High-risk, ultimate reward: How Australia can deliver knockout blows to take down India in World Cup final

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Australia have never faced a World Cup opponent as strong as this Indian team and they’re only way to cause a boilover in Ahmedabad is to step outside their comfort zone. 

They are up against a juggernaut which seemingly has no weaknesses after sweeping aside Australia and every other opponent in their 10-match winning streak in this tournament on home soil. 

It is rare for Australia to be the rank outsiders in a major tournament, particularly after eight wins in a row of their own, but if they stick with the conservative approach they’ve displayed at the World Cup, they are likely to be cannon fodder. 

After India’s dodgy tactics to dictate the pitch for their semi-final win over New Zealand, the Australians are expecting a similarly used surface to be rolled out at Ahmedabad. 

It is likely to be the one that was used in India’s recent victory over Pakistan which will not only suit their spinners but also the powerful local batting unit. 

Mitchell Starc and Pat Cummins of Australia celebrate victory over South Africa. (Photo by Matt Roberts-ICC/ICC via Getty Images)

Australia captain Pat Cummins did not seem particularly fussed by India’s wicked wicket ways at his pre-match media conference on Saturday. 

“No doubt playing on your own wicket in your own country has some advantages,” he said.

“But we’ve played a lot of cricket over here. We’ll wait and see.”

When it comes to India’s batters, they will look to dominate Australia’s seamers from the get-go.

Home captain Rohit Sharma has virtually adopted a pinch hitter role at the top of the order with cameos of 40 off 24, 61 off 54 and 27 off 29 in his past three knocks. 

But he can also be a candidate for LBW or bowled early in his innings, which brings the double-edged sword of Mitchell Starc into play.

If the peak Starc takes the new ball, he could make an early breakthrough with a full, swinging delivery but if he struggles for control, as he’s done several times in this tournament, Sharma will tear him apart in the power play. 

India’s batting revolves around Virat Kohli at No.3 and if he gets established, he will control the tempo deep into the innings before launching himself or taking a back seat for Shreyas Iyer, KL Rahul or Suryakumar Yadav to accelerate in the closing stages. 

Kohli averages an imperious 57.16 against the Aussies in India, tonning up five times in his 27 innings. 

Adam Zampa was briefly considered his kryptonite after dismissing him five times in ODIs during the first three years he took on the Indian superstar but he hasn’t claimed his wicket since the start of 2020. 

Ashton Agar dismissed him twice in six contests, including earlier this year at Chennai, and would have been handy to have in the squad if not for an untimely calf injury hobbling him just before the tournament.

Australia can gain an advantage in the field. Compared to the butterfingered displays in their 0-2 start to the World Cup, their intensity and effectiveness in the field has been drastically improved. 

Marnus Labuschagne has been an energiser bunny and David Warner’s diving efforts in the infield during the tense opening to the semi-final against South Africa lifted the pressure on the Proteas batters, who true to form, wilted with a few of them throwing their wicket away with careless shots. 

When it comes to India’s bowlers, the Aussies are in a pick your poison situation. 

A potential weakness in the Indian armour is that they rely on their five designated bowlers to bowl their full quota of overs, rarely using a sixth option. 

Virat Kohli celebrates after scoring his century against NZ. (Photo by Alex Davidson-ICC/ICC via Getty Images)

Apart from their win over the Dutch when Kohli, Sharma and a couple of the other batters rolled the arm over with the result already sealed, the pace trio of Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Shami and Moammed Siraj will share the bowling workload with the spin duo of Kuldeep Yadav and all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja. 

If they can blast one of them out of the attack, Sharma has no worthwhile alternative in his line-up. 

Jadeja has tormented Australia for many years in all three formats but his ODI returns in India have been modest – 30 wickets at 38.4 in 25 innings at 5.03 an over. There’s potential to target him but it’d be a gamble. 

Yadav could also be put off his game if the batters attack him. In 17 ODIs against the Aussies in India he’s been expensive, more than a run a ball across the journey, but effective as a wicket-taker, bagging 28 scalps. 

If the Australian batters use their feet to him, they can score freely but with so many right-handers in the middle order, his wrong’un brings stumpings into play if he is able to disguise it well enough. 

Depending on your perspective, Australia are building towards peaking in the final or their up-and-down form despite winning is a sign that they have been fortunate to make it this far and India are about to deliver a reality check in front of 100,000-plus screaming fanatics.

(Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

Cummins conceded they had not put together a “complete game” apart from perhaps their Dutch demolition mid-tournament.

The middle-order batting was again an issue in the three-wicket win over the Proteas in the semis so Australia’s best hope of knocking India off their game is for Warner, Travis Head or Mitchell Marsh to click at the top of the order.

“There have been no huge wins. We’ve had to fight for every win, but we’ve found a way to win,” Cummins said.

“I’m taking that confidence, knowing that we don’t have to be at our absolute best to challenge any team, we can find a way through it.”

Cummins has a chance to silence his growing band of critics if he is proactive with his tactics, especially his bowling changes and field placements, but don’t expect him to veer too far from the path that has taken Australia to the decider. 

Whether it will be enough to take down India remains to be seen but it’s better to try to land a few haymakers even though you might end up going down swinging than playing the percentages when you’re up against a stronger all-round opponent.

