World domination: Selectors can’t afford to be sentimental now Australia's one step away from trophy perfection

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Unlike Dr Evil and Homer Simpson before them, Australia’s quest for world domination in cricket is falling into place.

If they can take out the T20 World Cup when it’s hosted in the Caribbean and the US next year, they will have the full set of global trophies in their bulging cabinet.

That’s all three men’s trophies plus both women’s World Cups – and if the ICC had decided to get serious about Tests for female teams, let’s face it, Australia would more than likely have that in their keeping as well. 

Cricket Australia’s bigwigs, in their various strategic plans and in-depth reports when fortunes go awry, repeatedly state their goal is to be the best nation on the planet in all formats. 

India hold the top ranking in all three formats (for now), the balance of power in the boardroom and the global pursestrings but they can’t purchase a World Cup (well, not yet anyway) no matter how much they doctor pitches or play silly buggers with scheduling and ticketing to their advantage. 

After Australia’s women racked up their third straight T20 World Cup win earlier this year in South Africa to go with last year’s ODI tournament triumph in New Zealand, the men have now caught up with Sunday night’s 50-over victory over India in Ahmedabad now accompanying the World Test Championship silverware they collected when beating the same opponents in June at The Oval. 

The next women’s tournament is not due until Bangladesh hosts the T20 World Cup next September, a few months after the men’s event in North America. 

Australia’s selectors have been steadfastly delaying an inevitable refresh of their ageing squads in all three formats and if they had fallen short in India, it would have given them the licence to tap a few veteran stars on the shoulder. 

But after winning the ODI crown with an XI which had 28-year-old Josh Inglis as its youngest player and one of only three players yet to turn 30, the panel of chief selector George Bailey, coach Andrew McDonald and Tony Dodemaide will be inclined to give this group another chance to enhance their growing legacy at the T20 slugfest. 

The shortest format has been Australia’s weakest in the men’s arena. Apart from the unexpected 2021 World Cup victory during the pandemic in the UAE, they have been consistent under-achievers. 

Currently ranked fourth, they have played far fewer T20 matches in recent years than the other 11 full member ICC nations apart from Afghanistan, who are hampered by an inability to play matches at home as well as a reluctance from other countries to host them, or an outright boycott in Australia’s case.

Several members of the Australian ODI side will be forced to dust off hangovers to line up for the cash grab that is a five-match series in India which gets underway on Friday at Visakhapatnam. 

Victorious captain Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood, Mitchell Starc, Mitchell Marsh and Cameron Green have been excused from this series.

Travis Head, David Warner and Steve Smith are sticking around at least for the first couple of matches before likely returning home to prepare for the start of three-Test series against Pakistan in Perth on December 14.

Glenn Maxwell, Inglis and fellow ODI squad members Marcus Stoinis, Tanveer Sangha and Sean Abbott will be joined by Nathan Ellis, Matt Short and Matthew Wade in what will be the first of several auditions for next year’s T20 campaign to complete the trophy collection. 

(Photo by Gareth Copley/Getty Images)

The decision to appoint Matthew Wade as captain is still yet to be properly explained by the selectors – Marsh made a decent fist of his taste of the white-ball leadership in the World Cup warm-up tour to South Africa and is surely ahead of Wade in the race to lead the T20 team next year.

Head should be given the nod (pun intended) ahead of both of them – he’s had vast experience at state level and looms as the logical replacement to Cummins for the Test and ODI gigs when the NSW seamer retires or relinquishes the reins. 

Not that his position as a three-format player needed any further underlining but his match-winning century in the World Cup final on Sunday showed that he is not scared of the biggest moments. 

He has the respect of his teammates, tactical nous and as the only all-format Australian player under 30, he’s got the right mix of experience without being anywhere near the twilight of his career. 

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

His opening partner is planning on finally retiring from international cricket at the T20 World Cup and based on his white-ball form in both limited-overs versions, you can make a case for keeping him in the side despite being the wrong side of 37. 

