REPORT: 'This can't go on' - Superb Stoinis' record 50 keeps Aussies alive... but Finch's painful form hits new low

By Tim Miller / Editor

A dazzling half-century from Marcus Stoinis was enough to drag a still-rusty Australia to a crucial victory over Sri Lanka in Perth, to get their T20 World Cup defence back on track.

Stoinis bludgeoned six sixes in an unbeaten 59 off just 18 balls, the fastest-ever 50 from an Australian in a T20I, to steer the reigning champions to victory by seven wickets with 21 balls to spare, providing a crucial net run rate boost after their disastrous loss to New Zealand in the tournament opener.

But the hosts still have a series of questions that urgently need answering heading into another must-win game against archrivals England on Friday night – chief among them the form of captain Aaron Finch reaching a painful new low.

Struggling to hit the ball off the square for much of the innings, Finch laboured through a painful 42-ball 31 made all the more humiliating by the dominance of first Glenn Maxwell (23 off 12) and then Stoinis at the other end.

With Cameron Green waiting in the wings having shown exciting signs at the top of the order in the lead-up to the tournament, and space needing to be found for Ashton Agar as well after a miserly bowling spell as a last-minute replacement for the COVID-stricken Adam Zampa, Finch’s captaincy is the last thing keeping him in the Australian XI.

And it’s unclear just how long that status can continue to save him.

“My innings was unusual, it was poor – I just couldn’t hit the ball,” a candid Finch admitted after the match.

“They bowled a hard length, it was tough – it’s such a big ground that you feel as though it’s hard to stand and deliver. Especially with a bit of extra bounce, and when the ball’s seaming slightly, you feel it’s just not quite as easy to hit the middle of the bat.

“That’s no excuse for the way I played, but it was nice to get the two points.”

While Zampa was the only change to Australia’s line-up after failing to recover in time for the match, Finch was quick to prove the hosts weren’t averse to improvising on the fly following their disastrous loss to New Zealand in Sydney.

Mitchell Starc was stripped of the new ball after being taken apart by Finn Allen on Saturday night, with Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins instantly proving the change was a wise one.

Hazlewood regularly beat the bat of Sri Lankan opener Pathum Nissanka in a typically incisive opening over, while Cummins would go one better by removing the in-form Kusal Mendis for just 5, failing to get over a short ball and ballooning a simple catch to Mitchell Marsh at mid-wicket.

Things wouldn’t remain that easy for long, though; Nissanka and Dhananjaya de Silva first consolidated, then targeted the Australians’ weakness: their reserve bowling.

Moving cautiously to 1/63 after 10 overs, the first sign of upping the ante came when de Silva aimed to loft Marcus Stoinis over his head, with David Warner doing magnificently to prevent a six millimetres from the boundary: running back with the flight to long off, taking the ball and tossing it back into play just as his momentum carried him over the rope.

Warner would go one better an over later, completing a de Silva catch as the Sri Lankan again tried to bully Ashton Agar down the ground: so easy did he make the catch look that one could almost be tricked into underplaying the extreme degree of difficulty.

The problem was the dismissal brought Charith Asalanka to the crease, who immediately showed just why he’s regarded as one of the men set to carry the next generation of Sri Lankan cricketers back into prominence on the world stage.

A monstrous lofted drive off Mitchell Marsh from just his fifth ball, comfortably reaching the Optus Stadium stands, was without question the shot of the evening… and added insult to injury for Cummins, who had shelled a straightforward chance to remove Nissanka just one ball prior.

It was the latest and costliest in a string of fielding mishaps from the Aussies, and tensions were beginning to show as the reigning champions’ title defence remained on the brink. A throw from third man from Starc that reached Wade on the half-volley brought with it a foul-mouthed tirade from the passionate wicketkeeper.

Through it all, Agar, an eleventh-hour selection following the withdrawal of Zampa, couldn’t have done more to prove his worthiness for the remainder of the tournament – even if it needs come at the expense of one of the three premier quicks.

