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”We had some young, inexperienced players and some young guys playing their first games of cricket for Australia come into some foreign conditions and thrown in the deep end quickly,” Starc told reporters.
”We have had to navigate a few difficulties, being back home for the guys that have been in lockdown in Sydney or Melbourne or playing very little amount of cricket for their states,” Starc said Australia’s slide from being at the top in May last year to seventh in the T20 rankings is misleading and irrelevant to the T20 World Cup.
”It’s a huge positive that we have got our full-strength team here available to us for the World Cup. We didn’t have that through the West Indies and Bangladesh,” Starc said.
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”It’s no secret that we haven’t won a T20 World Cup so I’m looking forward to hopefully being a part of our first one,” Starc said.
”We have got our full-strength team available … it’s up to us now. We have set out to win the World Cup. We don’t want anything less,” said the 31-year-old left-arm pacer.
Australia begin its campaign against South Africa here on October 23.
”In terms of our make-up, the group feels like we have covered all bases that we need to for these conditions,” Starc, who has taken 51 wickets from 41 T20Is, said. ”I am feeling good about it. We have all played enough cricket to know what we need to do to best prepare ourselves for these sorts of tournaments.”