Marsh's hamstring concern
Mitchell Marsh is set to be confirmed as Australia's T20I captain for the World Cup but there is a major concern over his fitness after he missed Delhi Capitals' loss to Mumbai Indians on Sunday with a hamstring injury. Capitals' assistant coach Pravin Amre called it a "worrying sign" for Capitals but it is a greater concern for Australia given his injury history.
"He has gone for a scan and the physios will give us a report in a week's time," Amre said. "Then we will come to know what the exact situation is. Whether he can [play the entire season] or not depends on the reports."
Cricket Australia's medical staff will be kept in the loop but there is no indication yet of whether he would be withdrawn from the IPL to rest for the World Cup. Marsh has been very carefully managed by CA over the last 12 months since returning to being a three-format player, culminating in being named Allan Border Medallist as Australia's best-performed player in all forms over the last year.
His form prior to the injury was a concern for Capitals with talk of his place being in jeopardy after scores of 20, 23, 18 and 0. But his performances would not have concerned Australia's selectors given he has still been making fast starts without going on with it. He is playing the style of cricket Australia's hierarchy will want him to play in the powerplay during the World Cup.
Maxwell and Green struggling at Royal Challengers Bengaluru
He adds that RCB have to seriously consider in Will Jacks
Glenn Maxwell and Cameron Green have both had tough starts to the IPL at Royal Challengers Bengaluru and their form has had an impact on the team's performances as a whole. Maxwell has scores of 0, 3, 28, 0, and 1.
In the last match against Rajasthan Royals, he walked out in a situation set-up for a Maxwell masterclass but was cleaned bowled backing away. Opposing teams have used high pace against him early with great success, which will be a theme he will see a lot of heading to the World Cup. He told ESPN's Around the Wicket that he has had trouble adjusting to Bengaluru's two-paced pitch. Maxwell has bowled very well in the two matches he has been used. He credited work with RCB assistant coach and current Victoria bowling coach, Adam Griffith in helping him get more overspin and bounce which has yielded four wickets at an economy rate of 7.37.
While Maxwell's form will not concern Australia's selectors, Green's form is not helping his bid to make the T20 World Cup squad. He was already on the fringes of the final 15 for the tournament but he has been unable to make a statement in a new role for RCB. Having had an excellent debut season for Mumbai Indians last year batting at No. 3, and having had some brief T20I success as an opener, Green is struggling to find his feet at No. 5 with scores of just 9 and 5 not out in the last week. He lost his off stump to the pace of Mayank Yadav and then had no impact at the death against Rajasthan, unable to find the boundary in six balls faced.
His best innings of the tournament so far came at No. 3 against Kolkata Knight Riders where he made 33 off 21. In his three innings at No. 5 he has struck at under 100 across 37 balls. He has also struggled to make an impact with the ball. He did take two wickets in the first match of the tournament but has gone wicketless since. Green did not play any T20 cricket at any level between last year's IPL and this one as Australia's selectors kept him focussed on red-ball cricket. That lack of exposure may play against him when the selectors sit down to pick the final World Cup 15 later this month unless he can find some form for RCB.
Stoinis and David power up
Pooran-Stoinis chat
While Maxwell's out of runs, Australia will be pleased by the performances of Marcus Stoinis and Tim David for their respective teams on Sunday. Stoinis muscled a match-winning 58 from 43 balls in Lucknow Super Giants' low-scoring win over Gujarat Titans while David clubbed 45 not out off 21 balls in Mumbai's mauling of Capitals.
The form of Stoinis will especially please Australia's selectors. He was promoted to No. 4 with LSG having lost momentum outside the powerplay and picked his moments to attack to give them a winning score to defend on a surface that became slower throughout. He also played an important hand in the previous win for LSG making 24 off 15 against RCB. He took a wicket in that game but has strangely only bowled one over for the tournament. He was subbed out after his half-century against Titans.
David's start to the tournament had been very unusual. He was demoted to bat behind legspinner Piyush Chawla in Mumbai's previous game against Royals. But he was back at No. 6 against Delhi and smashed four sixes as he and Romario Shepherd ransacked 42 from the last eight balls of the innings as Mumbai finally broke their season drought.
Starc bounces back, Cummins keeps on keeping on
Mitchell Starc's expensive start to the IPL after his expensive auction purchase had raised some eyebrows but he fought back last week with wickets against Capitals. He claimed 2 for 25 from three overs including the scalp of Australia team-mate David Warner who chopped on the ball after smashing Starc for six over cow corner. Starc was unperturbed by his expensive start to the tournament claiming "a little bit of luck" had gone against him in the first two games.
Meanwhile, Pat Cummins is looming as a key man for Australia at the T20 World Cup given he is bowling superbly at the IPL. He produced another frugal display in Sunrisers Hyderabad's win over Chennai Super Kings including the key wicket of CSK's form batter Shivam Dube.