Like most left-arm slow bowlers, Agar’s turn is negligible, but his crafty changes of pace and length proved tremendously difficult for the Sri Lankans to handle, just as it had against the same opposition in February this year when he famously conceded only singles across 12 overs in the three-match series.

Ashton Agar of Australia celebrates the wicket of Pathum Nissanka of Sri Lanka. (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

It was his accuracy that brought about the downfall of Nissanka – attempting to bring the freewheeling Asalanka on strike, the opener attempted to manufacture a nonexistent single after tapping straight to Marsh at point, only realising his mistake when stranded halfway up the pitch.

Agar would finish with a superb 1/25 from his four overs, the one blemish a four down the ground in his first over from de Silva. Given what he brings to the team in the field and as a handy middle-lower order batter, the question now must be who else will make way for the returning Zampa against England on Friday night.

It could be Cummins, who, with Hazlewood (1/26) miserly as ever and Starc (1/23) adjusting well to a new middle-overs role, leaked badly in the final over of the innings as Sri Lanka, after appearing resigned to a total on the cusp of 150, suddenly found themselves with 157 to defend.

Taken apart by Asalanka, in particular with a stunning lofted drive into the stands, Cummins lost his range and repeatedly failed to hit his yorkers – though admittedly, a final-ball boundary from Chamika Karunaratne was scarcely his fault.

A low full toss was dug out into the covers, where Finch, looking every inch his 35 years as he ambled towards the ball, made a hash of a straightforward stop. It would prove a sorry portent of things to come with the bat.

While the Sri Lankan spin trio of Wanindu Hasaranga, de Silva and Maheesh Theekshana seemed the main threat for the Australians heading in, it was in fact pace that once again left Finch all at sea early.

Despite the visitors’ pace bowling stocks taking another hit with Binura Fernando limping off after just five balls in the opening over, Karunaratne and Lahiru Kumara would step up to give the captain and Warner a serious working over.

Finch would play and miss repeatedly in an incisive over from the latter ruined by a wayward ball down the leg side that beat Mendis for five wides; with Karunaratne peppering Finch from back of a length or targeting the vulnerable front pad, there was no respite.

Aaron Finch of Australia bats. (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

Extras were the only salvation, with a searing inswinger from Kumara cutting Finch in half, and too good for Mendis to stop, racing away for four byes.

“Happy to take any ideas if you know how to hit that,” Finch joked with umpire Richard Illingworth; what wasn’t laughing matter was that, for the first time in Australia’s T20I history, not a single boundary had been struck off the bat in the PowerPlay.

With Warner falling for 11 trying to assert himself on Theekshana’s first ball, drilling the spinner straight to captain Dasun Shanaka at slip, the Sri Lankans were well on top.

As it was repeatedly in last year’s World Cup, it was Marsh who turned things around. Committed to targeting the spinners after seeing off the quicks, the usually menacing Hasaranga was swiftly neutralised by the powerful Western Australian, using the reliable bounce to hit crisply through the line.

Between a powerful pull shot past deep mid-wicket – the Aussies’ first boundary off the bat from the 44th ball of the innings – and a salivating crunch over Hasaranga’s head, Marsh and Finch clubbed 15 from the over to instantly turn the worm the right way.

Even Finch at last got going, breaking the rot with a mighty heave over cow corner to start de Silva’s next over; and while Marsh would try one big shot too many and find Bhanuka Rajapaksa at long off for 16, he had done enough to turn the momentum.

Glenn Maxwell, already riding high after winkling out Shanaka with the ball, followed suit. Perhaps the only Australian to take the fight to New Zealand with the bat at the SCG, the Victorian dynamo confirmed his horror run of form heading into the World Cup has well and truly subsided.

Continuing the onslaught against the Sri Lankan spinners, this was a more conventional assault than the myriad of switch-hits he’d brought out against the Black Caps, clubbing Hasaranga against the spin for two sixes in the over to race to 22 off just six balls.

Hasaranga, normally Sri Lanka’s strike bowler, had conceded 34 from his two overs, and effectively been hit out of the attack.

