limited seamers available would be folly on Indian grounds, with their dead pitches and short boundaries.

The leading sides in the T20 World Cup will be building their attacks around spin, and so should Australia by picking two specialist tweakers in their XI from the start of the tournament.

Spinners rule the roost in T20, particularly in Asia where the ball does not come on to the bat. The top five bowlers in the ICC T20 rankings all are tweakers – West Indian leggie Samuel Badree, Indian off spinner Ravi Ashwin, Pakistan all-rounder Shahid Afridi, Sri Lankan finger spinner Sacithra Senanayake and Zimbabwean wrist spinner Graeme Cremer.

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What’s more, spinners accounted for four of the top five leading wicket-takers in the last World T20, which was played in Bangladesh on parched surfaces very similar to what we’ll see in India in March and April.

Yet in that last World T20, Australia refused to tailor their attack to the conditions, never once fielding two specialist spinners in their side, as they lost three of their four games and crashed to an early exit.

In their first match of that World T20, their opponents, Pakistan, played four spinners, while Australia’s first four bowlers used all were quicks. Next up, West Indian spinners Badree, Sunil Narine and Marlon Samuels combined to take 6-76 against an Australia side which leaned heavily on four seamers in Starc, Doug Bollinger, James Faulkner and Shane Watson.

In their third match, Australia appeared to belatedly recognise the importance of spin on slow, turning decks. They opened the bowling with part-time offies Brad Hodge and Glenn Maxwell against India. Between them, Hodge, Maxwell and leggie James Muirhead returned the good figures of 3-57 while conceding only seven runs per over.

So, after the success of their spinners in this match, what did Australia do in their final fixture against Bangladesh? Well, of course, they decided not to even pick a specialist spinner and dedicate 17 of their 20 overs to pace.

Australia won that match by seven wickets. Perhaps the selectors felt they had been vindicated by finally ditching those pesky tweakers and instead feeding their need for speed.

Australia at least had quality pace options to choose from in that tournament, with Starc, Coulter-Nile and Bollinger all fine international bowlers. If Australia currently had a full complement available then it would be somewhat understandable if they gambled on pace in the upcoming World T20. Starc, Cummins and Coulter-Nile are dynamic bowlers capable of turning a match with a burst of brilliance.

With all due respect, the same cannot be said of the likes of Scott Boland, Andrew Tye, John Hastings and Kane Richardson. Australia are hoping that Shaun Tait can be that kind of impact bowler, but he was awful in his two T20 matches against India this past week, taking 0-91 from eight overs.

With his unusual action and express pace, Tait may be able to rattle some of the lesser sides. The ease with which the Indians played him, though, suggests he could be a liability against the stronger batting line-ups.

Cruelling Tait’s chances of selection are the fact that he is poor both in the field and with the bat. To justify his position in Australia’s starting XI he needs to be bowling the house down and instead he sprayed the ball all over the pitch against India.

Australia need to come to peace with the fact that they will not be able to bully teams with pace in this tournament. Instead, they need to invest in spinners plus seamers who are clever, accurate and boast variation – a set of attributes only Shane Watson displayed against India.

Watson was Australia’s standout bowler, alongside leg-spinner Cameron Boyce. On Sunday, Boyce was faced with the nightmare scenario of coming on to bowl with the score 1-74 after seven overs against the rampantly in-form pair of Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma.

Undaunted, Boyce did not give in to the temptation to try to dart his deliveries in the hope he might sneak through his overs without getting spanked. Instead, he took on Kohli and Sharma, bowling with tantalising loop and getting significant drift which deceived both batsmen, resulting in their downfall.

It was a brave and wonderfully skilful display from the 26-year-old wrist spinner, who has been excellent his brief T20 career. In his seven international matches Boyce has snared eight wickets at 19 and, crucially, has conceded a miserly 6.6 runs per over.

He should be a lock for the World T20. And if the selectors have paid any attention to the history of the T20 format, Boyce should operate in tandem with another frontline spinner.

That could be either Test regular Nathan Lyon, young gun Adam Zampa, or even left-armer Steve O’Keefe, whose low-slung, accurate bowling is similar to India’s Ravi Jadeja.

The Crowd Says:

2016-02-04T05:43:07+00:00

ajay

Guest


Watto gone he's playing in psl.but stoinis?rod marsh should go he's sick I guess ?

2016-02-04T01:10:06+00:00

VivGilchrist

Guest


That's pretty much what the Windies do in T20.

2016-02-03T17:06:51+00:00

Tana Mir

Roar Rookie


Mate Faulkner was coming out of injury. Faulkner's last IPL wasn't as productive, but I still back him. Still did well for Rajasthan. He is highly valued by Indians, snapped up before auction.

2016-02-03T13:06:28+00:00

13th Man

Guest


Apparently Faulkner has injured his hammy, replaced in the squad by Stoinis! Seriously I would've thought Watto might have been picked, has been our best bowler of recent times.

