Australia's captain George Bailey has admitted his side stands no chance
of winning the World Twenty20 tournament in Sri Lanka if their
performances mirror a shattering first-up loss to Pakistan in the series
in Dubai.
The seven-wicket hiding was Australia's heaviest in terms of balls to
spare for the chasing team, after Bailey's men were shot out for a
measly 89, their lowest total since England rolled Ricky Ponting's team
for 79 in only their second T20I, at the Rose Bowl in 2005.
What's more, the Australians can now slip to 10th in the ICC's T20
rankings before the global event begins. Should Pakistan sweep the
series - a possibility given the lopsidedness of the opening match -
then Bailey's team will line-up for their tournament opener ranked below
their opponents Ireland.
"I'm very disappointed and there's plenty to go away and work on,"
Bailey said. "You don't ever want to be setting those sorts of records.
But in terms of the group we've got together and what we're capable of,
it certainly hasn't altered my thoughts that we can still be a very good
team.
"I still think we can win it. Definitely. Absolutely. I certainly don't
think we'd win if we played like we did today. It's hopefully just a bad
performance and one that you won't see again. Even if we gained a tiny
bit of momentum, we gave it back by losing a wicket."
The poverty of Australia's batting was stark, unable to hit a six in the
innings and striking only three boundaries. Bailey agreed that the top
five had to do far, far better in future and put the match down as an
experience that had to be learned from, particularly given the sorts of
slow, spinning pitches also likely to be seen in the World T20 in Sri
Lanka.
"Twenty20, all the stats we look at, you want your top four or five
batsmen batting most of the innings," Bailey said. "So to be four down
at the seven or eight over mark, we were certainly behind the game. We
learned a lot about the wicket, but we already knew that Pakistan were
going to be very competitive in this format, and that played very well."
Despite all players having taken part in the pre-season camp in Darwin
where spin was a major consideration, and most then having the benefit
of the ODI series against Pakistan in Sharjah and Abu Dhabi, Australia's
efforts against the spinners were particularly poor. Bailey admitted
improvements had to be made to what he described as a "real key" to the
team's chances.
"The spinners are outstanding, and on the back of the one-day tournament
the spinners were certainly the key to their bowling and our quicks
were probably the key to ours," he said. "So it's a work in progress,
it's going to be a real key the way we play spin and the way we play
spin heading into the World Cup too, so we're working on it.
"In terms of the World Cup there's no better practice than playing
against the world class spinners that Pakistan have in these three
games."
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