Finch’s slump far worse than Taylor, Hughes, Waugh, Chappell lean trots: If selectors don't act, team will suffer

By Paul Suttor / Expert

If you look up loyal to a fault in a cricket-minded dictionary, you may just find a picture of the Australian selectors.

They are backing Aaron Finch yet again to dig his way out of a form slump but their support for the struggling white-ball skipper is now well beyond the point of being loyal, the stubborn refusal to drop him is affecting the team.

The Australian men’s ODI team dropped the final match of the three-game series against Zimbabwe in Townsville and only just managed to squeak home on Tuesday night in the first one-dayer against New Zealand after Finch failed for the fourth straight innings at the top of the order.

Finch’s trough of low scores has been an ongoing problem for more than a year in the T20 and 50-over arenas.

In one-dayers this year, he has 168 runs at 14.08, including scores of 15, 1 and 5 against Zimbabwe and 5 versus New Zealand, which came via a dicey single to get off the mark which yielded four overthrows.

As for T20s, over the past 12 months he has chalked up 382 runs at 25.46 at a strike rate of 119.8, well down on his overall career marks of 2855 at 35.24 and 145.3 runs per hundred deliveries.

When you compare his slump against the historically bleak lean spells over the years by Australian captains, it’s clearly the worst.

Behind Greg Chappell’s string of ducks in the early 1980s, Kim Hughes’ West Indies battering which led to his tearful resignation, Mark Taylor’s infamous 1997 nadir or Steve Waugh’s rough patch which led to his demise as one-day skipper at the turn of the century.

(Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

Chappell went 0, 4, 1, 0 and 10 in the limited-overs arena 1982 before hitting a hundred to return to form. It was the only time in his 74-match career where he had four single-figure scores in a row.

Hughes’ famous 1984 barrage at the hands of a Windies quartet of Malcolm Marshall, Joel Garner, Michael Holding and Courtney Walsh ended his career after nine Tests in the Caribbean and on home turf where his highest score was 37.

CLICK HERE for a seven-day free trial to watch cricket on KAYO

He scratched together 296 runs at 16.45 before bowing out with a pair at the MCG after giving up the captaincy two Tests earlier.

Taylor went 11 games without a half-century, scoring 360 at 18.95 before his century in the second innings of the first Test of the 1997 Ashes tour saved him from the axe. He later revealed he was told before he went out to bat that another failure would mean he lost his spot and Steve Waugh would become captain and the left-handed opener responded with 129.

Kim Hughes was a dashing stroke maker for Australia. (Photo by Murrell/Allsport/Getty Images)

Waugh’s sacking as one-day skipper in the 2001-02 summer was front and back-page news, and he was still making a half-decent contribution with the bat, tallying 187 that tri-series against the Black Caps and Proteas at 31.17.

Perhaps Finch needs the Taylor treatment – being given an ultimatum of perform or perish from the selectors.

But that’s not the signal, at least publicly, coming from the national panel of George Bailey, Tony Dodemaide and coach Andrew McDonald.

Finch, who was selected to lead the squad for next month’s T20 World Cup title defence, is in many ways under-rated when you compare his career as a whole with Australia’s best white-ball players in the modern era.

Steve Waugh hits out in 2002. (Photo: Hamish Blair/Getty Images

He was a reliable option at the top of the order, he has achieved great feats but it’s all in the past tense.

Finch will be 36 in November and has been hampered by an ongoing knee problem. Cricketers, particular batters, are terrible at knowing when it’s time to hang up the willow.

Very few manage to maintain or improve their statistics in the second half of their 30s and even for greats like Ricky Ponting, it can be a swift decline from greatness to an enforced retirement when the eyes don’t track the quickly moving ball and the feet also don’t get into position like they once did.

McDonald, in defending Finch earlier this week, said it was his footwork that was at the heart of his current dry spell and tweaks to his technique could get the runs flowing again.

(Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

Unfortunately for Finch, his actions did not back up his coach’s words against the Black Caps, trapped on the crease by a Trent Boult inswinger in Cairns, with the skipper burning a review which drew three reds before trudging off as the first wicket down, as he has done in eight of his past 12 innings.

The selectors have tried shuffling him down the order in the T20 team – that didn’t work either when he scored 35 and 2 against Sri Lanka in earlier this year.

Their stubborn refusal to put Finch and Australian fans out of their misery by dropping the captain sends the wrong message on a number of fronts.

It’s a terrible signal to send to players trying to get into the team that a slot won’t open up at opener even though one of the current occupants continues to fail miserably.

And it also gives an impression to other players in the team that as long as they bank a few decent years on the international stage, they should have plenty of credits in the bank to go on a lean spell at the end of their career before they’ll get the punt.

McDonald also intimated that it was possibly too late to be changing the ODI skipper with the World Cup next year. There is plenty of time for a new leader to take over with fewer than 20 matches on the schedule between now and the tournament in India next October.

Alex Carey looks like the best option to take over from Finch as opener and captain.

His 85 in game one against New Zealand saved Australia from a second straight embarrassing defeat. 

Calm at the crease but also inventive and able to up the ante when required, Carey could be the perfect opening ally alongside David Warner, much in the same vein as Adam Gilchrist was with Mark Waugh a generation ago.

The 31-year-old could take over the leadership of both white-ball teams, a role that Test skipper Pat Cummins does not want. Matthew Wade is still a force in T20 cricket but he is turning 35 in December and selectors should be looking to a younger option like Carey. 

Alex Carey jumps over Wessly Madhevere. (Photo by Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images)

Young West Australian keeper Josh Inglis could still be used as a specialist batter in either short form alongside Carey. 

The selectors, headed up by George Bailey, have enjoyed a honeymoon period since the end of the last Trevor Hohns era 15 months ago with prescient decisions like pitching Scott Boland into the Ashes and bringing Usman Khawaja back to the Test side as an opener.

But the most important part of the job is the toughest – being able to cut players whose form is detrimental to Cricket Australia’s lofty ambition of being the best team in the world in all three formats. 

Australia will not only fail to defend their T20 title at home if they keep Finch in the team but have no chance of reclaiming the ODI World Cup unless they pick the best players for the job.

Sadly for Finch, he is no longer among that 11 and should not be chosen in the XI.

The Crowd Says:

2022-09-09T08:56:01+00:00

bowledover

Roar Rookie


We need to be planning now for the future. People will argue, but even Warner is going to be moving on soon. Maybe the team could look something like: 1. Head, 2. Warner (with McDermott in the wings), 3. Smith 4. Green 5. MMarsh 6. Carey - wk (but in all honesty, I see Inglis playing soon!). 7. Maxwell (could also see Inglis fulfill this role). 8. Starc 10. Zampa 11. Hazlewood. Theyd need to give the captaincy to perhaps Head, MMarsh or Maxy

2022-09-09T07:58:33+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Can't believe both Head & Khawaja aren't in the side to be honest. Finch & Stoinis clearly aren't first XI picks for mine.

2022-09-09T06:59:28+00:00

Tom


Travis Head has made 190 runs in the 3 ODI’s he has opened the batting this year, seems an obvious successor as far as ODI’s go.

2022-09-09T01:07:01+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


Fairly damming stats on labs but he has a lot of his career ahead of him unlike some of his team mates. There's also his performances in the uk to take into account. Hopefully Smith is turning his form around

2022-09-09T00:31:22+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


He's been able to accelerate in the past but I'm not convinced he still has it in him to do it consistently. His strike rate in last yer's T20I WC was just 97, and it's not as if he lacked opportunities to construct an innings. You're correct that just a platform would be nice right now, though. I don't quite know what you mean by Labs 'bouncing back'. In the last 2 years (which covers about 70% of his ODI career) he's scored 2 half centuries in 16 innings at 24, with a SR of 78. His List A average is 34. I'm not convinced he's genuinely proven himself in this format.

