Aussies into tri-series final with seven-wicket smashing of England

By Tim Miller / Editor

Australia defeated England by seven wickets with 33 balls to spare in the final match of the summer on Australian soil, and in the process secured a spot in the tri-series final.

An excellent team effort with the ball restricted England to just 137, a total that never felt like enough, and some fireworks from Chris Lynn, Glenn Maxwell, D’Arcy Short and, finally, Aaron Finch made light work of it. England’s bowlers looked short of a gallop, but there wasn’t a lot they could do.

From the moment David Warner caught the in-form Dawid Malan short with a brilliant throw from mid-on, and probably before that, too, it was Australia all the way.

The way they’re playing is such a far cry from the squad that hobbled their way through the ODI series.

The bowling attack is perfectly balanced, from the raw pace of Billy Stanlake to the slower balls of Andrew Tye and Marcus Stoinis to the wily spin of Ashton Agar, all spearheaded by Kane Richardson, tonight’s player of the match.

Together, they cut off England’s head in the opening overs, suffocated them in the middle, and prevented a blowout late when Jos Buttler, Sam Billings and David Willey were swinging for the fences. And the fielding, led by Warner, was nearly perfect, too.

Then, buoyed by a deep batting line-up and with a small total to chase, the top order ran amok. Lynn was at his destructive best, Maxwell continued his stirring form, and to wrap things up nicely, Aaron Finch came out and bludgeoned two sixes and two fours for a five-ball 20, including the winning runs.

David Willey tried hard, and was particularly dangerous to the left-handers with some away swing, but 39 runs in two overs from the spin twins, Adil Rashid and Liam Dawson, effectively ensured their would be no late blip on the radar.

England sorely missed the composure of Eoin Morgan in the middle overs, with Buttler and Billings tied down for too long with dot after dot.

Liam Plunkett’s wily changes of pace would also have been handy, though he couldn’t have done much on a night like this.

But the rested Joe Root has proved the biggest hole in the side. His absence, particularly after a dominant ODI series, has drastically thinned out England’s batting dependability, with Roy, Hales, Buttler, Billings and Willey all very much hit-and-miss.

Without him and Morgan, England’s batting, remarkable for a side with all-rounders down to nine, looked a touch thin.

For Australia, there’s only one concern, but it’s a big one; David Warner’s form with the bat. His captaincy and brilliant run-out showed what he brings to the table in the field, but he’s there to make runs, and his two runs tonight was his third straight score of below 10 this series.

It’s a serious problem for the brains trust, not least because an upcoming tour of South Africa is a bad time for a batsman of the calibre of Warner to be out of nick.

But also, in the lead up to the 2020 T20 World Cup, Warner is, for just about the first time in his career, not an automatic selection in the side.

The Crowd Says:

2018-02-11T09:25:20+00:00

Dean

Guest


Totally agree Geoff. Three formats is one too many and 50 over is a boring compromise between the beauty of test cricket and the excitement of T20. It is fast becoming as irrelevant as the Commonwealth Games.

2018-02-11T06:38:25+00:00

truetigerfan

Guest


Lynn struggles against the swinging ball and is susceptible to spin. Do you only play him in Australia?

2018-02-11T05:00:23+00:00

Blake Standfield

Roar Guru


Yeah what a thrilling contest that was.

2018-02-10T23:37:43+00:00

Geoff from Bruce Stadium

Guest


No. It's the 50 over format that has to go. Boring as. I hate it. Test cricket is a totally different game that rewards patience and technique. T20 requires totally different skills that rewards daring and risk. Love both formats.

2018-02-10T21:08:08+00:00

NickBrisbane

Guest


No coincidence that this has been since Ponting has been on the sidelines. At last we seem to be picking players on form (apart from Warner) and not sentiment.

2018-02-10T19:25:07+00:00

Diamond Jackie

Roar Rookie


D’arcy Short is the new David Warner. He seems free of mind, unencumbered by experience, fewer distractions. I think Davey will step down from 20-20, try and play the one dayers but will eventually step down there too. He should focus on being an all time great test batsman and when he gives it all away he’s fit enough to play IPL for many a year to come.

2018-02-10T14:22:12+00:00

Mitch

Guest


Does this side need Warner? Khawaja (can face swing lol) Short Lynn Maxwell Finch Stoinis Carey Agar Starc Tye Behrendorf/NCN

2018-02-10T14:19:42+00:00

Dirk Delaware

Guest


T20 is the future get rid of test matches because their boring with draws or reduce the number of days played.

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