Things, though, shifted again when Shanaka returned to his pacemen. Kumara took no time at all to return serve on Maxwell, first rapping him on the gloves, then following up with a short ball that honed in on Maxwell’s neck past his swipe across the line.

Felled, the Australian needed several minutes to recover, and it would prove the end of the carnage; an over later, he attempted to launch Karunaratne over deep mid-wicket, with sub fielder Ashen Bandara clinging to the catch just millimetres from the rope.

Amidst the drama, Finch again found himself becalmed: playing out six dots from Theekshana to halt the momentum, only a bizarre triple-bobble of a difficult catch running back with the flight from Bandara the ball before Maxwell’s fall keeping him in the middle.

Such was the disparity of form between the pair that praise of Bandara’s quick-thinking to drop the struggling Finch and claim Maxwell was only half in jest.

It fell to Stoinis to revitalise the run rate; while not as fluent as Maxwell, his flurry was even more prolific.

Beginning with a streaky uppercut down to third man off Karunaratne, then following with a bottom edge to fine leg and another outside edge through the vacant slip cordon, Stoinis had reached 15 off six balls having hardly middled a single one.

But he’d make up for it by joining Maxwell in taking Hasaranga apart again; with the spinner utterly rattled by the onslaught, his length would drop short time and again, allowing the powerful Stoinis to deposit him twice over long on in between a sizzling four back over the bowler’s head.

Remarkably, Hasaranga had conceded 50 runs by his 17th ball – the first time in his previously exceptional T20I career he’d been hit for that many.

“It was a pretty special innings,” Finch said of Stoinis’ surge.

“To come out with that intent, I think is the main thing. When you walk out to bat and you have that presence in the crease, that’s half the battle in T20 cricket.

“When you’ve got the skill and the strength that he’s got, it’s a pretty good combo.”

Stoinis proved an equal opportunity destroyer in the next over by blasting Theekshana for repeated sixes as well; while the run rate dwindled in rapid time as the Western Australian reached an Australian record 17-ball half century, it wasn’t exactly relieving the pressure on Finch.

As with Maxwell, the disparity between the pair’s striking was utterly absurd; while Stoinis was clearing the pickets with the greatest of ease, it was all the captain could do to lay bat on ball.

One particular ugly heave off Theekshana trickled off the inside edge down to long on for one, bringing with it a disbelieving cry of ‘Oh my God!’ from Finch. It could just as well have been on the lips of everyone watching on, too.

Somewhat ironically, Finch finally found the middle for the winning runs, clipping Kumara over mid-off for two to secure victory in the 17th over – though with Bronx cheers echoing around Optus Stadium, it couldn’t disguise his almighty battle in the middle.

Jokingly bowing down to Stoinis, Finch showed an endearingly good humour about his performance; but with so many alternative options, Green chief among them, clamouring for a chance at the top of the Australian order, change appears imminent and necessary.

The result sees Australia’s net run rate improve to -1.555 – still well and truly off the pace in Group A. But for Finch and company, a win to restore confidence was priority number one.

And for everyone, except the captain, that’s just what was achieved.

The Crowd Says:

2022-10-28T00:01:53+00:00

Ross

Guest


I agree. In general there seem to be loads of runs scored in T20 in these positions. I'm a big fan of the fine 3rd man both for saving 4s on outside edges and also catches for top edged hooks/pulls. Greeny's action promotes lots of these because of the energy he injects into the pitch

2022-10-27T03:02:33+00:00

Realist

Roar Rookie


Consistency has always been the issue with Stoinis!

2022-10-27T01:04:34+00:00

Milo

Roar Rookie


This is bordering on selfishness if Finch doesnt step aside or the selectors dont show some Robert Walls. One of the worst T20 innings Ive ever seen by anyone (recognized bat or not) with a bat in their hand. Dropped twice, on a great pitch, against a mediocre attack. One shot timed but not even the winning runs were. He's got to go immediately for Green if Australia is to have any chance.

2022-10-26T20:49:00+00:00

O M

Roar Rookie


Finch: "My innings was poor, I just couldn't hit the ball" What would a bit of self reflection tell you....that your time is up? One more innings like that and surely he drops himself?

