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If we had lost today, it would've been my fault for batting so slowly : Aaron Finch

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The words of a winning captain and a player.

Can you see the premium he puts on his position in the side and what it means to him to be able to score quickly?

No thoughts of playing to the end to raise his average - just selfless to the core.

Hats off to Aaron Finch.
 
Meanwhile Imam ul Haq was happy playing at 50-60 SR.



Can this team get any worse??? :facepalm:
 
That's one of the main reasons the team lost including the dropped catch of Maxwell earlier 46 at a strike rate 63 great innings.

The match was lost when we lost 3 wickets for 16 runs.

Dropped catches are a part of the game, you'll always have them.
 
That's called accepting and speaking the truth... if it was our player his statement would be "Yes I knew wicket was slow so I batted according to the situation please praise me":kakmal
 
That's why Australia has 5 world cups.

They do go through their rough times for sure but you can never doubt their commitment towards the team.
 
Imagine one of our batsmen saying this. There is a reason why Pakistan is still happy with scores of under 300 then act surprised when they get smashed by teams with more aggressive batsmen.
 
Amazing stuff. That’s 1 thing I love about Australian cricket, they take responsibility for defeat and in pressure situations. I can remember Steve Smith saying after being knocked of the CT that he was embarrassed.

Elite mentality.


Our fans do banghra over bilateral T20 wins. Finch played a part in winning the game but he is willing to admit it could have gone wrong as well.
 
The problem is at the moment our batsmen are playing for a spot in the World Cup squad, whilst Australian batsmen are playing to win a World Cup.
 
At the moment it needs a miracle for us to even reach the Semis. Team is demoralised and in it's worst phase since 2009-10.

WI are looking far more likely.
 
At the moment it needs a miracle for us to even reach the Semis. Team is demoralised and in it's worst phase since 2009-10.

WI are looking far more likely.

Pre and immediate-post 2015 WC team was at a much worse state.
 
The problem is at the moment our batsmen are playing for a spot in the World Cup squad, whilst Australian batsmen are playing to win a World Cup.

To be fair finchy was under pressure until he came into this series.
Khawaja was scoring runs and Warner was back in the picture too.
Hats off to him
 
Selfless captain like Sarfraz.

Our players especially domestic captains should learn a thing or 2 from him.

The likes of Saud Shakeel played at no 7 under Rizwan & Anwar and likes of Umer Khan were not given an over under Imad.
 
It gives great confidence to players when the captain is willing to admit his mistakes and take the blame. Classy stuff from Finch.
 
Subcontinental mentality will never admit this.

Rohit is the same. Loses India more matches than he wins with his selfish batting.
 
If a Pakistani batsmen scores a selfish hundred in a losing cause, they cut a cake in the dressing room
 
Looks like he's sending a message to Pak batters and coaching staff, of course no one will listen and Pak will continue to fail.
 
If a Pakistani batsmen scores a selfish hundred in a losing cause, they cut a cake in the dressing room

And say pitch was difficult to bat on
You had to work hard for every run
Add to that say shut up to media
 
At the moment it needs a miracle for us to even reach the Semis. Team is demoralised and in it's worst phase since 2009-10.

WI are looking far more likely.

Before the world cup in 2015, was a worse state. Right now you're saying it needs a miracle to reach the semis. Then it was a miracle to even win a game in the world cup.
 
https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1131535

From a maverick hitter who floated in and out of the side, Glenn Maxwell has become a lynchpin of Australia’s middle order, ahead of the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2019.

After a successful series against India, where he struck his third T20I century, Maxwell has peaked at a time when the Australian top order has been as prolific as it has in recent memory. And with various members of the middle order also finding form, it has essentially meant that runs have flown in from all parts of the Australian line-up.

Wednesday’s (27 March) third ODI against Pakistan offered further evidence of that as Australia had contributions from Aaron Finch at the top, Peter Handscomb in the middle, and Maxwell lower down to finish the innings. Maxwell made the most telling of those contributions, blasting 71 off 55 balls to shore up the Australian total as they registered 266/6 and then dismissed Pakistan for 186 to take a 3-0 lead and win the series.

"Once Finchy got out, it was up to me to make sure I was there for as long as possible towards the end," Maxwell said after the game. "I got a little bit of luck being dropped [on 27], but to make the most of that and control the back-end was nice and it gives us something we can bowl at."

Maxwell’s utility to the Australian side goes well beyond the destructive potential he brings with the bat. His off-spin often goes unnoticed, especially when he plays innings such as the one on Wednesday, but Maxwell’s bowling is pretty handy for a captain looking to get in extra overs from one of the non-frontline bowlers through the middle overs. He is also an electric fielder, especially at point, where he is impregnable on most days.

"Maxi is a player who people expect so much from every time he plays because he has so much brilliance at times," Finch said. "But I think what people don't see at times, when they get frustrated with him, is the amount of stuff he does in the field. If he averages 20 in a series, he might save 20 runs in the field as well.

Maxwell's range of strokes led to Finch calling him a 360-degree player Maxwell's range of strokes led to Finch calling him a 360-degree player
"He bowls overs, gets some wickets. It all adds up to a great package. And the fact he's batting at six at the moment, to give us that little bit of extra firepower towards the back end is something we're conscious of and it's a role he fits really well."

Finch went on to call Maxwell a 360-degree batsman on account of his unorthodox strokeplay and brought up Maxwell’s ability to manipulate the field and to collect runs equally effectively from all parts of the ground. "Guys who can hit the ball 360 [degrees] are so hard to bowl to. As a captain, they're a nightmare. There's a handful of them in the world now," he said.

"You've got Jos Buttler, who can scoop you over the keeper's head, but also hit over mid-off. They're two obvious places where you always have a fielder up when you've got five [fielders outside the 30-yard circle]. When you need both of them out, it creates some problems. Maxi is no different to that."

I think what people don't see at times, when they get frustrated with him, is the amount of stuff he does in the field. If he averages 20 in a series, he might save 20 runs in the field as well.
Finch on Maxwell

Maxwell also adds value to the side from a captaincy perspective, being a part of the Australian leadership group in limited-overs cricket. Maxwell has captained Melbourne Stars at the Big Bash League and has stated his desire to lead in the past. And while he may not be captain of the current team, his inputs are highly valued by the incumbent Finch.

"I probably take care of certain positions for certain players, making sure the right guys are at the right position at the right time," Maxwell said. "And that just takes a load off his [Finch's] shoulders.

"He's got a lot to work on with bowling changes, the numbers going through his head and making sure the right guys are bowling the right overs. I just make sure the right people are in the right spots."
 
Selfless captain like Sarfraz.

Our players especially domestic captains should learn a thing or 2 from him.

The likes of Saud Shakeel played at no 7 under Rizwan & Anwar and likes of Umer Khan were not given an over under Imad.

I mean how does Sarfraz even come into the picture here?

You really do rate him, I can see.

But I don't want to ask tough questions as you will just point to the Champions Trophy and forget everything else.

So I'll ask you after the World Cup.
 
The difference with Australia's team is they have selfless batsmen who possess the quality and application in their firepower to make up for Finch's SR as evident by the knocks from Handscomb and Maxwell amassing 118 runs off 98 balls, which is almost the equivalent of scoring 8 an over in 15 overs.

Required equation in the last 15 overs for Pakistan was very similar but to no avail for the last recognised pair in the middle at this point.
 
To be fair finchy was under pressure until he came into this series.
Khawaja was scoring runs and Warner was back in the picture too.
Hats off to him

Finch is a class act just out of form.

He plays for the team, not himself.
 
That is the difference between Pakistani players and other players. Pakistani players never admit their shortcomings.
 
That is the difference between Pakistani players and other players. Pakistani players never admit their shortcomings.

I saw Rizwan's press conference after his 100. He said that he was very happy that he scored a 100. He said it wasn't in his hands whether pakistan won or lost. It was the bowlers' fault. Compare this to finch.
 
I mean how does Sarfraz even come into the picture here?

You really do rate him, I can see.

But I don't want to ask tough questions as you will just point to the Champions Trophy and forget everything else.

So I'll ask you after the World Cup.

I was talking about Sarfraz's selflessness and he does come here as he is a selfless captain too. I never talked about Sarfraz's performance in this post.

Dont know whats the need of nitpicking each and every post of mine and interpreting it wrongly.
 
The concern is that Pakistan's batsmen's mentality at the moment in ODIs is - I score a 100 and that secures my spot for at least a few matches, irrespective of whether the team wins the match or not.
 
The concern is that Pakistan's batsmen's mentality at the moment in ODIs is - I score a 100 and that secures my spot for at least a few matches, irrespective of whether the team wins the match or not.

Every Pakistani team since 2010 has featured batsmen still playing for their spots in the team.
 
Resurgent Finch on verge of records

Aaron Finch admits he's sleeping easier after an extraordinary return to ODI dominance that has put him on the cusp of multiple Australian records.

Coming off scores of 116 and 153 not out in the first two games of the series against Pakistan, Finch fell for a "frustrating" 90 in the third ODI in Abu Dhabi where his side sealed series victory and a sixth-straight win.

The Australian captain narrowly missed out joining the likes of Virat Kohli, AB de Villiers and Kumar Sangakkara as men to have scored hundreds in three consecutive ODIs.

But Finch now could become the first Aussie to post three tons in a bilateral ODI series.

And with 359 runs at the astonishing average of 179.50 and two games still to be played in Dubai on Friday and Sunday, Finch is also only 28 runs away from passing David Warner's record for the most runs scored by an Australian in a five-game ODI series.

Warner scored 386 runs in a five-ODI campaign in South Africa in 2016, a series his side remarkably lost 0-5, while George Bailey set the overall Australian benchmark for the most runs in a series at 478 in a six-game (one was washed out) bout in India in 2013.

Mark Waugh and Matthew Hayden both scored three tons at World Cups (the former in 1996, the latter in 2007), while Waugh did it again in a 2000-01 tri-series featuring West Indies and Zimbabwe, but no Australian has done it a two-team series.

Finch conceded his 90 off 136 balls on Wednesday, after the visitors had slumped to 2-20 in the Power Play, was far from his prettiest innings.

"I struggled to get going the whole time," he said.

"It was a frustrating innings and I probably let the frustration get the better of me towards the end.

"I felt like I was hitting the middle of the bat a bit but it was just straight to fielders. So there was a lot of pressure building up … but it was still nice to get a few runs and contribute.

"I was kicking myself one, for getting out then, but two, for also chewing up so many balls. But looking back it wasn't the easiest wicket to play on."

Finch's abrupt return to form comes after a 30-innings stretch across all formats in which he didn't pass triple-digits.

The right-hander has had a rollercoaster summer that saw him reach the highs of receiving a Baggy Green and winning a maiden KFC Big Bash title, and the lows of losing a home Test and ODI series and being dropped from the Test side.

As he prepares to lead Australia at a World Cup for the first time while also handling the reintegration of Steve Smith and David Warner following their bans, Finch admits rediscovering his touch in the middle is a load off his shoulders.

"Winning is the most important thing and being able to contribute to that with the bat is obviously important, and it makes you feel better," Finch said.

"You don't lose as much sleep worrying about a lot of the stuff that occupies your mind as a captain.

"Really worrying about your own form, your own technique – things that could go wrong and at times you get into quite a negative frame of mind when things aren't going your way.

"India – they were probably all over me for a couple of games there in the Tests. Then the ODI series in Australia as well.

"So to get some runs at the back end of that series in India, get a 90 and contribute with a couple of other starts was nice.

"It never takes the pressure off, because you're always wanting to lead from the front in every game and have that match-winning contribution. (But) it's been nice to set us up for a couple of really big match-winning partnerships."

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/aar...kistan-series-warner-bailey-hayden/2019-03-29
 
At the moment it needs a miracle for us to even reach the Semis. Team is demoralised and in it's worst phase since 2009-10.

WI are looking far more likely.

Pakistan has to beat Bangladesh first before reaching semis. NZ, Aus, Eng, Ind are all much, much stronger than Pakistan in all departments.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Ramiz "At what stage did you feel that you had it covered?"<br><br>Aaron Finch "When they needed 8 off 1 ball"<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/PAKvAUS?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#PAKvAUS</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1111708009728757760?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 29, 2019</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Subcontinental mentality will never admit this.

Rohit is the same. Loses India more matches than he wins with his selfish batting.

India's winning percentage is around 65-70% since 2015. Do you just like to throw **** around hoping it sticks?
 
Someone should give him fatal dose of innings played by Misbah & Hussain Talat. Also, Rizwan too
 
I was about to say... Will Rizwan comeout and say it's my fault... not that brave huh afterall I want to be on the plane to England:hafeez2
 
I was about to say... Will Rizwan comeout and say it's my fault... not that brave huh afterall I want to be on the plane to England:hafeez2

Finch would have been the first to take the blame if he had played like Rizwan and lost the match for his team.
 
