Tim David reveals Australia's new T20 batting style after Darwin win
Trust from coaches and 'not a great deal of instruction' is driving Australia's new T20 mentality that will be 'all guns blazing' on the path to next year's T20 World Cup.
That batting style was on full display in the first of three clashes with South Africa on Sunday night in Darwin, with Tim David continuing his hot streak with a matchwinning effort of 83.
David blasted eight of Australia's 13 sixes and rescued the home team after an early wobble left the Aussies 6-75 before the eighth over had even been finished.
Comparatively, the Proteas only slugged two sixes for their entire run- chase, which fell 17 runs short.
David, who was elevated above Mitch Owen and Glenn Maxwell in the batting order, as flagged pre-match by captain Mitch Marsh so he could face as many balls as possible, said the new attacking style was clear and would be the way forward.
'We've been playing together as a group now for a while, so there's not a great deal of instruction from the coaches,' David said.
'They trust the players.
Tim David is in red-hot form. Picture:'We trust ourselves to go out there and we understand the game situation and we make decisions on the fly because that's the nature of T20 cricket.
'I think if you'd watched our guys bat over the last period, wherever they bat around the world and when they play for the Australian team, it's close to all guns blazing.
'You can probably expect to see that a little bit from our team.
'That's how we think we play best.'
David has 215 runs in his past three T20 innings for Australia, including a 37-ball century against the West Indies.
But he's not in the ODI squad, which will play three games against South Africa following the T20s, and has no plans to turn his eye to the 50-over game, with all his attention on being ready for next year's T20 World Cup.
'To be honest, the things I've been building towards is the T20 World Cup next year and the major tournaments that are leading up to that,' he said.
'Honestly, I don't operate much further than the next day ahead.
'But it's a nice problem to have because if I wasn't scoring any runs, then you wouldn't be asking that question.'
Originally published as Hitting as many sixes as possible Australia's T20 World Cup winning plan

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