Inglis ignites, Agar asphyxiates as Aussies make it four from four over Sri Lanka

By The Roar / Editor

An undermanned Australia have survived another spirited performance with the ball by Sri Lanka to win by six wickets at the MCG, and claim a 4-0 lead in the five-match T20I series.

Minus rested quicks Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc, a miserly spell of bowling from Ashton Agar, claiming 1-14, preceded a disastrous late collapse after a strong start from the tourists; before another T20 World Cup hopeful in Josh Inglis helped ice a nervy run chase with some brutal hitting.

However, the form of captain Aaron Finch remains a significant concern, managing just 2 to continue his wretched run of form despite again demoting himself to number three.

Having meandered to a series of middling totals in the first three matches of the series, Sri Lanka’s openers seemed intent on taking the fight to Australia’s new-look pace attack early after being sent in by Finch, rushing to 0-35 off the first four overs.

Their newfound intent was summed up in a single lusty blow from the out-of-form Danushka Gunathilaka, charging at Kane Richardson and depositing the South Australian back over his head for six.

However, things changed from the moment Ashton Agar was brought on. Having managed just one match in Australia’s run to the T20 World Cup title in the UAE to allow for a more batting-heavy XI, the left-armer bowled like he is intent on ensuring he becomes undroppable for the title defence on home shores later this year.

He’d take just three balls to frustrate Gunathilaka into miscuing a simple catch; conceding just one from the over to boot, the tide had turned Australia’s way.

1-73 at the halfway mark despite Agar’s miserly start and support from senior spinner Adam Zampa, the tourists remained on track for a competitive total – especially with opener Pathum Nissanka’s excellent form continuing.

But Australia’s fielding, a key difference between the two sides this series, came to the fore again, Kusal Mendis’ bold call to take on the arm of Glenn Maxwell backfiring spectacularly.

The chancy run was again caused by Agar, whose superb showing, following on from his miserly performance on return in the third T20I in Canberra on Tuesday, led to this remarkable stat: in eight overs across the two matches, he’d only conceded singles.

Having strangled the life out of the innings, finishing with 1-14 from his four overs, Agar could sit back and watch Sri Lanka’s desperation for quick runs see wickets at last tumble. From 2-110 in the 16th over, the visitors would lose 6-12 in a horror collapse as Zampa and the Richardsons, Kane and Jhye, filled their boots.

Only a 17-run final over as tailender Chamika Karunaratne swung for the fences allowed for a respectable total of 8-139; however, the Aussies’ sluggish start on a slow MCG pitch would soon make it look defendable.

Josh Inglis bats during game four of the T20I series between Australia and Sri Lanka. (Photo by Daniel Pockett – CA/Cricket Australia via Getty Images)

Having dazzled with the ball, Agar received less acclaim in his second run as an experimental opener alongside Ben McDermott – captain Aaron Finch demoting himself to first drop – especially with Finch’s form slump a key concern for Australia heading into the World Cup.

“I’d have him [Finch] opening,” former great Mark Waugh said on Fox Cricket.

“I don’t know why he didn’t the other night. I think he needs some runs moving forward. I’m not saying he won’t be there for the World Cup, but it’d be great to see him get into some form.

“His average has dropped from 36 to the high 20s and it’s probably the way he’s batting; he’s just not batting like he used to. I think he’s a little uncomfortable against raw pace and wrist spin, so he needs to finish the series really strongly.”

Having started his international career with a string of run-outs, McDermott appeared keen to cement his shaky reputation between the wickets, chancing several hair-raising singles before falling to spinner Maheesh Theekshana for a battling 9.

When Finch fell for just 2 a few overs later, the Aussies found themselves in a sticky situation as a fired-up Sri Lankan bowling attack, despite missing the world’s third-ranked T20 bowler Wanindu Hasaranga, sensed a breakthrough win for the tour.

A sluggish Agar limped to 26 off 30 balls before falling attempting to lift the run rate; but that was the cue for Josh Inglis to arrive and begin to change the momentum.

Unlike the top order, the Western Australian was on the attack from the word go, targeting second spinner Jeffrey Vandersay with a pair of boundaries, the second an audacious reverse-sweep, to see Australia above run-a-ball pace at last.

Even Maxwell was keen to play the anchor role as Inglis’ star shone; not even a narrow escape as Dushmantha Chameera claimed a catch at long on from Vandersay before being carried by the momentum over the rope could dent his confidence.

As Inglis raced to 40 off just 20 balls, Maxwell joined the party with an audacious ramp off Chameera; though the ball was short enough that there was a danger of five wides had the Victorian’s bat not intervened.

After depositing Chameera for another six, Inglis’ fun would end on 40, but he’d already all but done the job.

Just as they had done in Australia’s Super Over victory in Game 2, albeit under substantially less pressure, Maxwell and Stoinis applied the finishing touches to an eventually comfortable-seeming victory with 11 balls to spare that, like the series as a whole, felt much closer.

Sri Lanka 8-139 (20 overs; Nissanka 46, J Richardson 2-20, K Richardson 2-44) def by Australia 4-143 (18.1 overs; Maxwell 48*, Inglis 40, Kumara 2-22) by six wickets with 11 balls remaining at the MCG.

The Crowd Says:

2022-02-19T08:54:20+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I'm not sure about that; Finch averages 17.5 this series, Agar is 19.5. Finch is surplus to needs.

2022-02-19T08:04:14+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


I think they are only meaningless if you treat them as such. – Lots of cricket to be played and followed. I’m keeping a keen eye on Australia’s make up in T20 ahead of what side Australia puts forward for the T20 World Cup here in October. – The ODIs are flying under the radar a bit (nothing at home this summer after the NZ cancellation) but noting the ODI WC will be in 11 months in India. The ODIS in Pakistan and Sri Lanka will therefore be ones to watch. We have a huge 2 months in India from January – bilateral ODIs, then ODI WC, then Test series – so that’s going to be quite the challenge for all the Australian teams and should be quite exciting. – And I’m very excited for the Test series against South Africa here. I reckon our batsmen are going to be super challenged by this new group of South Africa’s attack. Will put the “contest” of the recent Ashes to shame in terms of a battle I think, Can’t pick the outcome at this point.

2022-02-19T07:54:54+00:00

PeteB

Roar Rookie


Just pining for the “good old days” of ODI tri-series tournaments that were heavily promoted as part of the summer of cricket on nine. After a busy day at work and running around after family I honestly forget these games are on. Just seems to be a general lack of excitement about these random standalone and seemingly meaningless T20 and ODI tournaments these days. Maybe it’s just me.

2022-02-19T07:19:29+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


:laughing:

2022-02-19T07:13:11+00:00

Ace

Roar Rookie


Well said Jeff. Pete must surely be better informed now..we hope

2022-02-19T06:30:48+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


In the 90s, Bazza, T20 was not a game. Strange that you “remember” it.

2022-02-19T06:22:22+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


The crowds were not "derisory". They turned up because they are fans. If you are trying a 'put-down' it's important to know what words mean. You also need to know how those words work within a sentence.

2022-02-19T06:04:47+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Turnbull reckons he’s not a good drinking partner :stoked:

2022-02-19T05:31:18+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I just saw the promo between Macron and Scomo. I reckon Macron was telling the truth

2022-02-19T05:17:45+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


We should celebrate Authentic people they are as rare as you & l :stoked:

2022-02-19T05:07:28+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Everyone's a rookie till they post a certain number of topics. It's not actually attributable to one's ability to argue or make a point.

2022-02-19T04:55:50+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


"Wouldn’t even know there was cricket still being played since the Ashes and BBL finished." How come? Are you not a cricket fan? FYI, Australia is touring Pakistan next month and then Sri Lanka in July. The T20WC is on in Oct/Nov, followed by Test series against West Indies and South Africa at home. Australia will play ODIs in India in Jan/Feb, followed by the ODI WC in India March, after which Australia will play a Test series in India.

2022-02-19T04:41:27+00:00

PeteB

Roar Rookie


Is this real cricket with real players or one of those computer match simulation games where you read about the scores afterwards ? Wouldn’t even know there was cricket still being played since the Ashes and BBL finished.

2022-02-19T04:01:36+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


How could such a genuine bloke be a Victorian???

2022-02-19T03:44:35+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


So true Don it’s our grass roots that need to be promoted on FTA then the audience will follow it would generate a huge whirlwind of corporate dollars it just needs a passionate individual like Packer did all those years ago. It can be done. A brand new FTA station like you suggested with CA & AFL headlining it would be jam packed what a revelation . :thumbup: For the people young & old to enjoy & embrace, Free To All.

2022-02-19T03:28:43+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


It’s only a matter of time the drums are beating Jeff :boxing:

2022-02-19T03:28:32+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


You would think so. It's been 20+ years since I watched FTA on any basis other than a sports event like the ODI WC final or the Olympics, but I do see that there are a heap of digital channels per station and they just seem to show junk like home advertising programs. You'd think there were would be as much interest in sports as there are in some of those shows that are put on.

2022-02-19T03:23:37+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Bazza...a guest? An ungracious guest. Wrong site for that silliness.

2022-02-19T03:21:34+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


CA and AFL jointly.

2022-02-19T03:21:02+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Ch9 has fallen off the ratings planet. They need to fight for FTA cricket again. That when they had an audience. One day, commercial sport will recognise the possibility of state cricket. It is cricket's best product. The only reason people don't go is because it is not promoted. Televise it and it will trend There's a bandwagon for an enterprising FTA. Maybe CA and the AFL can jointly buy a licence.

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