'That's the pinnacle': Cummins’ finest moment as captain with bold tactical gambles dismantling Indian juggernaut

By Paul Suttor / Expert

A captain’s impact on a cricket side can vary between monumental and incremental. 

In the World Cup final each skipper’s performance had a major impact on their team’s fortunes. 

And while Rohit Sharma threw his wicket away to forfeit his team’s early advantage, the final in Ahmedabad was the day Cummins’ captaincy came of age. 

Australia’s skipper outplayed and outstrategised his rival, starting with the surprising decision to bowl first after winning the toss. 

Sharma got his team off to a flyer in the opening power play, repeatedly flaying the normally miserly Josh Hazlewood to the boundary to race to 47 off just 30 deliveries. 

Australian players celebrate after winning the 2023 World Cup. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

But with his team well on top at 1-76 in the 10th over after he had bashed Glenn Maxwell for a four and a six, he tried to send him for another maximum but succeeded only in skying a catch to a diving Travis Head. 

Sharma had assumed something of a pinch hitter role in this tournament, smacking new-ball bowlers around in brief cameos which has allowed Virat Kohli the luxury of time to build his innings. 

It’s been a successful formula against lesser opponents in lead-up games but in a final, a captain’s knock was needed. Sharma had put his team well ahead in a short space of time but he brought his good work undone with a rash shot of aggression when consolidation should have been front of mind. 

Cummins then stepped up to dismiss the dangerous Shreyas Iyer for four and all of a sudden India were simultaneously sizzling at eight an over but fizzling with three wickets down. 

And after a steadying partnership of 68 in the middle stages it was Cummins again leading from the front by employing a short-ball scheme to unsettle Virat Kohli enough that the King chopped the ball onto his castle. 

While he’s often criticised for being too tactically taciturn in the field, Cummins was trying all sorts of strategies to break through on a benign batting-friendly surface. 

At one stage he cycled through nine bowling changes in a 10-over stretch. 

It can be a risky move, especially when the likes of Head and Mitchell Marsh have bowled sparingly in this World Cup and it can be hard for part-timers especially to maintain rhythm and accuracy in one or two-over bursts. 

But they churned through their mini spells with little damage to the scoreboard to keep the brakes on India as the hosts went an hour in the middle stages without finding the boundary. 

What loomed as a projected 350-plus total quickly scaled back to a 250 target before India were bowled out 10 runs shy. 

Cummins kept cool as India’s lower order succumbed to Mitchell Starc’s reverse swing and Hazlewood’s revenge spell to tidy up his figures. 

The plans worked with Suryakumar Yadav given no pace to work with even when facing the quicks and he fell to a slower ball to extinguish India’s last batting hope. 

Travis Head celebrates his century during the World Cup final. (Photo by Gareth Copley/Getty Images)

Cummins then had the joy of not even having to pad up as Head combined with Marnus Labuschagne combined to blast Australia to a famous sixth World Cup final win and their most improbable since Allan Border’s team triumphed in India 36 years ago. 

“That’s huge, I think that’s the pinnacle of international cricket, winning a one-day World Cup,” Cummins reflected in the post-match media conference. 

“Especially over here in India, in front of a crowd like this. It’s been a big year for everyone, but our cricket team has been here in India, Ashes, World Test Championship and to top it off with this is just huge and these are the moments that you’ll remember for the rest of your life.”

There was plenty of talk pre-game about India potentially interfering with the pitch preparation to suit their team and in explaining his decision to bowl first, Cummins went with his gut instincts.

“The pitch played pretty well actually, it was quite slow and basically no bounce, but I don’t think the bounce was anything different to anywhere else in the tournament,” he said.

“It probably didn’t spin as much as I thought it would. Yesterday it looked really dry, but it was quite firm today.

“And then the toss, we were kind of umming and ahhing right up until the toss really – but I thought you know half a chance of the wicket getting better tonight and you know in a World Cup game you can make a mistake bowling and it doesn’t really matter too much, but if you make a mistake batting and you’re under pressure it can be fatal so I just felt like it was the right time to go out and have a bowl.”

Next Sunday marks two years since Cummins was installed as Test skipper on the eve of a home Ashes series when Tim Paine resigned abruptly. 

He’s been learning on the job and has made a few mistakes along the way. 

Even though his tactics have been questionable at times, his leadership has been strong and there’s no doubt he has the unwavering support of the Test and ODI players. 

(Photo by Gareth Copley/Getty Images)

Whether he continues as ODI skipper now that he’s become the fifth Australian men’s captain to lift a World Cup trophy is now solely up to him. 

He’s going to have to scale back his commitments as a three-format, dual skipper fast bowler but there’s no rush now on his 50-over future. 

The next major assignment is the T20 World Cup next June in the Caribbean and US. 

Marsh or Head will likely lead that team for Australia’s shot at history in becoming the first team to hold the trophies for all three formats simultaneously. 

After a year in which he has lifted the World Test Championship trophy, the Ashes urn via a tough retention on enemy turf and an ODI World Cup, Cummins has earned the right to have a relatively light 2024. 

