Sports

Australia coach defends World Cup planning, puts blame on players

Australia head coach ⁠Andrew McDonald
 
Australia head coach ⁠Andrew McDonald


MELBOURNE: Australia head coach ⁠Andrew McDonald put the blame for the team's humiliating T20 World Cup ​exit squarely on ​the players, rejecting criticism of their preparations and a 'false narrative' that the nation is not taking the format seriously.
Australia crashed out of the group stage following losses to Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka, triggering acrimony on the home front.
Former players and ⁠pundits have zeroed in on Australia's preparations for the tournament which ⁠saw members of the squad arrive late to a warmup series in Pakistan after prioritising the Big Bash League.
Australia were thumped 3-0 by Pakistan before failing ‌to qualify for the World Cup's ​Super Eight phase.
McDonald ⁠dismissed criticism that Australia had not prioritised the tournament, ​saying the team had been 'fully ‌locked into (it) for a period of time'.
'I have heard that sort of narrative that T20 ​World Cups don't matter to us,' he told reporters.
'I think all that is a response to the performances of Australian cricket teams in these competitions.
'We won in 2021 and we haven't been as successful since then. The ‌expectations on the Australian cricket team are high -- and rightfully so.
'But ​to sit back and say that we're prioritising other formats or ​other ‌versions ⁠of the game and not the T20 World Cup is entirely false.'
Australia were missing leading pace bowlers Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood due ​to injury but McDonald said the available players ⁠were good ​enough but had not performed.
'It shouldn't be about the players that we're missing,' said McDonald, who is also a selector.
'It should be looking at the performances and we're disappointed in those. We need ​to own those and the critique is fair and reasonable.'
Australia ​finish their tournament with a dead rubber against Oman in Pallekele later on Friday.