2022-10-26T18:29:44+00:00

Censored Often

Roar Rookie


Just my opinion champ. Promise not to offend again…

2022-10-26T12:59:20+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Love the Dorff, I was obviously kidding about the 47 years thing

2022-10-26T12:21:00+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


It was a steady the ship captain knock he stayed he didn’t plunder but he helped win the game regardless of how painful to watch.

2022-10-26T09:19:52+00:00

Simoc

Roar Rookie


Great to see Finch can still bat through an innings and hit the winning runs. He'll remember this knock in retirement, though possibly not so fondly.

2022-10-26T08:58:00+00:00

Brisguy51

Roar Rookie


I think they won’t drop Finch as they hope Australia wins and he can retire as captain of a winning World T-20 side.

2022-10-26T08:18:36+00:00

Kim Griffiths

Guest


Drop Finch and Cummins.

2022-10-26T07:50:54+00:00

MKUltra

Roar Rookie


Ireland on the verge of an upset over England at the MCG,albeit thanks to the Melbourne weather,Australia and Eng could possibly be washed out on Friday,

2022-10-26T06:54:26+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I have said all along that Agar and Zampa should bowl in tandem. I find it astounding that the coaching and selection hierarchy haven't even considered it. If they have actually considered it, I'd love to know why they dismissed it.

2022-10-26T06:35:06+00:00

The Bush

Roar Guru


I get what you're saying Don. Though in this format, I'm not sure why we haven't been playing Agar and Zampa together the whole time. Spinners are the real go to option in T20s and considering we've got access to guys like Marsh and Green who can provide a third seam option that is almost as good as a front line bowler (possible "as good" in Green's case), it's very surprising. I've also always felt that Agar brings more balance ot the team with his batting. Sadly we might never get to see what Agar can/could have really done on the world stage if he'd been backed more consistently over the last few years.

2022-10-26T06:28:27+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


fine, i meant he was trying to get it fine. the throat one was almost a scoop gone wrong, it was such a bad shot it call be called the "oop".

2022-10-26T06:27:21+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


the other point i would make was field position. maxwell was trying to get it wide, notwithstanding the possible wide/no ball deliveries. they had the long boundaries covered. when he did stand and play a "proper shot", he absolutely nailed it, but fell literally 1 metre short of 6. (Stoinis hits different areas - which were shorter - and, frankly, is just stronger. Maxwell hits hard, but with more finesse than a beast like Stoinis. he is more wrist whereas Stoinis is ike an axeman. in a good way.)

2022-10-26T06:19:20+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


It's interesting that when considering Agar vs Zampa, not only is Agar usually more economical when they both play, but Agar's batting is worth 15 to 20 more at the end of an innings and his fielding would save 10 - 15 runs more than Zampa would. Hard to know why Zampa gets the nod. He's a very good bowler in this format, but Agar is better. Both are a very long way ahead of Cummins and Starc.

2022-10-26T06:17:57+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


oh yeah no doubt about it, they were right on edge, i guess sudden death does that. i mean Stoinis was making a point to someone, a positive one. after every big shot. someone on the bench, or maybe his family (who were there). it felt more like a tennis thing. maybe Maxwell. maybe Warner, they had a BIG embrace after the game. maybe just collective, we have all been written off, but we are still in this. will be interesting to see the mood against england, who are getting a nice tuneup from the Ireland and getting an advance MCG peek today

2022-10-26T06:07:32+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Have you noticed how many of Green's '9 an over' are edges, French cuts...miss hits? Especially through the really poorly set backward of point area. His bounce and his movement demands a fly slip...or, at least, a finer third man.

2022-10-26T06:04:24+00:00

The Bush

Roar Guru


That's really interesting about the lights thing Clear, I didn't appreciate that. That does make a bit more sense. Still, I felt the team attitude on the field was still very tense. That light issue does sounds like a real problem for night cricket...

2022-10-26T06:04:13+00:00

Nathan Tee

Roar Rookie


Who let the Flat Earther in here??? :sick:

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