Forget BBL form, Finch is an international gun

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Forget Aaron Finch’s shoddy BBL season, the Victorian has driven Australia’s white-ball resurgence and remains clearly their best option as captain and opener in limited-overs cricket.

After averaging just 13 with the bat in the BBL, Finch has been pilloried by fans and media and had his Australian spot questioned by former Australian skipper Michael Clarke.

Speaking on Sky Sports Radio, Clarke claimed Finch was “in deep trouble”.

“He got dropped from Bangalore IPL, he’s had a horrible BBL,” Clarke said.

“His one-day form was good in Australia but I tell you, there’s some serious pressure on Finchy in short-form cricket as captain.”

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The reality is that Finch’s form in franchise cricket has little relevance to the Australian side. If performing in these money-making leagues was the benchmark for international selection, then Glenn Maxwell’s constantly dire IPL efforts would prevent him from playing for Australia, despite his consistent T20I brilliance.

It is equivalent to saying an in-form Test cricketer should be dropped due to poor returns in the Sheffield Shield. In other words, it’s nonsense.

Finch is the main reason Australia have enjoyed a major resurgence in limited-overs cricket. Over the past two years, the Aussies have hauled themselves out of mediocrity to become one of the world’s best white-ball teams.

(Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

In that time, with Finch as skipper, Australia have a commanding limited-overs record of 32 wins and 16 losses. What makes that record vastly more impressive is Australia have barely played any matches at home – 75 per cent of those matches were overseas.

With Finch at the helm, the Aussies have become a white-ball force away from home. During the last two years, Finch has led Australia to five series victories away from home – in India (twice), England, South Africa and the UAE – and to a World Cup semi-final in England.

The 34-year-old is widely regarded as a calm, inspiring and tactically astute skipper. Australia’s limited-overs sides have looked happy, settled and united under his leadership. Finch has also led with the blade.

Over those past two years, as Australia have once again become a high-quality white-ball team, Finch’s form has been fantastic. In ODIs he’s piled up 1788 runs at 58, including six tons from 33 matches. Meanwhile, in T20Is, Finch has been dynamic at the top of the order, averaging 35 at a blistering strike rate of 147.

What stands out about Finch’s white-ball form over the past two years is his extraordinary consistency. In ODIs he has passed 50 in half of his innings, and in T20Is he has passed 35 in nearly two thirds of his innings.

Rarely has Finch failed in either format. This underlines the major growth in his game during his time as skipper, having been a boom-or-bust batsman earlier in his international career. In ODIs Finch is no longer as destructive as he once was, but he’s become the bedrock of the Australian line-up, regularly anchoring the innings to give others the freedom to play more expansively.

The consistently good platforms laid by Finch and his opening partner David Warner have made Australia an ODI team to be reckoned with once more.

(David Rogers/Getty Images)

In T20Is, meanwhile, Finch remains as destructive as ever. His ability to clatter pace in the power play, and also destroy spin in the middle overs, improves the balance of the Australian T20I batting line-up. That latter skill also means Australia have the luxury of tinkering with their batting order, due to Finch’s comfort in the middle order.

Not to mention the often overlooked value of having an opening combination that knows each other’s games intimately.

Finch and Warner first played together for Australia ten years ago, and have since opened together in nearly 100 limited-overs internationals.

That understanding, and collective experience, was on show in the 2019 World Cup as Finch and Warner combined for an incredible haul of 1154 runs at 61, including five tons from ten matches.

With the T20 World Cup just eight months away, now is not the time to be breaking up this dominant opening pair, let alone dropping Finch.

That’s not to say that one of Warner or Finch couldn’t potentially move to the middle order for that tournament. But that would only make sense if another Aussie player went ballistic at the top in this month’s five-match T20I series against New Zealand.

(Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

Unless that happens, Australia’s veteran opening pair should stay put for the World Cup.

Fortunately, Australia’s chairman of selectors Trevor Hohns has not been swayed by all the drivel about Finch’s franchise league form.

Hohns told media recently that what mattered most was Finch’s international performances.

“He’s been a little out of nick, or out of runs,” Hohns said.

“But on the international stage he’s very well credentialed and one of the best T20 players in the world.”

Spot on, Trevor.

The Crowd Says:

2021-02-09T04:16:27+00:00

Mangas

Roar Rookie


Yes let’s forget the other 16 years of his career because he had a poor BBL. (I don’t think so)

2021-02-09T04:11:51+00:00

Mangas

Roar Rookie


Finch is a gun. He had some unlucky dismissals in the BBL. You can’t compare his form to Burns.

