Smith building World Cup form in IPL

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Steve Smith is starting to erase concerns about his form and fitness ahead of the World Cup with a solid start to the IPL season, including a game-high 73* for Rajasthan yesterday.

As he returned from his year-long ban for ball tampering two weeks ago there were questions about whether Smith could quickly regain touch due to not just his long absence from high-level cricket but also a serious elbow injury.

Smith and fellow banned star David Warner both had elbow surgery in January but have so far shown no signs of being hampered by this in the IPL.

Warner has returned in devastating form to be the leading runscorer so far in the IPL with 279 runs at 70 for the Sunrisers Hyderabad. Smith, meanwhile, has been far less dynamic than Warner but has looked sturdy in each of his four innings, making 73*, 38, 28 and 20 for a total of 159 runs at 53.

The former Australian captain has never been on the same level as Warner in T20s.

The left-handed opener is a bonafide matchwinner who intimidates opposition attacks and looks to bully bowlers. Smith, meanwhile, prefers to play the more sedate anchor role in T20s, holding up one end while his batting colleagues take the game on.

This is just what he did yesterday on a slow pitch in Jaipur as his Rajasthan Royals took on the Kolkata Knight Riders.

Smith looked untroubled throughout his innings, even against the world-class spin pair of Kuldeep Yadav and Sunil Narine. The Australian veteran worked the gaps expertly, ran well and gave no indications that he elbow was troubling him.

While Smith executed his role nicely, with 73* from 59 balls, his side’s power hitters were unable to hold up their end of the bargain.

English batsmen Jos Buttler and Ben Stokes are the two Royals charged with scoring at a frenetic pace while Smith and opener Ajinkya Rahane steer the innings. But Stokes and Buttler both had off nights, combining to make 44 from 48 balls at a snail-like scoring rate of just 5.5 runs per over.

As a result Rajasthan managed just 3-139 from their 20 overs batting first, a total Kolkata reeled in with ease thanks in part to a sprightly knock of 50 from 32 balls by Aussie blaster Chris Lynn.

Steve Smith (AP Photo/Vishal Bhatnagar)

Smith’s innings was by no means a masterclass. Like Buttler and Stokes he struggled to get going on a sluggish pitch against some good bowling. But Smith has never been a dominant T20 batsman – it is comfortably his worst format – and scoring at a rapid rate from the start of his innings is not something that comes easily to him.

That matters not in regards to the upcoming World Cup, during which Smith’s role would be to anchor the innings from first drop, as he has done so well in the past.

The 29-year-old has a sensational ODI record at No. 3, averaging 53 in that position from 53 matches.

Smith’s greatest value as an ODI first drop is his ability to make tough runs. The best Test batsman in the world, he has the technique and temperament to combat elite pace bowlers even when the ball is hooping around and to score freely from star spinners even on a turning deck.

There very likely will be times in the World Cup that Australia will find themselves in trouble early in an ODI innings against a quality bowling attack.

It is at such a juncture that an in-form Smith, with his vast experience and Test-match pedigree, would be so crucial. While he has a long way to go to prove that he is back to peak form, Smith’s IPL campaign thus far has been encouraging.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2019-04-13T15:27:20+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Smith has played a couple of scratchy knocks in the IPL since I wrote this, still not looking near his best yet, even if there have been some good signs so far in the tournament.

2019-04-12T01:52:58+00:00

Chris Love

Roar Guru


I actually think Warner and Khawaja should be opening. Sure Finch found form in the UAE but the Paki’s didn’t exactly have hooping inswingers exploiting him like the Indians and everyone else has over the past year. On the flip side, Khawaja’s ability to come out to bat when spin is already operating has shown to be poor more times than not. Finch doesn’t have that problem. I would be happy to have a fluid batting order but I think it’s a mistake to open with Finch considering the above. If Khawaja gets out first, then Smith comes in Next. If Warner gets out first then Finch comes in next. If Warner and Khawaja both score over 50 at a decent rate, Maxy jumps Smith and even maybe Finch in the order to go ballistic and really turn up the heat.

2019-04-10T21:30:39+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


Marginally. But he's scored the most runs recently. By a considerable margin too.

2019-04-10T09:03:03+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Sure, but he’s been slower than others near the top of the order like Marsh and Handscomb, and the English top order players.

2019-04-10T08:32:45+00:00

danno

Guest


M Marsh is a better bowler than Stoinis and offers similar with the bat & field. 1987 (S Waugh), 1999 (Moody), 2003 (Symonds), 2007 & 2015 (Watson). Australia have always had a sound 5th bowling option during WC successes.

2019-04-10T05:51:53+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


"Just a bit concerned his run rate isn’t what it should be" An effective ODI team has a balanced line-up. You want a mixture of sloggers (Warner/Maxwell/etc) in with the more steady hand type batsmen (Smith/Khawaja).

2019-04-10T04:36:47+00:00

Tazewep

Roar Rookie


Agreed. Stoinis not in my WC squad. Would rather have NCN - better bowler and currently better batsman.

2019-04-10T03:48:01+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


Not a heap. From what I've seen in JLT, Big Bash and T20Is he looks pretty solid. A small enough step down from Carey that the extra batting depth would probably be worth it.

2019-04-10T03:16:26+00:00

Pumping Dougie

Roar Guru


Two of our greatest ever ODI players and late order batsmen were not big hitters - Bevan and Hussey.

2019-04-10T03:12:58+00:00

Pumping Dougie

Roar Guru


Agreed. Although they could accommodate Smith, Warner (middle order), Handscomb (as keeper) and Stoinis at the expense of Marsh and Carey.

2019-04-10T01:40:12+00:00

Omnitrader

Roar Rookie


How much do you think we would lose in terms of keeping ability if Handscomb took the gloves?

2019-04-09T20:47:19+00:00

Graham

Guest


We have good headaches and bad headaches Amongst the biggest question marks over what appears to be the selectors preferred squad are 1. How will we do if we have to rely on Carey and Stoinis to finish an innings? 2. Who is our best 4th specialist bowling option? I think these are real potential weaknesses that could end up exposed at some stage in the world cup

AUTHOR

2019-04-09T09:04:55+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Dave the ODI conditions in England are more batting friendly than those in India or the UAE so I'm not concerned about Khawaja's ability to score there. But I do agree his run rate could be lifted, and it could be done easily and with minimal risk just by Khawaja looking for more singles.

2019-04-09T07:24:13+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Fair enough, a bit harsh. Just a bit concerned his run rate isn’t what it should be, and don’t have a good feeling about his ability to succeed in England. Hope I’m proved wrong.

2019-04-09T05:28:11+00:00

Gee

Roar Rookie


He was going to play County Cricket last year instead of the IPL but got injured, not sure what he is doing now. He did cop a nasty blow to his box this season but he is over that now.

2019-04-09T04:54:33+00:00

Brian

Guest


I havn't seen Mitch Marsh in the IPL, which is surprising given he wasn't in the ODI squad. Lynn, Cutting, Stanlake are all there. Is he injured or not good enough to get a spot.

AUTHOR

2019-04-09T04:27:03+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Between them Warner and Smith have made 508 runs at 73 so far in this IPL. Remarkable stuff.

AUTHOR

2019-04-09T04:23:51+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


"Khawaja who I suspect was showing some fools gold against Pakistan B." That's very harsh Dave, Khawaja also dominated against India with nearly 500 runs at 62 this year - facing the world's best ODI quick (Bumrah) and the world's best ODI spinner (Kuldeep).

2019-04-09T04:08:05+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


If Smith and Handscomb both play then there's no room for Stoinis, though, which puts a lot of pressure on Maxwell's bowling. I don't think the selectors are game to go into big matches without the insurance of two genuine fifth bowling options. Finch just doesn't bowl enough.

2019-04-09T02:25:32+00:00

Graham

Guest


Smith and Warner may of not had ideal t20 knocks this last week but they were outstanding odi knocks and much needed time in the middle. Their 2 hitting which is crucial in odi's Hope they bring that form to the big show

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