Do you have reading comprehension issues? Rohit =/= team India.

Or Maybe rohit plays like the way he does cause he knows after the top 3 is gone, rest are incompetent and can't save their life with their garbage batting?
 
Finding form with the bat isn't the only improvement that captain Aaron Finch has made over the past month.

Finch's turnaround helped Australia secure an ODI series victory over Pakistan in the UAE, where the final match starts at 10pm AEDT on Sunday.

The captain has already scored 398 runs in the series, the most by any Australian in a five-match ODI series.

The runs have come a month after Finch's position in the side was being debated by pundits in light of a concerning form slump.

Coach Justin Langer believes Finch's captaincy, which played an unheralded role in Friday's six-run win, has also gone from strength to strength during tours of India and the UAE.

Finch kept his composure during a dramatic end to Friday's clash in Dubai, where Pakistan lost despite requiring 66 runs from the final 10 overs with two well-set batsmen at the crease and eight wickets in hand.

"Finchy is doing a great job. He's getting better all the time," Langer said.

"He would have taken confidence out of the Big Bash final as well. As a captain you've got to live it, you've got to have those really positive experiences (in close games).

"He's just growing. He's doing a really good job. He's obviously batting well and he's doing a really good job (captaining)."

Finch's return to form has come in the same country that hosted his impressive Test debut, which was the start of a topsy-turvy six months for the opener.

The Victorian was axed from the Test XI after the Boxing Day Test, struggled to score runs in the ensuing ODI series at home against India then turned the corner earlier this month with a knock of 93 in India.

"He's had a long, hard summer and he's getting better towards the end of it," Langer said.

"Great resilience, great durability and it also shows great leadership.

"Because often what happens at the end of a summer, guys can start going south. He's actually getting better and better."

Meanwhile, Imad Wasim has been fined 20 per cent of his match fee for Pakistan's slow over-rate in the fourth ODI.

Imad, leading Pakistan in the absence of rested regular skipper Sarfraz Ahmed plus injured stand-in captain Shoaib Malik, pleaded guilty to the offence.

Imad's teammates were fined 10 per cent of their match fees.

Qantas Tour of the UAE

First ODI: Australia won by eight wickets

Second ODI: Australia won by eight wickets

Third ODI: Australia won by 80 runs

Fourth ODI: Australia won by six runs

Fifth ODI: v Pakistan, March 31 in Dubai

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/aar...ia-odi-tour-pakistan-uae-world-cup/2019-03-31
 
The coronavirus-forced break has helped Australia’s limited overs skipper Aaron Finch to re-assess his career as he aims to extend his career till the 2023 ODI World Cup in India.

Finch said he is targetting to end his career on a high with a World Cup final appearance in 2023.

“My end date at this stage is the World Cup final of the 2023 World Cup in India. That’s my goal and I’m sticking to it,” Finch was quoted as saying by SEN radio network.

“That’s what I had my mind set on a fair while (ago), but I think this period has just confirmed it. That’ll see me through to 36 (years old), obviously with form and everything permitting, and injuries.”

The 33-year-old right-handed batsman said the five month-long forced break has rejuvenated him and he now desires to lead Australia in next three major ICC events -- the T20 World Cups in 2021 and 2022 followed by the ODI World Cup in 2023.

“Having this break, as difficult as it’s been for so many people, for athletes and especially ones that are travelling nonstop and playing for 10 or 11 months of the year, it’s been that mental freshen up that people probably needed but haven’t had the opportunity to do.

“If I thought I was going to be pushing it to get to that date, this break has confirmed that I’ll be ready to go right through to that period,” he said.

Finch and Australia will resume competitive cricket after six months when they tour England next month for three T20 Internationals and as many ODIs, starting September 4 at Southampton.

Finch admitted that the Covid-19 lockdown made him realise how he missed the game.

“The first month or so that we were in lockdown, I didn’t miss playing at all,” he said.

“So originally, that was alarm bells for me; (I thought) does this mean I’m coming to the end, do I retire? And it was like that 32nd day (of no training) ticked over and I was like, ‘right, I’m itching to get back into it’.

