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Cup history on Warner's side, says Finch

3 minute read

David Warner has scored just three runs in his last four innings, but Aaron Finch has backed his history of scoring runs in World Cups to help him in the T20s.

DAVID WARNER of Australia.
DAVID WARNER of Australia. Picture: Henry Browne/Getty Images

Aaron Finch has backed David Warner's World Cup history to be enough to overturn his horror run of form as Australia start their bid for an elusive Twenty20 title.

Warner will enter their tournament opener with South Africa on Saturday night with serious question marks over his form, after a nightmare build up in Abu Dhabi.

Since landing in the UAE more than a month ago, Warner has scored just three runs in four innings.

The rough patch includes scores of zero and two before he was dropped by IPL side Hyderabad, before another duck and a one in Australia's two warm-up games.

After sitting out tours of West Indies and Bangladesh, the 14 balls Warner faced in those innings double as his only competitive cricket since April.

But Finch is not deterred.

Instead, he points to Warner's knack of making runs in big tournaments, after his opening partner was the second leading run-scorer in the 2019 ODI World Cup.

Notably, Warner also entered that without a big score in his four warm-up matches on return for Australia after his 12-month ban.

Overall, Warner has averaged above 60 for Australia in ODI World Cups, but that figure drops to 21.50 at a strike-rate of 128.88 in his five T20 World Cups.

"I'm backing Davey's ability, I'm backing his judgement," Finch said.

"If you look at his World Cup history, it's bloody good. Would he like more runs? Absolutely.

"Everyone would like more runs all the time.

"But he's one of the greatest players Australia's ever produced and I've got no doubts that come game one, he'll be up and firing, ready to go."

How Warner gets away will be crucial for Australia.

The slower wickets in the UAE made the powerplays vital in the second stage of the IPL, with teams who won the opening six overs winning 74 per cent of games.

Starts were also a problem for an understrength Australia in their most recent series losses to West Indies and Bangladesh, outscored in the powerplay in eight of 10 games.

"Even though it's different surfaces to what the IPL used, we saw the impact that had," Finch said.

"The teams that won the powerplay, that went a long way to winning the game as the wickets deteriorated.

"I think the wickets first off in the tournament, will start out a little bit better, and probably be a little bit more consistent throughout that 40 overs.

"But as it gets a bit more traffic and the and the tournament gets a bit deeper, that might slow up and spin a little bit more.

"But (still) the power play is going to be crucial no doubt for both teams."

Meanwhile Finch is confident in his own match fitness, after playing both warm-up games against New Zealand and India with scores of 24 and eight respectively.

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