Australia
– A Lost Outfit? |
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| -Ramnath
Aroonachalam |
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When was the last time Australia
went into a tournament without
the favorites tag? And, when
was the last time they made
a first round exit in a world
cup like tournament? It sounds
very unusual that we associate
these questions with one of
the most dominant teams the
game has seen. For answers you
should dig a little deep into
the history books. Such was
the ill-fate for Australia in
this ICC World Twenty20 in England.
Courtesy – a batting massacre
from Chris Gayle and a disciplined
team work from Sri Lanka.
Talking about history, if you
are still wondering when, the
answer is the Benson and Hedges
world Cup in 1992 held in Australia
and New Zealand. They lost four
of their eight games in the
league stage. Interestingly
all four teams they lost to
- New Zealand, South Africa,
England and |
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qualified for semi-finals. Here is an exception
to it –Australia lost the quarter-final
matches against India in ICC Champions Trophy
in 1998 held in Dhaka and in 2000 held in
Nairobi (These two editions of Champions
Trophy are knock-out style tournaments and
Australia lost their first match, i.e. quarter-finals,
to India on both occasions).
Coming back to the present, starting from
two wickets in the first over by Jerome
Taylor till the wide ball signaling a Sri
Lankan win, nothing went right for the mighty
Aussies. They appeared never in the competition
as they never were aggressive with their
efforts. Australia is known for their ability
to fight back even in the rarest of possibilities,
but in the two matches none of their middle-order
batsmen tried to reconstruct the innings
after the loss of early wickets, and the
ones who tried doing so, were never playing
a T20 style cricket. One felt that they
lacked the skills to play T20 cricket as
they allowed too many dot balls despite
the need for quick runs.
Similarly during the second innings of both
their matches, they allowed the opposition
batsmen to dictate terms without fighting
back. Against Sri Lanka they tried defending
the total allowing Tillakaratne Dilshan
to score freely, rather than attacking,
an unlikely Australian approach. Against
West Indies when Chris Gayle went berserk,
Aussies couldn’t do much with their
monopolized pace attack. Their shoulders
dropped just half way through the second
innings on both the occasions.
Undoubtedly Australia has lost their venom,
venom in the form of match-winners like
Glen McGrath, Shane Warne, Adam Gilchrist
and Matthew Hayden. Though Ricky Ponting
has time and again rubbished the fact that
Aussies are struggling to cope with the
retirements of these big men, only time
will tell how much of it is true. The ‘Ashes’
is their next stop.
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