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No ‘drastic’ Aussie changes after WC exit despite ‘all-time selection howler’ as Warner era ends

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No ‘drastic’ Aussie changes after WC exit despite ‘all-time selection howler’ as Warner era ends

Australian selectors baulked at including batting dynamo Jake Fraser-McGurk for a T20 World Cup campaign that never reached the heights they expected but “drastic” change is unlikely to the team going forward according to pace veteran Josh Hazlewood.

The quick bowler was one of 10 players aged over 30 in the 15-man squad, with the only certain shift the next time the T20 side comes together is the absence of David Warner who officially retired from all international cricket after Australia’s 24-run loss to India ended their World Cup campaign.

Any faint hope of progression to the semi-finals was snuffed out by Afghanistan’s last-gasp win over Bangladesh.

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At 33, Hazlewood has given no indication of moving on from the shortest format having played in all but one of Australia’s seven games at the World Cup, snaring 1-14 in the loss to India that put their tournament in peril.

But knowing the next chance to lift the trophy comes around in 2026, Hazlewood said, in the immediate aftermath, there were no signs of a mass clean-out of players who didn’t get the job done in the Caribbean.

“They come around pretty quick, the T20 World Cups, every two years,” he said.

Josh Hazlewood isn’t expecting drastic changes to the T20 team. Picture: Chandan Khanna / AFPSource: AFP

“There might be a couple of changes, but a lot of the guys still play in the franchise cricket if they’re not playing for Australia, so they’re available to be picked.

“There’s some class players in our 15, and we’ve got a couple on the bench as well. So, you’d think it’d be an actual slow change. I don’t think there’d be anything drastic.”

Warner, who battled a hand issue in the lead-up to the tournament, still managed 178 runs from his seven innings in the tournament. But he made just nine runs in his final two innings, signing off with just six in the unsuccessful run chase against India.

Warner falls cheaply in last Aus match? | 00:33

The call to play him over Fraser-McGurk was controversial but the decision to keep veteran Matthew Wade in the side was clearly even worse.

Wade, who had considered retirement before the 2022 World Cup, played ahead of Josh Inglis but contributed very little through the 2024 tournament.

His high score was 17 not out against England, with three did-not-bats, a 5 against Afghanistan, a 4 not out against Scotland, and a 1 against India.

AAP journalist Oliver Caffrey described his selection over Inglis as an “all-time howler”.

The Australian team has had a taste of life without Warner in both the Test and ODI formats, but while Hazlewood said the veteran would be missed, it was important for the Aussies to “push forward”.

David Warner and Virat Kohli embrace after what could be Warner’s final international. Picture: Gareth Copley/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

But not before celebrating an “unbelievable” career.

“We’ll definitely miss him around the group, out on the field and off the field. He’s had an amazing all-format career,” Hazlewood said.

“We’ve had Test cricket and ODI cricket and now T20s. You’ve gotten used to it a bit in New Zealand (not having Warner there).

“It’s always different when you lose a player that’s been there for so long. We’ll move on and push forward.”

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