Smith and Starc shine as Kiwis beat Australia

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Australia might have lost yesterday to an understrength New Zealand side but they will have been buoyed by dynamic displays from returning superstars Steve Smith and Mitchell Starc.

The plucky Kiwis ended Australia’s run of nine consecutive wins in the 50-over format by comfortably chasing down the total of 6-277 posted by the home side in Brisbane thanks to a fine ton by Will Young.

Smith (89* from 77 balls) and Starc (2-14) showed signs of being back to their best after lengthy absences from representing Australia.

The Aussies yesterday rested all four of their bowlers who helped them win Game 1 of this three-match unofficial ODI series – Pat Cummins, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Adam Zampa and Jason Behrendorff. In a sign that neither side is taking this series too seriously – the Kiwis did not bring any of their ODI stars – Australia included a couple of players not even in their World Cup squad in Sean Abbott and Michael Neser.

While Cummins, Behrendorff and Coulter-Nile combined to take 9-114 in the first match, Abbott and Neser were obliterated, returning the woeful combined figures of 0-119 at nearly eight runs per over. Neither of that pair are close to international standard in this format.

Australia’s Mitchell Starc (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)

This left Australia’s attack very vulnerable, especially with Starc limited to bowling just five overs, treated with care in his first match in 13 weeks. Australian coach Justin Langer said this week Starc was in great physical condition after his long injury lay-off and footage then emerged of him bowling absolute rockets to Smith in the nets. Starc tore the last World Cup to shreds, with 22 wickets at 10, and there were indications yesterday that he is tracking well for the 2019 edition, which starts in three weeks’ time.

Reminiscent of the way he bulldozes through teams at his peak, Starc yesterday secured both his wickets with searing yorkers which beat the batsmen for pace. In the first over of the New Zealand innings Starc castled Hamish Rutherford, and later he returned to skittle the well-set George Worker, who was on 56.

Highlights of Starc’s bowling show him operating with fine rhythm and unsettling pace. This sight was a boon for Australia on the same day they had to omit young pace ace Jhye Richardson from their World Cup squad due to his shoulder injury.

Equally as exciting for the Australian team and its fans was the impressive knock by Smith. Batting out of position at five – Smith has an imperious ODI record at No.3 – the former skipper held together the Australian innings. The Aussies lost openers David Warner (0) and Aaron Finch (16) early. Then Usman Khawaja (56) and Shaun Marsh (28) put on a slow-paced stand of 63. When both of that pair were gone Australia were 4-132 and Smith was left to first guide them out of trouble and then finish their innings with a flourish.

As you would expect from one of the world’s best batsmen, Smith achieved both of these tasks with aplomb. He hammered 26 from the last two overs, including several sixes, to lift Australia to a semi-competitive score. The reality was that Australia were about 30 runs short of a winning total. That was in part due to the slow scoring of Finch, Marsh and Khawaja, who combined made 100 from 156 balls, which equates to a scoring rate of just 3.84 runs per over.

The gentle pace of scoring of this Australian batting line-up, Warner and Maxwell apart, is one of their weaknesses. Maxwell again showed his immense value to this team yesterday by cracking 52 from 44 balls, continuing his hot recent form for Australia. But it was the return to touch of Smith and Starc which mattered most.

The Crowd Says:

2019-05-09T23:55:09+00:00

Riccardo

Roar Rookie


Spot on Neel. I have made the same comment...

2019-05-09T23:04:25+00:00

badmanners

Roar Rookie


Yeah I can't understand why India got excited about winning a test series in Aus for the first time!

2019-05-09T11:30:55+00:00

Nudge

Roar Rookie


Very presentable

2019-05-09T10:46:06+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


There’s a South African-born player who is in the Kiwi ranks named Devon Conway. He might be eligible for selection this year or next year. He has a good First Class and List A record averaging in the early 40s.

2019-05-09T10:41:53+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


Will Young is a gun. He should have been in the World Cup squad over Munro imo. Unfortunately he is out for 9 months due to a shoulder injury.

