Who’s to blame for Australia’s T20 World Cup failure: Selectors, coach, captain, players let themselves down

By Paul Suttor / Expert

When it comes to the blame game for Australia’s failure to defend their T20 World Cup title on home soil, no one can escape the proverbial blowtorch.

Put simply, nobody from the selectors and coach to the captain, batters and bowlers will emerge from this listless performance with their reputation enhanced.

The off-field decision makers paid the price for being too conservative in their approach to cricket’s most innovative performance while the players didn’t shape up with bat or ball in hand or do particularly well in the field either for that matter.

Australia does not play again in this format until next August so surely Aaron Finch’s retirement is surely just a matter of working out a convenient time to make the announcement. 

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Alert the designers to do up the graphic that simply must be put out on social media before anyone can make any substantial announcement these days. 

(Photo by Mark Brake-ICC/ICC via Getty Images)

The simple fact of the matter is Finch should have retired well before this tournament. 

In sport, the truly great teams regenerate their roster too early rather than too late. The ones that become dynasties are renowned for jettisoning veteran players when it’s best for the team not for when the player wants to bring down the curtain.

Finch has been one of Australia’s best all-time white-ball batters in the two shortened formats but the signs were there last year in the UAE that he would never rediscover his best form and the selectors failed to heed the warning signs.

T20 cricket is not the young cricketer’s game that everyone expects it to be – players at the international level can still produce deep into their 30s but when a batter, particularly an opener who usually faces the fastest bowlers, loses that fraction of speed in footwork and hand-eye co-ordination, the drop-off in form can be dramatic.

But it wasn’t just on Finch that the selectors erred. They tried to get in early in the sole T20 game on the Pakistan tour and the three matches in Sri Lanka to give fringe players a chance – Travis Head, Marnus Labuschagne, Josh Inglis, Cameron Green, Ben McDermott, Sean Abbott, Jhye Richardson, Ben Dwarshuis and Nathan Ellis played in that narrow win in Lahore or the series against Sri Lanka.

(Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

They were all cast aside when the players from last year’s title triumph were available.

Green’s plight was the perfect example of the selection panel’s muddled approach. He was brushed for the Sri Lanka games after two wickets and a failure with the bat in Pakistan until the warm-up series in India in late September, after the World Cup squad had been selected. 

It was not a surprise that he was out cheaply after getting a belated chance to open for Australia when Finch was hamstrung for the game against Afghanistan given he hadn’t played for nearly a month. 

Players like Richardson, Ellis and Green must surely now be given extended chances to solidify their place in the T20 team as Australia kick off the next cycle towards the 2024 tournament in the US and Caribbean.

Like the ODI team should be geared around four-year missions, the T20 squad can afford to experiment with all sorts of combinations next year and next summer so that by the time the next World Cup rolls around, they have the right combinations with players who have spent a decent number of matches together in their specialised roles. 

Andrew McDonald. (Photo by Joe Allison/Getty Images)

To that end, it means Steve Smith, Kane Richardson and Matthew Wade should be phased out while star veterans like Glenn Maxwell, David Warner, Marcus Stoinis and Mitchell Starc should be not guaranteed selection unless they have the runs (or wickets) on the board. 

Australia paid the price of sticking by underperforming veterans based on reputations. You can’t afford passengers when you’re trying to win a World Cup.

South Africa found that out the hard way on Sunday – their captain, Temba Bavuma, has been in worse form than Finch this year and the Proteas again wilted when the heat was applied.

Even though Pat Cummins is not the skipper of the T20 team, the honeymoon period with the Australian cricketing public is well and truly over for the Test captain and new coach Andrew McDonald.

Cummins has been widely praised for his leadership since taking over a year ago from Tim Paine in dramatic circumstances while McDonald has barely copped any criticism for his low-key efforts since assuming the job when Justin Langer departed amid further controversy in February.

Despite the likes of Ricky Ponting questioning his spot in the team, Australia persisted with Cummins but his form with the ball was mediocre in the World Cup.

Pat Cummins and George Bailey (Photo by Steve Bell/Getty Images)

He lacks a genuine slower ball or much variety at all for that matter in the T20 arena and he paid the price – carted for 132 runs from his 16 overs during the tournament, at an economy rate of 8.25, with only three wickets to his name. 

