Captain Pat Cummins said yesterday that cricketers were “not robots” with Australia’s Twenty20 team struggling in India straight after their 50-over World Cup triumph.
Seven of the Australia squad who won the World Cup remained in India for a five-match T20 series that started four days after the November 19 final.
A second-string India side won the first two matches and reports in Australia say that six of the seven are now set to return home. The third T20 was yesterday.
Ben McDermott, Josh Philippe and Chris Green were among reinforcements being sent to relieve the flagging World Cup heroes, the reports said.
With a busy home summer of cricket looming, including Test series against Pakistan and the West Indies, Cummins acknowledged the burden on the players, some of whom have been playing in India since September.
“They’re humans, they’re not robots,” he told reporters at the Sydney Cricket Ground.
“Putting everything into a World Cup and then playing a couple of days later - I probably don’t begrudge them if they’re not at 100 percent.”
The skipper added: “These are still games for Australia and it’s great that these tours do provide opportunities for some of the younger guys, or guys who might not be in the first eleven. I think these are important tours and you can get a lot out of them.
“To hold one trophy takes a lot but to hold them across formats really shows our amazing coaching group but also the squad of players. You can’t do that with 11 players, you need 25 really good players so it shows the strength of Australian cricket at the moment and the appetite of the guys to compete whenever they play. Everything takes a lot out of you but the guys keep rocking up and performing which is as pleasing as anything else.”
Veteran opener David Warner, who was withdrawn from the T20 squad on the eve of the India series, is set to bid farewell to Test cricket after the Pakistan series.
Warner’s Test spot has been in doubt after a lean run of red-ball form, but the 37-year-old was Australia’s leading scorer at the World Cup with 535 runs.
Cummins said Warner was “hitting the ball beautifully at the moment”.
“He wasn’t just playing for himself out there, he would go and take the game on, be really brave and really take it to the opposition,” he said of Warner’s displays in India.
The first Test against Pakistan starts on December 14 in Perth before the Boxing Day match in Melbourne. The third and final Test will be at Warner’s home Sydney Cricket Ground from January 3.
Australian cricketers Mitchell Starc (left) and team captain Pat Cummins pose with the ICC World Cup 2023 Trophy during a media opportunity at the Sydney Cricket Ground yesterday. (AFP)