2019-05-09T07:47:54+00:00

Republican

Guest


How can anyone talk up a loss to a B Kiwi side? This is apparently our 'national sport' while we draw on a population of 20 mill plus. Last time I looked NZ boasted a population of around 5 mill while 'Cricket' does not enjoy the status it does hear. Pathetic.

2019-05-09T06:31:59+00:00

dungerBob

Roar Rookie


Hopefully he's got it in him to play the matching winning innings Ronan. A steady 80 n.o to see us home on a dodgy deck would do me tbh.

2019-05-09T06:11:03+00:00

dungerBob

Roar Rookie


That's what I thought they'd do too and said so in some posts a while back. I was sure they just picked all those fast bowlers because they knew at least one of them probably wouldn't make it fitness wise. Not so though. They really do think we need that many bowlers for some reason.

2019-05-09T06:03:07+00:00

dungerBob

Roar Rookie


Doesn't worry me that T20 is bringing more players into the game Cantab. I like all 3 formats for different reasons and if T20 is diverting a bit of talent crickets way then more power to it.

2019-05-09T05:57:09+00:00

dungerBob

Roar Rookie


That's impressive. NZ is sitting pretty to make the semis yet again. Not that many are talking about them as probable semi finalists though. As per usual.

AUTHOR

2019-05-09T05:23:09+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


In 10 ODIs batting down the order (at 6/7) Carey has made 231 runs at an average of 32 and a strike rate of 97. That's very presentable. A lot of us (myself included) have been too harsh on Carey in ODIs, partly I think because he hasn't played that one really impressive innings yet, the type of eyecatching knock that convinces people he's class.

2019-05-09T04:24:15+00:00

badmanners

Roar Rookie


I did some number crunching and batting at 7 he's averaged 32.4 at SR 95, not comparable to Buttler, de Cock or Dhoni but better than Latham when he keeps and arguably better than Hope who whilst averaging 50 has a strike rate of 75. I think you should always ask if your relying on your 7 to score big what's going on with the 6 above him?

2019-05-09T03:16:30+00:00

AREH

Roar Guru


Yep - not the same firepower of what you may want in a typical no. 7, but at least he has become dependable. Still think 4-5 would suit him best, but that is understandably tricky right now.

2019-05-09T03:12:33+00:00

Targa

Guest


Will Young was made a first class captain at a very young (no pun intended) age and was scoring a lot of pretty 50s. This season he gave away the captaincy, focused on his batting, and has scored a lot of runs ( including 100s for NZ A v Pakistan A and India A). Two other NZ batting names to look out for in the future who could tour Australia next summer are Devon Conway (a South African who is soon to qualify for NZ who averaged over 80 in first class this year) and 19 year-old Rachin Ravindra who also bowls handy slow left arm spin.

2019-05-09T02:23:43+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Roar Rookie


Nothing to worry about here, just a good old work out for both teams.

2019-05-09T02:18:51+00:00

Wal

Roar Guru


NZ batting stocks have risen alot in the last decade or so, Latham is coming off a fantastic summer of Test cricket, NZ now has 4 test batsmen ranked in the top 15 and 3 in the Top 12 for ODIs. More than any other nation in both cases.

2019-05-09T01:54:07+00:00

U

Roar Rookie


2019-05-09T01:53:38+00:00

Riccardo

Roar Rookie


Neesh has been in some decentish nick since he came back Targa. And the fact is we will need him. The all-rounders and spinners will be key in this tournament, I feel. Rapt for Young too mate; he has a big future...

2019-05-09T01:47:35+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Nesser is coming in cold is he not? Abbott was fantastic with the ball in the second half of the Shield.

AUTHOR

2019-05-09T01:19:49+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Abbott is very hot and cold - he has days where he bowls really well but also plenty where he sprays the ball and goes for a lot of runs. He is a long way from being good enough to represent Australia IMO. Neser, meanwhile, is a good Shield bowler but a very ordinary one-day bowler - he has a career bowling average of 37 after playing List A cricket for nine years.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar