Australia can't win World Cup unless Finch makes toughest call of career to retire, effective immediately

By Tim Miller / Editor

England’s shock loss to Ireland means Australia’s T20 World Cup fate is, remarkably, back in their own hands.

But there remains a glaringly obvious barrier to back to back world crowns – and unfortunately, its name is Aaron Finch.

Finch’s decline has been obvious for months now, and just as it forced him to retire abruptly from ODI cricket last month, so too should it see the end of his time in charge of the shortest format too, effective immediately.

His painful innings against Sri Lanka on Tuesday evening, completely bereft of ideas against an unassuming pace attack and barely able to hit the ball off the square in 42 balls of agony, has made his position at the top of the order untenable.

The fact remains Australia still need to beat England at the MCG on Friday night to progress to the semi finals – a venue that has already earned a reputation this tournament for being fast bowler-friendly.

Already, Ireland’s quicks ran amok to dismantle the Poms’ highly regarded top order after both India and Pakistan made hay with pace, swing and seam, particularly with the new ball.

For Finch to take on England as an opener at the ‘G wouldn’t just be a lamb to the slaughter; it would be like that scene in Jurassic Park where the cow gets put in the velociraptor paddock.

>> READ: ‘This can’t go on’ – Finch’s painful form hits new low

The very best Finch or any Australian could hope for is another tortured knock like against Sri Lanka, where he can’t even find a way to get himself out. And there’s slim to no chance of getting away with it like in Perth against a far superior opposition in England now in the last-chance saloon themselves.

Yes, he has made a couple of 50s this summer, one against the West Indies in a lead-up series and another in a warm-up game against India; but the challenge is substantially tougher here, and the stakes infinitely higher.

In last seven outings since returning to Australia his average is 23.66 at a strike rate which has dropped below a run-a-ball to 97.26. 

“I think it was an anomaly in my career, it was just one of those days,” Finch told reporters at the MCG on Thursday. “I still feel like I’m playing pretty well.

“I still feel confident in my game, 100 per cent. I don’t feel anymore pressure than I ever have, the only pressure is the expectation you put on yourself.

“Everyone’s got their opinion, that’s fine. I’ve got no issue with what people’s personal opinions are, I don’t read or listen to any of it.”

There is no room in Australia’s middle order for Finch to drop himself down as he did against the Windies in a lead-in match, either: Marcus Stoinis’ record half-century against Sri Lanka has removed any doubt as to his place in the team, and Glenn Maxwell and Tim David are power hitters whose best can change games and shape Australia’s World Cup dream.

Maxwell has hinted at his destructive potential with cameos in both his games this tournament to date, while David did likewise before not being required against Sri Lanka. And even if one of them were to make way for an ‘anchor’ role-player in the middle order, Steve Smith would be a far more logical replacement than trying to fit a square peg into a round hole with Finch.

(Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

The reality is, unfortunately, there is no one in the Australian team that can or should be omitted or moved around to accommodate Finch transitioning down the order; and a little-known all-rounder by the name of Cameron Green whose presence would instantly fix a number of other problems with the line-up.

While he’s hardly a front-line quick in limited overs cricket, Green’s inclusion would ensure another fast-bowling option in the team, empowering selectors to make a tough call on Pat Cummins or even Mitchell Starc should conditions require Ashton Agar and Adam Zampa to both play, without compromising the batting order.

Agar’s miserly bowling performance against Sri Lanka, as well as numerous other excellent displays in recent years, should put a focus on trying to squeeze him into the team at every possible opportunity: Green’s presence in the team would at least provide enough confidence in fast-bowling options to pick Agar at eight as a frontline bowler, and leave out one of Cummins or Starc.

In addition, Green’s explosiveness at the top of the order is arguably just what Australia need at the moment, with neither Warner or Finch willing (or possibly able) to do what Finn Allen did to the Aussies at the SCG and take the fight to the bowling attack from ball one.

Finch’s struggles aren’t just limited to his batting, either: he doesn’t bowl, and he is fast becoming a liability in the field, too. A regulation miss in the covers to give up a four off the last ball of Sri Lanka’s innings in Perth was the prime example in that regard.

Green covers both those bases, while also being capable of fireworks with the bat AND being the ideal candidate to fix Australia’s problematic team balance.

The reality, though, is that to drop the captain halfway through the tournament would instantly destabilise the team. It runs the risk of dividing the camp between Finch supporters and backers of whoever would take up the mantle at short notice – most likely Matthew Wade, Cummins or even David Warner – all of which must be avoided at all costs in a campaign with margins as razor-thin as this one.

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

Which is why it is imperative that Finch come to this decision himself, and either retire or choose to drop himself for the England game, and probably the rest of the World Cup too.

To do this would be the hardest decision of Finch’s captaincy tenure, and as brutal a sacrifice as any made by a cricket skipper in recent memory. But it’s also the right one for the sake of the team – and would rubber-stamp him as one of the most selfless cricketers to have ever played the game for Australia.

To make an AFL comparison, Collingwood player Simon Prestigiacomo became a legend of his club by making himself unavailable for selection in the 2010 grand final.

The decision cost him a chance at a premiership medal, but instantly won undying respect from his club and the football world – Collingwood still honour him to his day by awarding his number 35 to their highest draft pick of that year.

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Finch has been an incredible servant to Australian cricket. He is in exalted company as a winner of both T20 and ODI World Cups – even the great Virat Kohli hasn’t achieved that. His status as an all-time great for his country in limited-overs cricket is already assured – unlike Prestigiacomo, he doesn’t have to weigh up costing himself a chance at glory he has already captured.