McDonald fronted the media on Sunday after Australia’s elimination was completed by England’s victory over Sri Lanka the previous night and said there were no excuses for their lacklustre campaign.

Victory has a thousand fathers, but defeat is an orphan and McDonald said the entire team set-up had to accept responsibility for failing to make it past the Super 12 stage.

McDonald admitted “we have only got ourselves to really blame” and indicated there would be changes to personnel but again refused to say whether Finch would be tapped on the shoulder.

“We will go through what that looks like in terms of building towards the next World Cup in 2024,” he said.

“There will be some natural turnover because of the gap and space and also the age profile of the team. So there will be some people that get some opportunities, albeit next August when we play T20 again.

“I haven’t really put much thought or time into that, it’s a little bit raw on the back of a World Cup,” he added when prompted on the topic of Finch’s future. “But he has got some time to think about that.

“Any time that you, I suppose, start to think about it then the end will be one day closer, there’s no doubt about that. I think the Big Bash will probably determine his future – how he goes there, his performances, how his body is holding up.”

Even if he blasts his way back into red-hot form in the BBL, the door to Australian selection should be forever closed. 

You get the feeling McDonald and his fellow selectors George Bailey and Tony Dodemaide are trying to be too understanding and frankly too nice to their players.

That’s not their job. Sure, they have to be professional and not be callous when making calls which have major consequences or potentially end a professional sportsperson’s career but they have to make the right decisions.

And they have not done so from the moment Finch held the trophy aloft last November. 

Marcus Stoinis and Matthew Wade of Australia. (Photo by Mark Brake-ICC/ICC via Getty Images)

McDonald also defended the decision to drop Starc for Kane Richardson in their final game when the replacement seamer was spanked around Adelaide Oval for 48 runs in his four overs while only taking one wicket.

“We were looking to reinforce the back end with Kane Richardson so we put a premium on death bowling, that was the decision in a nutshell really,” McDonald said.

“Any time you leave out a player of the stature of Mitchell Starc it’s always going to create, I suppose, significant – how would you phrase it – attention.

“The reality is we have got 15 players that arguably could be in the 11 and those that miss out are always going to be genuinely stiff.”

It’s a tough job being a selector – the Australian men’s cricket team in all formats has pretty much always and should pretty much always have players who feel aggrieved about not being in the side. 

The Crowd Says:

2022-11-09T00:57:42+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


yes but i was initially reacting to your "who is an incumbent". I would pick Richo over Starc too, but I don't really consider Starc an incumbent any more (he is so lucky he is a cack hander. that really is all he has now his speeds are down.) they may, however, given the squad just named (predates my comment). but my point was also that it will be hard for Richo to be an incumbent, when there are Neser and Boland also trying to squeeze in. Richo is a great talent, on that we agree! --- in terms of the ODI squad and test squad named yesterday, yes, some terrible selections, and the timing is all off - which indicates that the scheduling is just crazy. the first test is 30 November, literally 3 weeks away. some of the test team has just been poor in a world cup. some of the same players were poor in SL. some test players (head) were poor in SL and poor in the Shield. and we've named the team now? maybe so they can use the ODI as tuneup? maybe so they can relax during the ODi and that may help them win, which may (?) help them in THAT World Cup next year. it's just completely stupid. on this I welcome anyone going as hard as they can with conspiracy or anything else. why wasn't Bailey asked? what is the reasonable answer? -- as for some of your WA players, no harm in having both hardie and Green in. Archers x 2 etc, 1950s style. Anyone but warner for me. I am on his side and respect his record but it's time, for mine. Now. Not after that. I don't have the intel re keepers, I just wanted Paine gone and Wade not in. the long term choice is probably out there. big fan of the early promoted and early rejected Hilty C, I would get him in the T20 team, smashes it, unrivalled fielder. Peace, out!

2022-11-09T00:45:58+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


I have just hunted down in the other post (?) some specific "fast" bowler recalls that led to 12+ run overs. Again and again. even with who and what we had, we probably should have been at least 10% more economical with the ball, if deployed more effectively that's why a new captain makes sense now. (and a new atttack!)