Some of his agenda-driven critics will never concede Cummins is an elite captain but they can’t claim he hasn’t been a success. 

The Crowd Says:

2023-11-21T07:54:31+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


And logically, these sorts of teams will continue to improve.

AUTHOR

2023-11-21T07:53:38+00:00

Paul Suttor

Expert


my biggest regret is I didn't work in a sentence along the lines of "in an instant Sharma's gonna get you in trouble, gonna knock you right off your feet"

2023-11-21T03:23:09+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


That was quite a strangle.

2023-11-21T03:11:48+00:00

NQR

Roar Rookie


This team under Cummins is self driven and has a positively motivated self governance IMO. That’s the pinnacle elite teams strive for. Warne mentioned coaches at international level are the vehicles players travel to games in? Under authoritarian regimes ( overly controlled coaching) that only gets you to a certain level. Under pressure or confronting adversity those teams struggle. Maybe this is what Pat Cummins believes delivers the best outcomes.

2023-11-21T01:37:55+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


Excellent observation!

2023-11-20T23:50:13+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


They’ll arrange a special coin for the coin toss . :laughing:

2023-11-20T23:41:00+00:00

The Bush

Roar Guru


Funnily enough Ed, I'd look to phase out Starc first; he's the oldest and he's looked the most out of sorts this tournament. Hazlewood has missed a lot of cricket in recent years, so I think we're more likely to get more years out of him than Starc. To be honest, there's not a lot of ODI cricket on in the next twelve months; we have three against the Windies in Jan-Feb 2024 and then nothing until September 2024 at which point we play Ireland, England and Pakistan for a few months. Bizarrely there's then no ODI cricket scheduled until the Champions Trophy in March 2025... Basically what I'm getting at though is that you probably either move guys on now or you commit to them for the Champions Trophy. Personally, I'd move on all of Starc, Hazlewood, Warner, Smith and Maxwell now from ODI cricket. As you say, Stoinis should have been gone yesterday, so I've just made the broad assumption that he's already yesterday's 'man'.

2023-11-20T23:25:23+00:00

NQR

Roar Rookie


Cummins has similarities to Cameron Smith in my opinion. It’s they carry themselves especially under pressure. You can’t get overly animated and emotional because it portrays an angry, panic or losing control of the situation to those you are entrusted to lead. Cummins also shares the responsibilities evenly throughout the team without favouring a select few. This inclusive approach brings out the best in individuals. The moment you favour a couple of individuals others start thinking they’re not preforming? This is something extremely important in a team that is trying to achieve their best performance. Players can quickly lose self confidence and narrow their focus to simple survival mode when they feel less valued. Not many understand how constantly relying on certain individuals affects the physiological and mindset of those outside that select group (favourite )and their ability to relax and play smarter. It also heaps even more pressure on certain individual’s to do everything?

2023-11-20T22:31:15+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Yeah, it's an interesting one. Tough to know what a par score was on that pitch at Lucknow. Obviously India made 229 a par score, but that was against a struggling batting lineup. I still think India should have made closer to 300 in the final. I suspect they think the same, so moving forward, that inability to make a defendable total when the ball's doing a bit, is surely going to be playing with their heads. I wouldn't be at all surprised to see them winning tosses and batting second in future games, so they don't have to second guess whether they've made enough runs if they bat first.

2023-11-20T22:15:04+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


9/ 229 against England though. Maybe a little more ball movement by the English bowlers, but they have that ability. Not a huge difference from their score against Australia.

2023-11-20T21:53:22+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Given the circumstances, that's outstanding

2023-11-20T21:49:06+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Indian batsmen are used to simply hitting through the line of the ball so when it does a bit, they're likely to struggle (ditto with the Poms). That said, I don't think this pitch was a minefield, not like the one where India played England. There was lots of movement through the air and off the wicket, so not surprising only 350 runs were scored in that match It certainly wasn't a 240 wicket, maybe a 270 or 280 pitch?

2023-11-20T21:10:38+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


India were in exactly the same position when they’d played England. With a pitch that offered a bit more in the daylight, their batsmen had no real answers. I think that scenario played out in their minds when they’d lost 3 wickets against Australia. So they tried to play it out in a safer method with the batting. It’s just that England could not have been worse batting second, that pulled India out of that game with a win.

2023-11-20T20:55:16+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


My favourite part of the game was when they viewed Kolhi late in the Australian innings. He was standing there fielding, watching on . Shaking his head as he couldn’t believe what was happening. Of course, he wasn’t the only one . Most cricket watchers couldn’t believe it . :stoked:

2023-11-20T20:46:22+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


The Keg on legs? That’s pretty cruel on Head to call him that. :laughing:

2023-11-20T20:39:49+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


And wear the Aussie ODI shirt

2023-11-20T20:32:25+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Hasn't he already come out?

2023-11-20T20:30:52+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


WA

2023-11-20T12:06:47+00:00

Barb Dwyer

Roar Rookie


... and that's all before Corey Bernardi comes on.

2023-11-20T11:42:21+00:00

Curmudgeon1961

Roar Rookie


Read somewhere Cummins first ODI world cup to complete 10 overs without conceding a boundary

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