Skipper Aaron Finch admits self-doubt is creeping into Australia’s batsmen after another woeful display against South Africa, but he insists “the wheel will turn.”
The hosts on Sunday slumped to a crushing six-wicket defeat with more than 20 overs to spare in the opening one-day international in Perth, dispelling any hope a corner might have been turned after a grim eight months since the ball-tampering scandal.
Australia have now crashed to 17 losses in their past 19 one-day internationals, including an unparalleled seven defeats in a row, with batting failures a feature for much of the year.
“You’d say that guys are probably at times doubting themselves,” Finch said.
They were reduced to 8-3 and 66-6 before Nathan Coulter-Nile (34) and Alex Carey (33) steered them to 152 all out, again exposing how much they are missing the banned Steve Smith and David Warner.
“When you’re 8-3, you probably have to go and play a different style of one-day cricket than what you map out in your head about how you think the game will unfold,” Finch said. “When guys are not performing as well as they can do, there’s always going to be a bit of doubt.”
Outside of Carey, no one in Australia’s top six scored more than 15, with flawed techniques and poor shot selection at fault on a lively Perth Stadium wicket against a world-class attack led by Dale Steyn and Kagiso Rabada.
With less than seven months until the start of the World Cup, Finch is adamant Australia’s luck will change.
“It will turn,” he said. “The way we are training and preparing, the wheel will turn, and it will happen quickly.”
He also won an ally in Steyn, who came to Australia’s defense.
“I don’t think they need to be too embarrassed by it,” Steyn said. “The conditions were tough. Throw another 30, 40 runs on there and it becomes quite a tricky chase. I think we outbowled them. I don’t think they bowled as well as they potentially could have. That was the difference.”
Finch bizarrely opted to open the bowling with Coulter-Nile instead of Mitchell Starc alongside Josh Hazlewood. He was smashed for 16 in his first over before being removed.
He said it was an experiment to try to snap their losing streak.
“It’s just a tactical thing to be honest,” Finch said. “If you keep doing the same thing over and over it’s the definition of insanity, isn’t it?”
Barcelona star Lamine Yamal would be motivated by criticism ahead of the Clasico, Barcelona assistant coach Marcus Sorg said yesterday. Teenage winger Yamal has been in the spotlight in the Spanish capital after joking that Real Madrid “steal” and “complain” during an appearance on a social media stream. Champions Barca face Real Madrid today in La Liga at the Santiago Bernabeu, looking for a fifth consecutive win over their rivals. “Lamine is a top player and I think [the criticism] will be motivating for him,” Sorg told a news conference. “I hope we all see him tomorrow [give] the best performance.” The 18-year-old Spain
‘A HISTORIC moment’: ‘I think we all need to take a step back and appreciate Leo Messi is playing in Major League Soccer,’ league commissioner Don Garber said Lionel Messi raised the Golden Boot. He then got Inter Miami started with his head. The Argentine opened the scoring with a diving header in the first half, then capped the scoring in the 96th minute as Inter Miami opened the MLS playoffs with a 3-1 win over Nashville SC in Game 1 of their Eastern Conference best-of-three first-round series on Friday night. Messi and Ian Fray had the assists on Tadeo Allende’s second-half tally for Inter Miami, who now get two chances to advance out of the first round for the first time in Messi’s two-and-a-half-year tenure with the team. Game
‘COMPLETE GAME’: ‘To be honest, I’m not sure about the history, but I’m very happy about what I did today,’ Yamamoto said through a translator after the game Yoshinobu Yamamoto pitched a World Series game from another era. Sandy Koufax had October outings like this, and so did Orel Hershiser, but those types of performances have vanished in modern baseball. Until this 178cm starter from Japan delivered like the aces of old. Yamamoto threw a four-hitter for his second consecutive complete game, the first in the World Series since 2015, and the defending champion Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Toronto Blue Jays 5-1 on Saturday night to tie their best-of-seven matchup at one game apiece. “It’s kind of the throwback,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “When he starts a game, he
Japan’s narrow defeat by Australia showed they can compete with the best teams in the world, coach Eddie Jones said after his side fell to a 19-15 loss yesterday. Australia coach Joe Schmidt led the Wallabies for the first time against Eddie Jones, his predecessor and now Japan coach. During Jones’ second tenure as Australia coach, the Wallabies lost seven of nine tests and were eliminated in group play at the 2023 World Cup. “What I’m super pleased about is that now we [Japan] are a team that stays in the fight,” Jones told reporters. “We kept going, we could have won