{"id":295155,"date":"2023-10-05T07:39:11","date_gmt":"2023-10-05T07:39:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sportstons.com\/?p=295155"},"modified":"2023-10-05T07:39:11","modified_gmt":"2023-10-05T07:39:11","slug":"australias-home-away-from-home-world-cup","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sportstons.com\/%d1%81ricket\/australias-home-away-from-home-world-cup\/","title":{"rendered":"Australia\u2019s home away from home World Cup"},"content":{"rendered":"
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time.<\/p>\n
If this is India\u2019s home World Cup, then for Australia\u2019s cricketers it is something like playing one at the office.<\/p>\n
So strong are the centrifugal forces pulling cricket towards India\u2019s huge population and hive of economic activity, most of Pat Cummins\u2019 team spend more time there than anywhere else around the world.<\/p>\n
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The countdown is over. Captains pose for a photo before the 2023 ICC World Cup.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>International Cricket Council<\/cite><\/p>\n And though the tournament begins on Thursday night with England facing New Zealand in a reprise of the 2019 decider, it is Australia\u2019s match-up with India on Sunday in Chennai that many observers see as the major meeting of the opening round. A hamstring complaint for Marcus Stoinis is Australia\u2019s one injury concern.<\/p>\n While frequent national tours – two this year and at least once every two years – form part of the picture, the annual and expanding behemoth of the Indian Premier League has also welcomed a generation of Australian players through.<\/p>\n This year, Cameron Green\u2019s $3 million deal with Mumbai means that by tournament\u2019s end he will have spent almost half of 2023 in India, having also been here for the tour in February and March.<\/p>\n Among older players, the likes of David Warner and Glenn Maxwell, in particular, have made their names as much in India as anywhere else. Their profiles rival the days when, on arrival in India, an answer in the affirmative about your Australian nationality was instantly met by the reply of \u201cAha, Ricky Ponting!\u201d<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Australia\u2019s four ODI World Cup-winning captains: Ricky Ponting (2003, 2007), Michael Clarke (2015), Allan Border (1987) and Steve Waugh (1999).<\/span>Credit: <\/span>Dallas Kilponen<\/cite><\/p>\n As Maxwell put it this week: \u201cYou\u2019re used to the culture, you used to the little intricacies that come with being over here, and it doesn\u2019t feel as much of a home advantage as it did in past years. There\u2019s guys here who\u2019ve had more than 10 tours to India, and probably upwards of three months every year here, so it\u2019s not as foreign.\u201d<\/p>\n In addition to his IPL exploits, Warner has also ventured into Indian business. The St Andrews Beach Brewery, of which Warner is a director, recently unveiled a venture to produce, market and distribute their beers in India.<\/p>\n Undoubtedly, the sense of India being the centre of the cricket universe is enhanced by playing games to packed grounds, none bigger than the monolithic Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad. Former captain Aaron Finch said that the familiarity of such backdrops would be beneficial.<\/p>\n \u201cI always found as a player that knowing what to expect when you turn up to the ground is a big thing,\u201d Finch told this masthead from Hyderabad. \u201cEven just where you sit in the change room, where you warm up, things that you don\u2019t tend to think about, but they always made my mind just a little bit calmer.<\/p>\n \u201cIf you turn up to a ground for the first time it is a bit of a scramble. Guys are trying to figure out where to sit, and so you\u2019re always a little more at ease once you\u2019ve done it a few times.\u201d<\/p>\n Indian cricket followers have plenty of love but also respect for Australia\u2019s players, especially when it comes to white ball cricket. That\u2019s because over the past decade or more, no team has played India more often or pressed them harder on home soil – since 2013, Australia have won 10 and lost 14 matches against the hosts, meaning Sunday\u2019s first meeting in Chennai is no sure thing for Rohit Sharma\u2019s men.<\/p>\n Over the past 40 years, no nation has dominated World Cups like Australia: wins in 1987, 1999, 2003, 2007 and 2015 were all characterised by aggression with the bat, speed with the ball and agility in the field. Even in a world now dominated by T20 franchise leagues, they are the sort of match-winning qualities that endure.<\/p>\n \u201cThere\u2019s a couple of the boys that were there in 2015, which obviously gives us confidence,\u201d Cummins said in Ahmedabad. \u201cOne day cricket is a format that\u2019s really suited Australian teams of the past.<\/p>\n \u201cNot only taking the game on with the batting and having some good quick bowlers, but even in the field, that early 2000s era I grew up watching, they were amazing, really athletic. So hopefully we can carry it on.\u201d<\/p>\n <\/p>\n David Warner and Glenn Maxwell at the 2019 World Cup.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>AP<\/cite><\/p>\n Maxwell is one member of the group who experienced 2015, winning the Cup in Australia and capping it all with a commanding display against New Zealand in the final at the MCG. He felt bleaker emotions in 2019, grappling with the demands of the Justin Langer regime and his own high expectations as Australia qualified strongly for the semis before they were knocked out by England.<\/p>\n That day at Edgbaston, Maxwell felt it was his time to win the game for Australia after an indifferent tournament, only to pop a Jofra Archer knuckleball to cover. \u201cI was like \u2018this is it, this is my day\u2019,\u201d Maxwell told the Ordineroli Speaking<\/i> podcast in 2020. \u201cI remember seeing this ball in the air and just going \u2018no, it can\u2019t all be over, it just can\u2019t be, this is it, this is the day\u2019.\u201c<\/p>\n Four years on, Maxwell, Warner and their teammates have a new day ahead of them, and the opportunity to make good on all the time and experience they have invested in India. It\u2019s not a home World Cup, but a home away from home.<\/p>\n News, results and expert analysis from the weekend of sport sent every Monday. <\/i><\/b>Sign up for our Sport newsletter<\/i><\/b>.<\/i><\/b><\/p>\nMost Viewed in Sport<\/h2>\n
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