2022-09-08T16:55:01+00:00

Soyaib Zihad

Roar Rookie


Well, if Finch is out I see Travis Head as the opener, not Carey. Yes, he is my captain in ODI for sure but in T20? Not likely. Head can open in T20I too and for the captain option, I think Warner's captaincy ban should be overturned and he back to the captain's ring. Nonetheless, Maxwell is always there to say 'Hello'.

2022-09-08T10:15:19+00:00

Simoc

Roar Rookie


They could bring back Ian Chappell for the same value. Finch has been hopeless forever. He had a great season a while back but is way over rated.

2022-09-08T07:32:57+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


He can accelerate, as evidenced from prev odi, test and t20 innings but atm we need a platform. Doubt they'll drop Labs, think they'll back him to bounce back

2022-09-08T06:40:13+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


Yeah look, if they’re going to drop the likes of Finch, Stoinis and Labuschagne (and I think they pretty much have to now) then it probably makes sense to keep Smith at 3 for some stability. The query on Smith at the moment is whether or not he can accelerate, but as long as he has some more powerful players around him it shouldn’t be a major issue.

2022-09-08T04:53:41+00:00

bowledover

Roar Rookie


But many times Finch has seemingly refused to go into the middle order. but agree, keep him in the t20I side for now..

2022-09-08T04:00:17+00:00

Harvey Wilson

Roar Rookie


One problem is the selectors (and media) think that one good innings means that they are 'in form'. One good innings in 10 is a blip, that is all.

2022-09-08T03:15:09+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


That's true. I think Khawaja would be a better option to see the team through to the WC, with Head to replace him after that?

2022-09-08T01:48:17+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


I have no problem with Smith in ODI cricket. There aren't too many test greats who weren't also good in the 50 over format. He just seems to remain woefully out of form. Maybe some time out of the national short form team to focus on the shield (do they still have that?) might be a way to let him build back to somewhere near his lofty heights

2022-09-08T01:26:13+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


You had me until you suggested making Carey ODI opener and captain of the T20I side. Carey is not a powerful enough player to open the batting and he shouldn't be near the T20I side. Captaining ODIs and batting at 6 is fine, although Maxwell or Marsh could easily take over in both formats. My worry is that in another 12 months Inglis could be pushing for Carey's spot in ODIs. I don't think we want that sort of pressure on a recently appointed captain. I don't mind Finch seeing out the T20I WC defence as his swansong (his T20I record of late isn't completely awful) but he should be nowhere near the ODI side. He should never have been picked for the Zimbabwe series, which was a great time to change things up. I'm also not convinced about persisting with Smith in limited overs cricket. I got absolutely roasted on social media for saying it because everyone remembers those remakable tons he scored against India, but those were almost two years ago. He's played just 6 ODIs since the start of 2021, all within the last few months. I also want us to get the most out of him in test cricket, which is clearly his best format. With the WC 12 months away we should be getting games into guys like Head, Inglis, McDermott and even Philippe. Assuming Smith does keep his spot in the starting XI next year, we still need to know who among the next in line is actually up to it at this level. We don't learn anything by sticking with the same formula, especially not when our ODI record of late is patchy at best.

2022-09-08T01:13:33+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Odd way to try and prove your point by cherry picking stats, including some Test score but not Chappell's. Finch is under pressure for sure but he did score runs recently against Sri Lanka. It is the way he us getting out more than the scores

2022-09-08T00:38:00+00:00

Nick

Guest


Is the other opener performing? Seems a very old team.

2022-09-08T00:22:01+00:00

Hard at work, hardly workin'

Guest


These matches are summer warm ups. I would not take them terribly seriously. Whats more, Mark Taylor was allowed to 'slump' for most of his career as captain and that seemed to be no problem for anyone.

AUTHOR

2022-09-07T23:59:13+00:00

Paul Suttor

Expert


Inglis needs to be invested in, whether it's as a specialist batter or keeper-batter after Wade goes in T20 side

2022-09-07T23:52:57+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


The age is a problem. Inglis and McDermott are others that could be brought in.

2022-09-07T23:52:04+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


He’s younger than Usman as well. Issue would be a good stop gap, but we also have Warner at a similar age

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar