Australia finally end ODI losing streak

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

It was far from a perfect performance but Australia last night finally ended their longest-ever ODI losing streak with a tight win over South Africa in Adelaide.

Australia entered this match having not just lost their past seven matches, but also having won only two of their previous 21 ODIs.

Never before had the Australian cricket team plunged into such a form abyss in ODIs, which traditionally has been their strongest format.

Despite winning four of the last five World Cups, Australia have become a laughing stock in ODIs in the wake of a prolonged sequence of rank performances. Shoddy batting displays have underpinned Australia’s swift slide down the ODI rankings and, despite ending their losing streak last night, they again struggled with the blade, making just 231 on a good batting pitch.

Australia were saved by a spirited and skilful effort from their attack. The surprise star with the ball was again burly all-rounder Marcus Stoinis, who produced his second fine bowling performance of this series.

After grabbing 3-16 in the first ODI, Stoinis turned the match last night with the key wicket of the destructive David Miller (51) amid of haul of 3-35 from ten overs.

Stoinis was impressively precise, as were fellow seamers Josh Hazlewood (2-42 from ten overs) and Pat Cummins (1-27 from ten overs). Although less accurate than that trio, Mitchell Starc showed great signs last night, bowling with impressive rhythm which helped him reached consistently searing speeds.

In his four-over spell with the new ball Starc’s average pace was a remarkable 152kmh, according to leading cricket analytics company Cricviz.

That was the single fastest new ball spell of his ODI career. After struggling with injuries for almost 12 months now, Starc looked physically unencumbered for the first time in a long time last night.

The best ODI bowler in the world when at his peak, Starc is the key to Australia’s hopes of performing strongly in next year’s World Cup.

Mitchell Starc celebrates a wicket. (AP Photo/Eranga Jayawardena)

While Australia bowled with discipline, with the bat they stuttered each time they looked to be building momentum. Young opener Travis Head was trapped plumb LBW in the third over before veterans Aaron Finch and Shaun Marsh steadied the innings nicely, taking Australia to 1-66 in the 12th over.

Marsh, in particular, looked in lovely touch, timing the ball beautifully.

But overconfidence brought about his downfall as he attempted an extravagant drive on the up against Kagiso Rabada only to feed an edge to wicketkeeper Quinton de Kock on 22. With the typically-aggressive duo of Finch and Chris Lynn playing within themselves, Australia again looked to be righting the ship at 2-96 after 20 overs.

Once more a wicket was gifted to the Proteas when Finch chopped on for 41 as he tried to dab cut a Dwaine Pretorius delivery which was too full and straight to allow such a stroke. The pattern continued as Lynn and ‘keeper Alex Carey guided Australia to a decent position at 3-133 in the 26th over before Lynn became the next batsman to waste a good start.

After patiently playing himself in Lynn exploded, clattering Rabada for 6, 4, 4 and 4 off the first four deliveries of the quick’s over. Lynn then got carried away and tried to dispatch a sharp bouncer from Rabada, succeeding only in gloving it through to de Kock on 44.

Then Carey and Glenn Maxwell both looked comfortable at the crease, moving the score to 4-166 in the 33rd over before the latter man became the latest Aussie to cough up his wicket in limp fashion.

Glenn Maxwell (AP Photo/Jon Super)

Maxwell, whose ODI form has become a serious concern for Australia, played a half-hearted cut shot at a wide, short delivery from Pretorius to give de Kock another catch. Medium pacer Pretorius looks innocuous at first glance. But he did a fine job for South Africa yesterday, maintaining a tight line and length en route to figures of 3-32 from ten overs.

Only a patient knock of 47 from 72 balls by Carey and some late strikes from Adam Zampa (22) allowed Australia to edge to what looked to be a well-below-par total of 231. In holding on for a tight win Australia not only banished a few demons but also set up this three-match series for a tantalising decider at Hobart on Sunday.

The Crowd Says:

2018-11-11T07:45:58+00:00

Kopa Shamsu

Guest


You have sent one of the best bowling asset you have in UAE in a series you "assumed" your team would get thrashed with a team of which 1/3 name people never heard of before or didn't play test cricket right after he got back from injury. And my shield suggestion is "bizarre"?

