West Indies tours for Aussie fans are often dream-like. They're late at
night, often look like someone had smeared Vaseline on the lens and
have a kicking soundtrack. It also means that more people hear about
great deeds by Aussie players in the Caribbean, than actually see them.
It also means when something happens in an ODI series as Australia tour
the West Indies that no one cares about, few fans notice.
Had they stayed awake, looked through the soft-focused Vaselined screen
and kept the sound down as not to wake anyone in the house, they would
have seen one man tormenting the Australian batsman: Sunil Narine.
In a five-match series he took 11 wickets at an average of 14.45 and a
scary economy rate of 3.32. He stopped the top order from scoring and
dismissed the middle and lower order with ease. Narine was still a
mystery to world cricket, his faux-hawk was barely known, his mystery
knuckle ball was unplayable and his offspinner gripped and ripped off
the dusty surfaces. It was even before he became a cult hero in the
IPL.
In the oppressive heat of Sri Lanka, Australia will again meet West
Indies, a side who have many players who can win a T20 match on their
own. Chris Gayle can decapitate a bowling unit, and he's done that to
Australia before. Marlon Samuels can score with ease and make decent
bowlers doubt themselves. Dwayne Bravo changes the game with the bat,
the ball or with his hands. Kieron Pollard can score at a strike rate
that previously never existed. Fidel Edwards bowls swinging yorkers.
And even backup players like Andre Russell are capable of amazing
destruction.
Yet when the West Indies looked like they would lose to New Zealand and
fall out of the tournament, it was Sunil Narine who bowled two overs for
only five runs in the 17th and 19th of the match. He also took two
wickets.
Australia have already shown they can beat West Indies at the Premadasa
in this tournament. In that match, Narine bowled two overs for 15 before
the rain came down before he got to bowl his last two overs, and the
Australians played him quite cautiously. If they find themselves in
another big chase, with a soaring run rate required, their battle with
Narine could be the difference between playing in the final or not.
The group game against West Indies was not all smooth sailing for
Australia. They punished their bowlers and actually should have made
more than the 192 they ended with. No Australian bowler went for less
than seven-an-over. The West Indies handled the pace of Mitchell Starc
and Pat Cummins easily, Johnson Charles aside. Dan Christian just
didn't look like a viable option with the ball. Brad Hogg tried hard,
and took one of his two wickets in the tournament. And Glenn Maxwell
got Gayled for 17 runs in his one over. But it was a great pitch for
batting, as the Australian top order showed when they smacked the West
Indian bowlers everywhere.
While all of Australia's matches have been in Colombo, the pitch has
changed on Australia. It is no longer the pace-friendly wicket of late
September, it's quickly becoming the spin-happy track of early October.
The constant use of this square has brought it back in favour of the
spinners and sub-continental batsmen.
Starc and Cummins' pace was a real factor at times early in the
tournament. Cummins beat up the Indians and barely went for a run.
Starc was almost as good against the Pakistanis and took three wickets.
Sohail Tanvir showed that, even though the pitch is spinning more, the
fast bowlers could still be important, although their pace will be less
so against West Indies.
But there is no doubt that spin will play a massive part from here on
in. The England v New Zealand women's match was dominated by the English
spinners, and for the first men's semi-final the ball continued to spin
considerably. Xavier Doherty came in for Christian a few matches back
and has by far been Australia's best spin option in this tournament.
His early wickets against South Africa set up the game, and against
Pakistan he took the wicket of their best batsman Nasir Jamshed.
Brad Hogg has struggled far more. It's not that Hogg has been a
catastrophe; he's just not had the impact he had when he first made his
comeback. His economy rate of 7.5 is fairly high - only Cummins is
worse for Australia - and Hogg's batting is now non-existent. At the
age of 41 his eyes can no longer allow him to bat like a man with an
average of 35. Australia are yet to bat all the way down in this
tournament, and they may not, but Hogg is now probably Australia's No.
11.
With the middle order struggling to get a hit, or look good when they
do, it seems Glenn Maxwell is the man who may make way for David Hussey.
Maxwell has done little wrong, but he is being barely used as a
bowler, and has had little chance to perform with the bat, only batting
twice in the tournament for one failure. It would also be a panic move
from Australia, as Hussey was in terrible form in the UAE, and most of
the Australian middle order have had only one chance to bat under
pressure.
Australia could also drop Hogg for David Hussey. Maxwell and Hussey
could combine as the fifth bowler whilst strengthening the batting.
When Doherty came in for Christian, Australia lost another batting
option, this would fix that problem, and while Hussey's bowling is not
of the standard of Hogg's in the real world, this is T20, where Hussey's
step, step, sling, offspin can work.
On paper the West Indies side looks like a side that should beat
Australia, but on the field they seem to be unsure and their decision to
bowl Marlon Samuels in the Super Over against New Zealand seemed to
stem from the input of too many people apart from Darren Sammy. They
are a dangerous opponent, but one that Australia will believe they can
beat.
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