“I’m just excited to start playing again. It’s been a long five months and I think for everyone having not had this kind of extended break for some time, I think the novelty of that wore off after the first three months and everyone’s been itching to get back into it since then,” he added.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/foot...aaron-finch/story-nXuceYYw8ArSCaSTjI2thO.html
 
114 - brilliant innings vs India in first ODI
 
Australia could not have asked for a better start to their summer as their captain Aaron Finch led the show from the front in the 1st ODI of a 3-match series against India at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Friday. Finch got to his 17th ODI hundred as he gave his side a perfect start to the much-anticipated series.

Aaron Finch got to his hundred in 117 balls as the skipper came up with a well-composed knock. Finch celebrated a landmark he achieved as the Australia star got to 5000 runs in ODI cricket. It was also Finch's first ODI hundred at the SCG.

Finch became the second fastest Australia to reach the landmark as he has gotten there in his126th innings. He is next only to his opening partner David Warner who holds the record as he had gotten there in 115 innings. Dean Jones (128), Matthew Hayden (132) and Michael Bevan (136) complete the top 5 on the list of fastest Australian batsmen to 5000 runs.

Aaron Finch had won the toss and opted to bat against Virat Kohli's visiting side on Friday and the skipper started with a cautious approach. Both Warner and Finch took their time before cutting loose as India pacers struggled to get a breakthrough.

Finch and Warner added 156 runs for the opening wicket before Mohammed Shami got the wicket of the latter. Finch though carried on and stitched another solid stand with Steve Smith, who walked in at No. 3.

https://www.indiatoday.in/sports/cr...st-odi-sydney-david-warner-1744561-2020-11-27
 
Scored his 50 off 68 balls and then scored a 100 off 117 balls. Imam does the same thing but gets so much flak for it. Finch does it and its an incredible innings. The fact is it's a great inning when Imam does it as well. The problem is not Imam or Finch. The problem is that the other batsmen in the team can't do what Steve Smith did. Score a 100 off 70 balls. This is why I blame Babar Azam much more than Imam. Babar is clearly the best batsman in the team and top 5 in ODI around the world yet he's the one who plays at 100 SR. It makes Imam's 90ish SR innings look bad when in essence Babar and co should be playing around 125-130SR.
 
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Scored his 50 off 68 balls and then scored a 100 off 117 balls. Imam does the same thing but gets so much flak for it. Finch does it and its an incredible innings. The fact is it's a great inning when Imam does it as well. The problem is not Imam or Finch. The problem is that the other batsmen in the team can't do what Steve Smith did. Score a 100 off 70 balls. This is why I blame Babar Azam much more than Imam. Babar is clearly the best batsman in the team and top 5 in ODI around the world yet he's the one who plays at 100 SR. It makes Imam's 90ish SR innings look bad when in essence Babar and co should be playing around 125-130SR.
What is virat kohli and Smith's career strike rate. Even butler does'nt have a SR of 130. Looks like you are just recently started watching cricket
 
Scored his 50 off 68 balls and then scored a 100 off 117 balls. Imam does the same thing but gets so much flak for it. Finch does it and its an incredible innings. The fact is it's a great inning when Imam does it as well. The problem is not Imam or Finch. The problem is that the other batsmen in the team can't do what Steve Smith did. Score a 100 off 70 balls. This is why I blame Babar Azam much more than Imam. Babar is clearly the best batsman in the team and top 5 in ODI around the world yet he's the one who plays at 100 SR. It makes Imam's 90ish SR innings look bad when in essence Babar and co should be playing around 125-130SR.

Because it was Smith's only 60 ball hundred. It's not like Smith does it everyday.

Finch or Imam, this innings, yesterday, was quite average. He was clearly playing for his hundred.
 
What is virat kohli and Smith's career strike rate. Even butler does'nt have a SR of 130. Looks like you are just recently started watching cricket

I am not sure he even watched yesterday's match. Finch obviously playing for the hundred.
 
What is virat kohli and Smith's career strike rate. Even butler does'nt have a SR of 130. Looks like you are just recently started watching cricket

What I meant was if Imam is scoring a 100, then Babar needs to be playing at 120-130SR.

If Imam is out early, then Babar can play at 90ish SR.
 
What I meant was if Imam is scoring a 100, then Babar needs to be playing at 120-130SR.

If Imam is out early, then Babar can play at 90ish SR.

Imaam opens the batting his job is to give fast starts and use the powerplay
 
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