2018-11-10T21:23:29+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


+1 Should be hypothetical in Warner's case anyway. That's if CA is going to enforce the 'No D1ckheads' policy.

2018-11-10T21:20:56+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


It was a 100% sample of all the ODIs that 'The Big Five' have played together in. However, re-checking shows that I've made a complete & embarrassing hash of it. The re-checked results reveal; 6 wins, 3 losses & 2 NRs. Wins: 3551 (RSA), 3811, 3812, 3813 (All NZ). 3822 & 3826 (both Pak). Losses: 3818 (Pak), 3885 & 3960 (both Eng) Apologies for dismal first effort.

2018-11-10T17:40:36+00:00

Kopa Shamsu

Guest


Bae,that is BBL, this is ODI we are talking about. Understand the difference. Not need to make another maxwell experiment out of him. You top scorers in BBL was a complete flop in UAE( Lynn, Macdermott,Short). Carey has already shown improved performance, don't mess it up with another experiment. My suggestion would be even head should come down the order and bat at 1 down or 4.

2018-11-10T12:03:10+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


Carey was the second top run scorer in the BBL and he opened the batting for the Strikers. It's not as silly an idea as you're making out.

2018-11-10T12:01:41+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


I think some of the dismissals were less about shot selection and more about poor execution. Head, Finch and Maxwell all played reasonable shots in the circumstances but the execution was off. Rock-bottom confidence will do that.

2018-11-10T11:58:40+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


Give it a rest. You can't punish people forever.

2018-11-10T11:57:13+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


Your lineup also lacks a 6th bowling option. It doesn't even have Maxwell as a backup. Lynn would be a terrible number 5. He can't rotate the strike. He should be batting top 3 if he plays.

2018-11-10T11:54:04+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


How is a test series against Pakistan an 'irrelevant series'?!? You want him to miss that but play Shield? Bizarre.

2018-11-10T11:51:38+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


37 is a good ODI average. Not amazing, but good.

2018-11-10T09:45:19+00:00

Kopa Shamsu

Guest


Let's us presume that you were being sarcastic :-p

2018-11-10T09:25:55+00:00

Kopa Shamsu

Guest


Really? If you don't mind may I know which series or matches you took a sample? Because I don't remember big 3 bowlers playing together that much. In my recent memories I can remember 2 matches Aussies lost despite playing big 5 together . Both against England, 1 is in CT other in the home series. Same goes for test. The only match I can remember Aussies lost despite playing big 5 was the 2nd test of S.A. series. I have very much doubt Aussies selectors have picked same team for back to back matches (specially in ODIs) in last 1 year or so.

2018-11-10T09:23:25+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


As long as Faf can play, anyone can. Even Mohammed Amir was let back.

2018-11-10T08:15:05+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


Skully's usually right but not this time. Comparing Test batting to ODI is invalid for the obvious reason.

2018-11-10T07:37:10+00:00

Tanmoy Kar

Guest


Due to the absence of A. B. De Villiers and Hashim Amla, South Africa's batting line-up weakened considerably.

2018-11-10T06:48:27+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Head can’t buy a run

2018-11-10T06:48:04+00:00

Simoc

Guest


What a shame speed doesn't get wickets. Movement in the air, off the seam and bounce get out good batsmen. Straight up and down speed doesn't. Poor old Ronan is transfixed by speed. Great to win a game. That brings back confidence. The score was enough as it turned out. It always stupid to say its a 300 run wicket when you haven't got a clue. Everyone wants more always but winning is the best tonic.

2018-11-10T06:47:27+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Like Faf?

2018-11-10T06:39:58+00:00

Ozibatla

Guest


Having watched very little of yesterdays coverage I will have to take your word for it Ronan. I wasnt necessarily assuming he was straining for extra pace but rather letting old habits creep back into his game. I agree with the notion that his rhythm will take care of the pace factor, as is the case with most fast bowlers. Perhaps its that lower arm and wrist that allows him to feel at ease with his action? He does need to get that consistent new ball swing back though.

2018-11-10T06:10:20+00:00

Steve Franklin

Roar Rookie


Oh please Warner and Smith should never play for their country ever again give our country some dignity back from the cheats.

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