2021-02-09T00:56:54+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


And he'll have a damn good go at it today!

2021-02-08T06:18:10+00:00

badmanners

Roar Rookie


Amazing, a debutant scores a double ton in the 4th innings to win a match! Just phenomenal. :thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup: He now has a test average of 250 :cricket:

2021-02-08T05:28:26+00:00

Tempo

Roar Rookie


I think Shield form is more relevant for fringe players. Someone like Joe Burns was vulnerable leading into the first test this summer, because he’d had mediocre form last season (so wasn’t established in the side) and had awful form in the Shield and Australia A games. I don’t think he could have complained too much if he was dropped prior to the first test. Players who performed well in their most recent outings for Australia should generally be safe, particularly players who have performed well over a long period (Finch qualifies under both categories). If you scored a 100 in your last test match, you deserve another chance at test level before getting dropped, even if you are struggling at Shield level. Further to Rob’s comment, if Steve Smith scored 5 ducks in a row in the Shield, whilst it would be worrying to selectors, no way are they dropping him unless he fails for an extended period at test level.

2021-02-08T05:25:57+00:00

TJ

Guest


His last 5 scores for Australia in white ball cricket are 0, 35, 114, 60 and 75. I don't understand why there seems to be so many people that want our captain to be dropped because of how he's performing in domestic T20 leagues. If he's performing well for Australia, which he is, then who cares how many runs he makes in the BBL or IPL.

2021-02-08T04:07:20+00:00

Leuco

Roar Rookie


Finch is in terrible form and the Renegades which he captains finished a dismal last. Was even dropped by his IPL side. But lets keep him captaining and playing for the Aus side because he's a good bloke and played well a year ago.

2021-02-08T02:34:19+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Roar Rookie


Forget BBL in general. How about the West Indies unlikely victory over Bangers?

2021-02-08T01:17:30+00:00

Rob

Guest


He has been poor in the IPL and BBL however his form for Australia over the last year has been fantastic and that's what matters. He is clearly still one of the best white ball batsman in the world and he's currently ranked 4th in T20 and 5th in ODI cricket which proves that he is still one of the best.

2021-02-08T01:06:53+00:00

Rob

Guest


Would you drop Steve Smith if he was going poorly in Shield cricket?

2021-02-08T00:32:40+00:00

Tony H

Roar Pro


Finch WAS one of the best White ball players in the world. This year, his form has been atrocious.

2021-02-08T00:30:34+00:00

Rob

Guest


Ridiculous to compare Burns to Finch. Burns was a player who has been in and out of the side and never cemented himself in the team. Finch is one of the best white ball players in the world and arguably one of the best T20 players of all time.

2021-02-07T07:11:47+00:00

Dean F

Guest


Great white ball player for Australia, very poor Test player. But it was just as much Langer's fault because he picked Finch to open for Australia when he doesn't even open for his state. Langer's incompetence is another discussion though.

2021-02-07T04:58:40+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Probably not as Taurus women usually have big voices. Cher is also Taurus. They are also usually very pretty. Edit: and Amy, hubba-bubba , Shark.

2021-02-07T04:51:37+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


You think Adele's lung capacity has been compromised of recent times?

2021-02-07T04:51:00+00:00

Simon G

Roar Rookie


I thought we would have learned our lesson with Joe Burns...

2021-02-07T04:49:02+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I call JL in Yoda's voice, it quells his Scorpionic intensity.

2021-02-07T04:46:56+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Sometimes l sing Cranberries in a Dylan voice. Sometimes l do Van Morrison black, others in a blend of Cher and Adele (her fat period)

2021-02-07T04:41:32+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


Well this may be part of the issue. Burns looked to many as not being anywhere at the peak of his game leading into the Tests, but he had to fail in the Tests themselves to be dropped. We elevate players due to domestic form, so seems logical we should drop them on the same basis - "incumbency" certainly buys you some credits, but at some point a player should be considered to have used up those credits re automatic selection in the national team if he has an extended run of poor performances domestically (not just scores, but demonstrated technical issues/modes of dismissal). I guess we'll see with Finch this NZ series whether he is out of form, or just switches off when not playing for Australia.

2021-02-07T04:33:06+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


It's a discussion thread Mooty. Anyone can respond to any comment. It's how it works. Otherwise it wouldn't work at all.

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