2016-02-03T12:36:16+00:00

13th Man

Guest


umm, when he makes some runs against a decent side let me know Ajay?

2016-02-03T12:34:54+00:00

13th Man

Guest


I'd be asking for Hussey, Ponting and Hodge to become permanent selectors with Mark Waugh as chairman. I think selectors do need to have only recently stopped playing so they understand the modern game better. I don't think Rod Marsh does.

2016-02-03T12:32:07+00:00

Hutto

Guest


i think boyce, beer and hogg would be a good mix beer doesnt take many wickets but his economy rate is outstanding and on a turning indian pitch you never know he might pick a few more wickets up

2016-02-03T12:30:43+00:00

13th Man

Guest


Ronan, congratulations, you've just been appointed Chairman of Selectors!

2016-02-03T11:53:55+00:00

Homer

Guest


The assessment " Indian grounds, with their dead pitches and short boundaries." tells me all I need to know about Australia's prospects in the Wt20. If the pitches are actually dead, as evidenced in the recent one dayers against India, Australia stand more than enough chance to go all the way, given their power hitting up and down the order. However, the tourney is going to be played in March-April in India, where between the summer heat and tired wickets ( second half of the domestic season), pitches will grip, turn and stop - making hitting through the line a dangerous proposition. And, as evidenced in the T2 series against India, even a modicum of turn and the Australian batsmen do their best rabbit in the headlights impersonation. And given that Australia play New Zealand, Pakistan and India, all with competent spin options, odds of Australia making past the league stages are bleak. Cheers.

AUTHOR

2016-02-03T09:36:51+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


"Replace with Faulkner, his variations will do well in India, and his massive experience in IPL." Faulkner's variations were completely ineffective in the last IPL and he got smashed - part of the reason he averages a whopping 62 with the ball across his past 20 Twenty20 matches.

2016-02-03T04:36:23+00:00

Andrew

Guest


Agreed get Khawaja to open as he has been amazing in the powrplays in bbl

2016-02-03T03:05:27+00:00

Peter

Roar Rookie


I've been advocating that too. At least until we get selectors that have actually played T20.

2016-02-03T02:44:05+00:00

ajay

Guest


Disagree! Shaun marsh lock in playing x1 you left him out ? He scored 182 vs west Indies.

2016-02-03T02:38:31+00:00

Simon

Guest


I agree with all of this but I think Tye has been treated with fairly harshly. Up until the last over on Sunday night he'd been far and away our standout specialist quick imo

2016-02-03T02:22:18+00:00

My2cents

Guest


I completely agree. Although I'm surprised James Pattinson hasn't been given more of a chance to prove his worth in t20 cricket. An attack featuring Watson, marsh, Pattinson and hazelwood/clint Mckay seems a good blend of youth and experience. Then you have maxwell, Boyce and a 3rd spinner of your choice (o'keefe, Lyon, zampa and Agar are all good options)

2016-02-03T01:19:19+00:00

Kreese

Guest


[correction] - Andy Bichel is no longer a selector.

2016-02-03T00:45:28+00:00

Tana Mir

Roar Rookie


Ronan, I've stated this in other posts. I agree with top six batsmen, only would move Khawaja to open, I reckon he is better in powerplay. M.Marsh - replace with Faulkner, his variations will do well in India, and his massive experience in IPL Pain - I would go with Neville, better player of spin. Zampa over Lyon. Agree, vital to play 2 spinner.

2016-02-03T00:41:31+00:00

Kreese

Guest


I never thought I'd say this, but I think Watson has better utility opening. He seems better when given licence to play his power hitting shots without consequence. If Finch, Warner, khawaja get out cheaply, I'd be nervous if the team then had to rely on Watson to steady the ship. When he plays tentatively he tends to get out playing silly shots. If Watson opened and there was a top order batting collapse my insurance would be batsmen like Bailey or Nevill at 6 and 7 who are good against spin, good at getting ones and twos in middle overs and good at rotating strike if someone like Maxwell is on song.

2016-02-03T00:24:32+00:00

Kreese

Guest


Agree completely. With the exception of Mark Waugh, I don't think the current selectors comprised of Trevor Hohns, Andy Bichel and Rod Marsh get T20. They seem to select T20 teams assuming it's all about speed and power. It seems the selection process for a T20 side is to take the ODI team and replace middle order batsmen who can be relied on to get ones and twos with power hitters. I think Adam Gilchrist, Mike Hussey and Justin Langer would be good heads to have around a T20 selection table.

2016-02-03T00:18:19+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


Agreed. Henriques was looking really good in the BBL before his injury too. Definitely someone who would have been in the mix for the World T20 if he hadn't got injured. Especially with Faulkner in such bad form with both bat and ball at the moment. At the start of the summer you'd have said Faulkner was a lock for the squad, but right now he looks like a liability. He's not doing remotely well with either bat or ball. Batsmen in the BBL had no issue smashing him around, and the same in the ODI's and T20's against India. I suspect the same will be the case in the ODI's against NZ.

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