It would be a testament to Finch’s qualities as a leader to recognise, and act on, the fact that right now he is holding the Australian team back to a concerning degree.

The ultimate team-first call doesn’t even mean he would have no impact on the Australian set-up moving forward – he would still be capable of leading from the sidelines, driving tactics, making recommendations at drinks breaks, and essentially becoming a core member of the coaching staff.

Just because he wouldn’t be part of the XI doesn’t mean he couldn’t influence how the rest of the World Cup pans out – and it would be impossible to have Finch in this role if he had been dropped against his wishes.

The only possible way for Australia to navigate this tournament, and come out of it covered in surprise glory again, is for Finch to fall on his sword.

Any other method of solving the current problem facing the captain and his team will lead to nothing but disaster.

The Crowd Says:

2022-10-30T23:58:20+00:00

Tempo

Roar Rookie


This is a fairly big overreaction. You could have written the same thing last year in the UAE (in fact Finch's form was probably worse back then), yet we managed to come out with a win there. We are far from favourites to win the Cup (and 50:50 to advance from the group), and yes Finch doesn't really deserve a spot in the team - but his presence, whilst a drag on team performance, is not necessarily a catastrophic one. We have to be realistic here that Australia is not going to drop its captain in the middle of a World Cup - they'll ride it out and be judged on the outcomes. Finch is more likely to make a good contribution for his team than Temba Bavuma is for South Africa, and not much less likely than Kane Williamson is for New Zealand, and those are the two form teams of the tournament. In fact, hardly any captains have made meaningful contributions so far - Jos Buttler has been out cheaply twice, Babar Azam has hardly scored a run, Rohit Sharma hasn't done much in the big matches (Pakistan and SA) either. Not to mention other key players who have flopped including KL Rahul, Alex Hales, Ben Stokes, Dawid Malan, etc. It's quite likely that whichever team wins the tournament will have carried at least one player through - as Australia did with Maxwell, Finch and Starc last time around.

2022-10-29T20:13:29+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


And even if one of them were to make way for an ‘anchor’ role-player in the middle order, Steve Smith would be a far more logical replacement... This baseless justification that, "an ‘anchor’ role-player in the middle order" is A Good Thing took a hit last night. EnZeds version, KW, completely failing to nudge'n'scurry the Kiwis out of a hole.

2022-10-29T05:34:40+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I do too. I'm a Maxi fan but if players like Philippe keep doing what they're doing, form has to be rewarded.

2022-10-29T05:08:16+00:00

Chris Love

Roar Guru


He only needs one knock to be back and I expect it to come soon.

2022-10-28T22:53:44+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Form. His spot is shaky.

2022-10-28T17:56:44+00:00

Chris Love

Roar Guru


No one is mentioning Maxwell as a replacement captain. He’d be my pick

2022-10-28T10:51:44+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


Let’s be fair, we expect these guys to go at 9 am over, almost three times a first class rate, with defensive fields set. Of course they get out regularly. Nobody can go that fast and average 40+ for more than a few games at a time

2022-10-28T10:35:24+00:00

Simon

Guest


None of those guys lasted as long as him

2022-10-28T09:12:27+00:00

PeteB

Roar Rookie


Are you sure ? They seem to get a little precious from my view.

2022-10-28T08:44:46+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


These are big boys.

2022-10-28T07:52:24+00:00

PeteB

Roar Rookie


Sacking the captain mid tournament would be hugely disruptive. Hypothetically it could pay off but we’re unlikely to find out.

2022-10-28T07:50:31+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


Fair point. So they haven't even been cameos! :laughing:

2022-10-28T06:55:06+00:00

Republican

Guest


Smith, Green, Finch - makes no difference to Australia's fate. We simply don't produce enough T20 style batters to be a threat in this format of the game. Australia were never going to win this WC but their absolutely woeful effort v NZ has rendered any finals participation null and void. England won't miss another opportunity to cement a finals birth, after their unfortunate rain affected match v Ireland.

2022-10-28T06:17:18+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Don’t mind that. I have more belief in Green’s bowling than you do. It’s amazing how many of the runs scored off him are edges to the boundary through 3rd Man. Could do with better captaincy. With your team, I’d open with Hazlewood and Green. Green has never been tried with a new ball for Australia (he has for WA with great success). An older ball in the middle overs has him on a hiding to nothing. That’s where Agar and Zampa bowl. Green’s pace, movement and bounce would dot-up their power play or produce wickets forcing strokeplay. Kane Richardson’s forte is closing. Give Richardson one at the end of the powerplay and 3 at the finish. The 6th bowler if needed should be Marsh ahead of Stoinis and Maxwell. Marsh went for runs the other day in one over but he is usually very tight.

2022-10-28T06:00:51+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


Green in close would save twenty runs and make up for any supposed deficiency in his bowling.

2022-10-28T05:57:27+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


After having been shot down so comprehensively, you're clinging to the weather to save Finchy's career?

2022-10-28T05:56:29+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


If he doesn't get out, it's not a "cameo".

2022-10-28T05:55:12+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


Green had a good tour of India, but his recent T20 form in Australia was poor. Bigger picture, I’d like him to concentrate on Test matches - he has the capability of being a genuinely great (not just ‘good’) all-rounder I think. I’d hate to seem him compromise that by playing too much T20.

2022-10-28T05:54:19+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Hey matth, remember speaking about The Dorff the other day? Did you hear him on ABC radio commentary last night? What a breath of fresh air; incisive, engaging, well spoken...downright eloquent. He'll have a comments future when his career is done. Way better than Dirk Nannes and Stuart Clark. Young Ben Cameron was terrific too.

2022-10-28T05:49:54+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


And a 7 for in one of those early games. It might have been the next one.

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