Zampa stunning, Marsh brutal as statement win delivers huge momentum shift for Aussies

By David Schout / Expert

Australia’s thumping win over Bangladesh overnight was all about the numbers. And they check out for Justin Langer’s men, whose hopes of progressing to the T20 World Cup semi-finals have gone from 30/70 to 70/30 on the back of one result.

Not only does it mean victory over the West Indies on Saturday night will (almost certainly) see Australia through, but even a loss could see them progress, provided South Africa lose against a dominant England outfit. Wrapping up victory in just 6.2 overs has bought Australia an almighty insurance policy.

While the intense focus on net-run-rate throughout Thursday night’s game grew somewhat tiresome, the ICC’s questionable way of separating sides in knockout tournaments in this instance works for the Aussies. Their NRR climbed exponentially from a lowly -0.63 (thanks to Sunday morning’s huge loss against England) to a more-than-respectable 1.03. Importantly, that sees them overtake South Africa’s 0.74.

Perhaps as importantly as getting back in black, the win goes some way to re-instilling Australia’s battered confidence in the wake of defeat to England last time out. Bangladesh, of course, are several rungs below England’s T20 quality, and Thursday night’s thumping does not erase the significant question marks that hang over Langer’s side.

But it reinforced that Australia boasts a world-class T20 bowling line-up, who they will rely heavily upon to progress deep into this tournament. Victory in Dubai was set up by Australia’s two most in-form bowlers in Adam Zampa (5-19) and Josh Hazlewood (2-8), the former snaring just the third Australian five-wicket haul in T20 internationals.

Hazlewood’s rapid T20 improvement has been well documented in recent months following IPL success with Chennai, and his progression beyond being a one-dimensional bowler in the game’s shortest format is testament to his professionalism.

But it’s Zampa who is now one of Australian cricket’s real success stories of the last ten years. Perhaps unfairly, Zampa doesn’t give the impression of an ultra-professional, striving towards continual improvement.

But he is a real student of the legspin craft, and continues to get better. It might be the ultimate compliment that, when he performs game after game, it causes little stir. People expect him to do well, and he more than often delivers. By the end of the game, Zampa was the leading wicket-taker during the Super 12 stage of this World Cup.

Adam Zampa celebrates another Bangladesh wicket. (Photo by Alex Davidson/Getty Images)

After running through Bangladesh for just 73, skipper Aaron Finch (despite not admitting as much post-game) looked like a man wanting to wrap things up within the power-play. In the end, a Mitchell Marsh six wrapped things up just two balls after umpire Kumar Dharmasena performed the obligatory windmill-arms at the end of the sixth.

Finch’s innings started agriculturally, legs rooted to the crease flaying (and missing) at almost everything. But once he whipped Mustafizur off the pads for six through midwicket, something clicked. He hit four sixes in his 20-ball knock — four more than Bangladesh managed in their 90-ball innings. It’s beyond question now that the skipper is beyond his best. But his power-game, as shown in his quick fire innings, remains.

It was Marsh’s innings that, while short (16* off 5), was one of the most positive aspects of the Australian performance. In the lead-up to this World Cup, teammates and coaches had fawned at the form of Marsh (“no one’s hitting them better”), but he was inexplicably dropped against England, collateral damage to the conservative move of picking five specialist bowlers.

The move spectacularly backfired, and it’s pleasing the selectors returned to Marsh against Bangladesh. There’s few players who can lead Australia to against-the-odds success in the UAE. Marsh is one of them.

The Windies clash will worry Australia. On form shown thus far, Finch’s men should do enough to progress.

But any side that boasts the hitting Andre Russell, Kieron Pollard, Nick Pooran and Shimron Hetmyer is a chance to do lasting damage. While the situation dictated that Australia came out hard against Bangladesh, it needs to adopt a similar aggressive approach in what should be a huge clash on Saturday night.

The Crowd Says:

2021-11-06T11:19:45+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Lol. I plucked those figures out of my head!!

2021-11-06T07:48:29+00:00

The Late News

Roar Rookie


Just like me on a dance floor hey?

2021-11-06T06:40:18+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


That is laughable. Taskin bowls serious heat

2021-11-06T03:35:58+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Hey Donny, it's been fun but I really can't waste any more time on Davy. I know how important having the last word is to Davy fans so I'll leave it to you to have the last post and I promise not to reply

2021-11-06T03:22:02+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


You didn't read the last post?

2021-11-06T02:57:33+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


How do you go holding up Davy's posters with just one hand?

2021-11-06T02:41:36+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I'm not super Davy fan. I have enjoyed what he has done but when keyboard plebs think it magnifies their own humanity by putting someone else down, I'll point it out. You gain nothing from it apart from holding up a mirror to your own shortcomings.

2021-11-06T02:36:15+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Donny, I'll just leave you to your collection of posters of Davy

2021-11-06T02:26:15+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Yep, keep saying that and you'll continue to parody yourself.

2021-11-06T01:34:47+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Hang on to that. 14 balls faced, 5 scoring shots. As I said, looked like an out of form Jimmy Anderson.

2021-11-06T00:52:39+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


...but did his job..

2021-11-06T00:22:42+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Davy? He played like a busted.

2021-11-06T00:18:33+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


He did his job. If you do want to talk cricket and want to be negative about a positive performance, another poor bowling performance from the vice captain or another poor bit of wicket keeping on a hat trick ball were more notable...yet your target was Davy.

2021-11-06T00:04:34+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Yes, but we're allowed to talk about his cricket right? That's what this site is for. And his innings was very, very ordinary, particularly against a team that would be lucky to win a dozen games in the Sydney grade competition.

2021-11-05T23:53:08+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Agree on factoring in the wickets as a tie-breaker David, though head-to-head as suggested by Bush would be even better. As for 5 vs 4 specialist bowlers, most top teams at the WC have a fifth bowler whose bowling is as good as or even better than their batting – Jadeja, Pretorius, Moeen, Imad Wasim. NZ is playing five pure bowlers. So not sure it’s correct to say no one picks five bowlers any more. Don’t think anyone is playing bits and pieces bowlers as poor as Stoinis. I would have thought M Marsh wouldn’t be the worst option as a fifth bowler, wonder if he’s injured? Also, Australia’s problem is that their keeper isn’t good enough to bat in the top 6 at the moment, which adds to the pressure to have six specialist bats.

2021-11-05T23:43:25+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Depends on what you want to be convinced about. Most Warner comment is tall poppy hatred. He has been wonderful for over a decade; doesn't deserve hate...especially from keyboard cowards.

2021-11-05T23:35:23+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Yep, head-to-head would be by far the best method, otherwise factoring wickets as David suggests.

2021-11-05T19:02:08+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


So you thought he was convincing? Dear oh dear.

2021-11-05T14:24:49+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


Did you write this before the Vic/NSW game? Lyon, 27 overs, 2/47. What are the lotto numbers for tomorrow night?

2021-11-05T10:17:39+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Only faced 14 balls. Got 18 runs. Gave the strike to Finch. What did you want to be convinced about? The team did everything that they needed to but, I guess you're not commenting on the cricket. Tall poppies are another conversation.

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