2022-11-08T23:51:48+00:00

Diamond Jackie

Roar Rookie


Nah. A pass was the semis.

2022-11-08T23:49:44+00:00

Diamond Jackie

Roar Rookie


Pity we have to think like that, but we do.

2022-11-08T22:24:12+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


Going for the test side. Richardson over Starc certainly. I'd also argue Whiteman is also worth a look over Warner particularly in the UK. I rate Carey but Inglis will be pushing him all the way - should tour as a backup. Agar should be the second spinner on the India tour. Cartwright and Hardie are both playing excellent cricket as well and whilst I wouldn't select them yet, could both easily push for Head's spot. Hardie is that good he could potentially put Green under pressure, but I'll back Cam in. Future prospects down the line include Wyllie and Morris. In the limited overs format there is even more scope with guys like Philippe, Inglis, Behrendorff and Paris all other potential options. Not suggesting all the players I've named should play, but right now it's the form all three format team in the country and has been for the last couple of years. The fact these players aren't even mentioned by our so called coach McDonald is cause for concern.

2022-11-08T22:19:22+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


I agree I think test cricket is his best go. But right now he isn't going to get a look in at the national set up at test level. Realistically I think his form for WA in all three formats warrants him getting an opportunity in Australian colours regardless of the format. It's unlikely he will play in the World Cup as it'll be in India and therefore 2 spinners and possibly three will be a must but I'd like to see him backed in a bit more from the selectors, he's a bloody good bowler.

2022-11-08T21:12:20+00:00

Naughty's Headband

Roar Rookie


Don is from WA - he's fixated on WA players and the usual WA us vs them thing. You have to cut him some slack, they don't have much interaction with the rest of the world over west so they get a bit paranoid. They also find it difficult to understand why the rest of us aren't thinking about them all the time. When you consider this context the Agar Agar Agar obsession makes perfect sense.

2022-11-08T20:32:36+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


Ps we won the second test

2022-11-08T18:18:36+00:00

Tanmoy Kar

Guest


Australians were unlucky, with only one big loss against the Kiwis have put them out of the Tournament, on the other hand England and Pakistan lost to minnows like Ireland and Zimbabwe but still managed to qualify for the Semifinals.

AUTHOR

2022-11-08T11:29:01+00:00

Paul Suttor

Expert


a lot of right-arm seamers hitting the decks hard with right-handed batters with one gear only

2022-11-08T09:12:39+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


Whoever win the world cup from here just steal their coach. Like, when they try to depart get customs to take them aside and make them an offer they can’t refuse.

2022-11-08T06:47:03+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


surely someone like Shipperd or Johan Botha, if you really wanted a T20 super coach, with no baggage in this context?

2022-11-08T06:46:14+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


contributed. end days of Ponting. Clarke out of form and favour but criticising better players and about to be rewarded with the crown. the beginning of the end of Watto's golden period. the crazy selections, the Bollinger fiasco, Mitch the best and the worst bowler in the world within a week, Doherty and Beer, Katich getting injured. all capped off by Digger Hilditch and the launch in the drizzle of the reality TV squad where (seriously) they thought it would be a great idea if they announced who was getting pumped from the squad day by day leading up to the first test. culminating in Argus review.

2022-11-08T06:33:54+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


what's in a name?

2022-11-08T04:11:34+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


Sorry, three things don’t make a both. Back to maths school for me

2022-11-08T04:09:16+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


Wt actual f? Abusing someone for being working class? Just go. Don’t come back

2022-11-08T04:02:16+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


What is that even trying to be, and why does this site put up with that bull bed linen?

2022-11-08T02:57:10+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


Yeah interesting. Agar would have easily saved those runs.

2022-11-08T02:49:31+00:00

U

Roar Rookie


Lol. Yeah but he does nothing for Australia. Graeme Hick style

2022-11-08T02:44:47+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


A rough calculation - had we conceded 13 fewer runs for each of the 4 games, we would have had a better net run rate than England. That could easily have been made up by a little better selection, a little better bowling and a little more effort from a few players.

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