The Crowd Says:

2023-11-20T01:47:21+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


Not worthy eh? 6 world cups mate :thumbup:

2023-11-19T21:59:13+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Nah, I reckon they get to do both. The Aussies were written off after 2 games of this tournament, had injured players, etc and came back to belt the Indians by scroig more runs. Plenty of grounds for a moral victory I reckon.

2023-11-19T19:27:49+00:00

Steele

Roar Rookie


Probably because they win World Cups for fun, shame Aussies didn’t get a more worthy opponent.

2023-11-19T09:50:33+00:00

Ace

Roar Rookie


As I would expect

2023-11-19T08:55:32+00:00

Stuckbetweenindopak

Roar Rookie


U mean 11, before the toss

2023-11-19T08:39:16+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Absolute, compelling proof that stats are nonsense. Have you factored in games against minnows? India fills its boots with them.

2023-11-19T07:46:21+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


Good luck tonight, Sedz. If India win it it somehow confirms even more how the are far and away the number 1 ODI team. A gun team playing sensational cricket. Enjoy it.

2023-11-19T07:44:08+00:00

The Knightwatchmen who say Nii

Roar Rookie


I think the current India side is a little bit better than that minnow 87 England side. But, I guess you might say our chances of winning tonight are fairly similar to winning against Pakistan in the 1987 final - now that was a side!!

2023-11-19T07:43:11+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


:stoked: :stoked: :stoked:

2023-11-19T07:42:48+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


Is it possible to score more runs than the other team and claim a moral victory? Or is that too greedy?

2023-11-19T07:40:46+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


I'm rating our chances as good as our chances in 87. Remember that one? Ha ha ha ha yeah sucked in Minnows.

2023-11-19T07:39:02+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


Jadeja is a legend. I sure do hope he migrates to Oz after the game and is granted immediate Aussie citizenship.

2023-11-19T07:36:00+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


Dwarshius was locked in before the toss to the opening game. I just wish Dwarsh rhymed with Marsh so there would be a world of quality descriptive rhymes.

2023-11-19T07:08:09+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


No Veletta? Just look at his record in world cup finals in India. Get him in at the death and it's thanks India bye India

2023-11-19T06:37:29+00:00

ColinT

Roar Rookie


I do agree Paul, that Australia needs to improve bowler rotation and fielding positions. I wouldn’t want to see Hazelwood ending up two short of his allotted ten overs again, unless prevented by injury.

2023-11-19T06:32:44+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Good luck and hope for a good match. Fingers crossed our boys don’t spoil it by going down in a screaming batting heap thinking they have to get 350 to win. I’m sure India won’t do that. I suppose the fact Australia has won previous cups might help confidence, but I wouldn’t overrate how much that influences things on the day. But maybe less pressure than on Indian team.

2023-11-19T06:29:06+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Not sure about ODI history. If you look at the best numbers all time, combing average and scoring rate, adjusted for era, India would have four ranking in the top twenty – Kohli, Gill, Rohit and Shreyas, with Rahul at 33rd and just ahead of Maxwell, Smith and Williamson. Bumrah is 7th and Kuldeep 11th all time, with Shami at 26th. In the Aus team, the only batter above Maxwell and Smith is Warner at 22nd, while the only top ranking bowlers are Starc at 22nd and Hazlewood at 27th. But a lot of the differences in rankings aren’t very significant, especially below the top ten.

2023-11-19T04:02:16+00:00

La grandeur d'Athéna

Roar Rookie


Yet they are test world champions, not us. It is like we always excel in class tests, assignments only to botch the final exam. There is no jibe. They have world test championship. We have zero nada lul. We may defeat them on Jupiter for all I care. Does not mean anything if we can not win that 30 minutes or one match that matters most of all.

2023-11-19T03:58:45+00:00

La grandeur d'Athéna

Roar Rookie


I believe this is 60-40 in favour of Australia. We do not have home advantage against them. They are only team to win multiple series here in last 5-6 years. Also the crowd factor does not work against Aussies. It is like screaming to deaf ears. They are five time world champions, current test champions, it is another day in office for them. Pressure is on our boys. In one way or the other, this is end of an era. At least for five of our guys it is very possibly the last one day world cup. Our batting relies heavily on Rohit, Virat and Rahul. I am pretty sure Aussies have taken note of that. So I am hoping other guys will give their best. If we have to defeat the Aussies and the pressure, then we need to plan for the most critical 600 balls we are going play of our life. I am hoping they have planned for all sorts of possibilities.If we doubt ourselves with 30 minutes of possible bad cricket, then we are in trouble. If we depend on other factors against Australia, we will be in trouble. It is our 11 vs their 11, it is that simple. No toss factor, dew factor, crowd factor, Bollywood factor. These are distractions. I know that there will be pressure no matter we say, because I am feeling it right now and it is only 9 30 in morning . We will have result around 13 hours from now that will resonate among 1.4 billion people for years to come. So good luck and God speed. May the best team win.

2023-11-19T03:54:05+00:00

VSSRAO

Roar Rookie


I feel Siraj, Shami or Kuldeep has the ability to come back strongly though if they get hammered initially!

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