Big picture
As the World Cup staggers into its closing 20 days, it can be possible to lose perspective on the past four years. England, thanks to their defeat by Sri Lanka and injury to Jason Roy, are in crisis, lambasted by the press and now weighed down by the expectation that come global tournaments, they invariably stuff it up. That’s the conventional view of this week, anyway. At the same time, Australia are growing in strength, getting the wins they need without quite looking like they have put it all together – something, presumably, that will only happen when it matters most.
But away from the easy assumptions of the week is a bigger, more complicated story. England, having been more or less laughed out of the 2015 World Cup due to their retrograde approach and early elimination, retooled and rebranded with such success that they have been viewed as tournament favourites for at least the past two years. Australia, meanwhile, were the team in crisis for most of the past 12 months, due to the Newlands scandal and bans to Steven Smith and David Warner. Certainly Australia’s coach Justin Langer had no reason to think his men might be in danger of getting complacent given their experiences leading into this competition.
Nevertheless, the major question is whether or not Australia now have a team that will match-up effectively against an England team who, for all their former success, need to keep it together in the here and now. A warm-up game in Southampton, won by Australia, provided some information of use. “We’ll take a few match-ups [from the warm-up game],” Langer said. “The beauty of the World Cup is we get to watch every game and we’ve got lots of eyes on them, lots of cricket expertise and experience in our group. We get good ideas as they’ll be doing against us, so yeah whether it’s in the practice games or the games we’ve been watching or the last four years’ footage and data we’ve got on England, it all adds up.”
A notable strength of Australia under Langer has been their ability to play a brand of cricket suited to most opponents, with adjustments made for each. This all comes back to Langer’s very pugilistic understanding of cricket “combat”. At Lord’s, both England and Australia will get a strong indicator of how well their fighting feet are moving around the ring with the world title bout entering its final, definitive rounds. “This tournament is going to be about who can hold their nerve in the big moments,” Langer said . “We have got to concentrate on how we hold our nerve in the big moments. There are going to be plenty of them in the next three games and hopefully the semi-final. I have said for 6-8 months, when it comes to a World Cup there is a lot of talk about statistics, but it comes down to match play and we have to play England on Tuesday better than they play us.”
Form guide
England: LWWWL (Last five completed matches, most recent first)
Australia: WWWLW
in the spotlight
No country, not even England, got a better look at Jofra Archer prior to his international debut than Australia. It was via the Big Bash League and a wildly successful run for Hobart Hurricanes that Archer made himself a high profile likelihood for England in the first place. As coach of the Perth Scorchers, Justin Langer has already had to plan for Archer, and his Hurricanes twice confounded the Scorchers on a run to the BBL final in 2017-18. “Great athlete isn’t he?” Langer said. “We’ve seen him a lot in the Big Bash, Adam Griffith was his coach at the Hurricanes, so we know a fair bit about Jofra, he’s a brilliant athlete, he bowls fast, moves well, so we’ll be on our toes for him as well. It’s nice to know the opposition and study them well, but at the start we’ve just got to be really clear what we want to do.”
In an Australian side not always the most balanced, Marcus Stoinis is a key link man. As a batsman his top order tendencies can at times obscure his powerful hitting, with early strike rotation key to allowing him and his partners to score effectively at the back end of an innings. But it is with the ball that Stoinis has arguably become most important, using seam up and a combination of many slower ball variations to prove harder to hit out of the attack than it would always appear. Against Bangladesh it was Stoinis, not Starc or Cummins, who took the key wicket of Shakib Al Hasan, miscuing one of those very change-ups.
Team news
Jason Roy’s return to the side has seemingly been made more urgent by the defeat to Sri Lanka, while Liam Plunkett and Mark Wood continue to duel for the last pace bowling berth.
England (possible) 1 Jonny Bairstow, 2 James Vince/Jason Roy, 3 Joe Root, 4 Eoin Morgan (capt), 5 Ben Stokes, 6 Jos Buttler (wk), 7 Moeen Ali, 8 Chris Woakes, 9 Adil Rashid, 10 Jofra Archer, 11 Liam Plunkett/Mark Wood
Based on the way they performed against England in the warm-up fixture at Southampton, both Nathan Lyon and Jason Berendorff can expect to be strongly considered in place of Adam Zampa and Nathan Coulter-Nile.
Australia (possible) 1 Aaron Finch (capt), 2 David Warner, 3 Usman Khawaja, 4 Steven Smith, 5 Glenn Maxwell, 6 Marcus Stoinis, 7 Alex Carey (wk), 8 Nathan Coulter-Nile/Jason Behrendorff, 9 Pat Cummins, 10 Mitchell Starc, 11 Adam Zampa/Nathan Lyon
Pitch and conditions
Lord’s entered World Cup equations for the first time this week with Pakistan’s victory over South Africa on a surface that, as is typical, offered a little bit of something for all – plus the vagaries of the Lord’s slope. London’s forecast is for warm temperatures and scattered showers across the day.
Strategy punt
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Nathan Lyon is yet to play a match at this World Cup, and Jason Behrendorff has played only once. But on a match-ups basis they may well be the best options for Australia against England, demonstrated not only in the warm-up match at Southampton a month ago but also by the wider numbers. Lyon has been successful in tying down Joss Buttler in their previous meetings, while left-arm pace has been a consistent thorn in English sides recently. Their defeats to Pakistan and Sri Lanka were characterised by difficulties against the sorts of angles created by left armers plus those of Lasith Malinga – who’s inimitable style asks very similar questions.
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England have, in Jofra Archer, Mark Wood and Liam Plunkett, three pacemen with the speed to threaten an Australian top order that has, against Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, functioned like the best oiled part of Aaron Finch’s machine. An echo of the West Indies short-pitched assault could have a significant risk/reward element, not least because the boundaries at Lord’s are not exactly distant. But Eoin Morgan will remember how Wood surprised Warner at the MCG in January 2018 – well directed bouncers have the capacity to startle, as Justin Langer well remembers from day one of the immortal 2005 Ashes campaign.
Stats and trivia
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Australia have won eight and England five of their ODI meetings at Lord’s since 1972, with a tied game in 2005. Australia won the most recent encounter in 2015, a game remembered mostly for the Ben Stokes/Mitchell Starc obstructing the field dismissal.
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Adil Rashid (35 wickets) needs three victims to surpass Mitchell Johnson (37) and enter the top five wicket-takers in all ODIs between England and Australia.
Quotes
“Jos Buttler is an unbelievable player. I love watching him bat. I hope he gets a duck in this game obviously, but I saw him at Somerset and he is an unbelievable athlete and an incredible finisher. He is the new Dhoni of world cricket. We know we will have to be on our game. But they have a number of players. Stokes, Morgan, even Woakes at the end smacks them over point all the time and pulls well. They have a very strong batting unit and we will have to be right on it.”
Justin Langer on England
Source: ESPN Crickinfo