It’s his planned Test swansong of a farewell trio of matches against Pakistan which is problematic for the Australian set-up. His Test form has been sub-par for a long time now and despite another modest Ashes tour, it looks like he will keep Cameron Bancroft’s mounting claims for a recall at bay until the West Indies return for a second summer of woe in January. 

With a two-Test tour to New Zealand the only other slightly meaningful cricket on the horizon, the T20 World Cup suddenly has much more significance for Australia. 

The race for selection in the squad will, possibly for the first time, become an ongoing storyline and could even raise interest in the BBL among many of the Test diehard supporters. 

The Crowd Says:

2023-11-24T05:31:55+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


And then he takes the gloves from Inglis. Wade is as bad as Bairstow with the gloves.

2023-11-24T05:23:03+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


I totally agree. I can’t see any good reason for picking Wade

2023-11-22T09:20:48+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


It's really interesting that no one seems to be able to shed light on Agar's progress...apart from the fact he is bowling and batting in the nets. Maybe he'll start again when BBL starts. If he extends his injury break, Oz selectors won't come calling for their summer drinks waiter and he'll get to play some cricket on this side of town.

2023-11-22T01:29:51+00:00

jammel

Roar Rookie


yes for sure Ace! All of those names are good.

2023-11-22T01:08:33+00:00

Ace

Roar Rookie


Back again jammel. I noticed a few more names mentioned for a team going forward In an article in the Melbourne Sun paper. Fraser-McGurk. Cooper Connoly, Phillippe and one I agree with in Will Sutherland the Victorian captain A good batsman/ med-fast bowler. Just thought I'd throw those names out there

2023-11-22T00:12:32+00:00

jammel

Roar Rookie


maybe come through today with a few more pro-Green + Agar posts? For the banter.

2023-11-22T00:09:59+00:00

jammel

Roar Rookie


yeah, I genuinely like reading a wide range of opinions. I definitely don't agree with all you say Don - or Rowdy :) I just like the breadth of opinions on theroar - and don't like the pile-ons (here on anywhere in life).

2023-11-21T22:36:02+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Wade's place is only for this tournament and I can't imagine he'll figure in calculations for the World Cup, let alone be on a plane to the West Indies - unless he's going over to commentate. Selectors are caught between a rock and a hard place when to comes to choosing T20 players because the Big Bash is a poor guide to use when it comes to picking blokes good enough to make it at international level. Not too any guys who kill it in the BBL, carry that form into T20's for Australia.

2023-11-21T22:19:36+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


I think he absolutely is good enough if given another crack, what he’s done for the Scorchers over the last 3 seasons has been magnificent. Is Wade really a lock for the next t20 World Cup? Inglis has surely gone past him, perhaps Phillipe too. Maxwell would be great, but like the others deserves a rest after a sensational tournament.

2023-11-21T22:18:04+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


I don’t really think international t20 should be much of a thing. Let that format be the domain of the franchises and keep test and ODI cricket sacred to international cricket.

2023-11-21T22:12:59+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


That would make him a lock for the World Cup team and is he good enough to justify that selection? Granted his chances at international level have been limited but he's hardly set the world on fire. Surprised nobody's mentioned Maxwell.

2023-11-21T21:38:59+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


But they got the First 6 in a row so that's something. But the country is a rabble and the English have a lot to do with that.

2023-11-21T21:32:41+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


Don’t think they’ve gotten a hockey gold since the 80s to be honest. It’s either been the Kookaburras or European teams like Germany, Netherlands or Belgium. They underperform hugely in global sport.

2023-11-21T21:32:10+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


It's becoming that way now. International T20 for Australia is still fairly new.

2023-11-21T20:51:17+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


All-rounders have a history of being handled poorly in Australia. It's been 70 years since Miller

2023-11-21T20:48:03+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Yes, his knowledge on SS is very good.

2023-11-21T20:46:06+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Bancroft definitely

2023-11-21T20:45:07+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Btw, thanks for that defender. :laughing:

2023-11-21T20:43:59+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


The best hip n shoulder I've seen outside of an AF game

2023-11-21T20:40:39+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Imagine if they don't get the Hockey gold either. Their first 6 or so golds were all Hockey. All medals in India will be double worth it as it's a hard country to get around

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