The Second Coming : Rachael Haynes & World Cups
Rachael Haynes’ second coming to the Australian team probably would have surprised many cricket plaudits. It was the 2017 World Cup, when she came out for the toss instead of Meg Lanning. The explanation given for Lanning’s absence was a shoulder niggle, which the world later learnt was not exactly a niggle. It just seemed astonishing that a woman who wasn't even in the frame for Australian selection was a “like for like” replacement for Lanning. Even more surprising was that Haynes was even not considered for the first 11, excluding the 2 matches which she captained.
But Rachael Haynes was destined for glory,
as they say. Here was somebody who'd been dumped from an Ashes side in 2013
after indifferent form, having just touched the high of being the country's top scorer at a World Cup. A weaker mind would have submitted in
the wilderness of a superstar-laden Aussie team and the exhaustion of juggling
a job and a domestic career. She herself admitted that retirement from cricket
was a step away. Then came the 2017 pre-world cup season and Rachael Haynes was
almost resilient to make it count. After Australia's shocking exit at the semis of the World Cup in 2017, it was
announced that Meg Lanning will miss the Ashes. Haynes found herself catapulted
as the captain. Nobody quite knew why, and nobody elucidated why. If she was
surprised, she just chose a finesse filled innings of 89 in the second Ashes
ODI to announce her second coming. With the return of Lanning, and the
retirement of Alex Blackwell, Rachael Haynes was the permanent vice-captain for
Australia in 2018. She was certainly back. The nerves were gone, the artistry
had returned. She is that ‘fine wine’, which her captain refers to her as. A shrewd reader of the game,
she was there almost like a professor giving a masterclass on leadership. Yet,
Rachael Haynes often flies under the radar, & she loves being away from the
spotlight.
Cut to 2022 Ashes, England were at the
brink of an unlikely Test victory after a bold declaration by Lanning. With Nat
Sciver striking it well, shoulders were dropping. But the Aussies had one of
the sharpest cricketing brain in Haynes. It was suddenly she who was setting
field positions, and as somebody said - it almost seemed that Rachael Haynes
has taken over the captaincy. Fields were set, strategies devised and England
probably dint know what hit them. The match was drawn.
World Cups and Rachael Haynes is a match
made in heaven. If 2017 was a prelude to a second coming, she had decided that
2022 will be worth remembering. A sharp run a ball 130 in a difficult pitch
against a good English attack was just the start as she peeled off runs to
cross 400 runs. The 85 in the semis is an innings I will watch over and over
again. Basin Reserve was cloudy, foggy and misty. In other words perfect
conditions for seam bowling. And almost deja vu for Australia. It was on a damp
foggy day in Derby that they crashed out of the semis in 2017. Haynes made sure
that there will be no repeat. The restraint she showed in the power play rubbed
off even on Alyssa Healy, her more attacking ODI opening partner and a record
partnership of 216 was just the platform Australia needed for a 300 plus score
in 45 overs. Haynes pulled and immaculately timed her way to 85 off 100 balls.
There was no hurry, and hardly any nerves. But nerves aren’t what we normally
associate with her. She is calm, composed & probably the best cricketing
brain in the Australian team. By the time she had finished, West Indies were
already deflated at the innings break. Australia won by a thumping margin.
It is almost strange that Rachael Haynes
had once thought of retirement. We may never know why Haynes was handpicked by
Cricket Australia, but she's surely shown she belongs. ‘Fine wine’ yes - probably one
of the finest.
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