New injury Head-ache for Australia in Sri Lanka
COLOMBO – Travis Head will miss Australia’s last one-day international against Sri Lanka while Steve Smith is also doubtful, skipper Aaron Finch said Thursday (23) on the eve of the dead-rubber match.
Head hurt his hamstring on Tuesday (21) when Sri Lanka took an unassailable 3-1 lead in the five-match series in Colombo, adding to a long list of injuries for the visitors.
Smith missed the game with a quad problem and Australia were also without Marcus Stoinis, Kane Richardson, Mitchell Starc and Ashton Agar.
“There is a lot of them,” Finch said, adding that he was “not sure” if Head, who scored a useful 70 not out in the third ODI on Sunday (19), would be fit for the two-match Test series beginning on July 29 in Galle.
“Especially where he fields in the outfield, he does quite a lot of kilometres and the ground is quite heavy,” Finch said, adding that Head’s absence was a “bit more of a precaution”.
He said he doubted Smith would be available either.
“But that could change. I mean he’ll be doing training this afternoon. We will go down there and have a look at the conditions and everything. But from what I understand, he won’t be available for tomorrow,” Finch said.
Finch also said that Starc was “still not right” with his finger, which he cut on the spike of his boot in the first ODI.
“Where it is, the stitching and things like that (are) just not quite 100% healed. Without being able to bowl with tape on, he will be out for tomorrow as well,” Finch said.
Australia’s cricket board late Thursday announced all-rounder Glenn Maxwell will join the Test squad “as an additional option” while Head recovers from “a minor hamstring strain”.
Maxwell has only played seven Test matches and is a white ball specialist who is considered one of the most destructive players in the sport’s shortest T20 format.
The maverick middle-order batter made his Test debut against India in 2013 and scored his maiden Test century against the same team in 2017.
Finch blamed the “disappointing” series defeat on Australia’s inability to build partnerships but said the games were still good preparation for the Tests.
“Any time we’ve started to get any momentum in the game, we lose a wicket and in these conditions, once you lose one, they go back-to-back pretty quick,” Finch said.
He also defended international bilateral series in the age of domestic T20 tournaments like the Indian Premier League, which have registered huge growth in funding and popularity in the last few years.
Finch said that the standard “isn’t the same when you play domestic competitions” and international bilateral series were still “important to the game”.
Sri Lanka head coach Chris Silverwood on Friday paid tribute to the players for their “very satisfying” first bilateral series victory over Australia since 2010.
“Most satisfying for me was the progress of a team as we’ve made through this journey so far, just to see obviously the tactics coming together, to see guys out in the middle scoring runs, to see how we’ve chased totals down,” Silverwood told reporters.
“And to me, one of the most exciting things is but we’re still nowhere near the potential that we have in that team… If the guys keep learning and keep progressing the way they are, then we will be… in a very strong position to challenge anywhere in the world.”
-Agence France-Presse