Zampa rejects idea Australia do not value T20sMedia caption, Australia hammer Oman in final World Cup gameByMatthew HenryBBC Sport Journalist in PallekelePublished20 February 2026, 16:08 GMT72 Comments
T20 World Cup, Group B, Pallekele
Oman 104 (16.2 overs): Wasim 32 (33); Zampa 4-21
Australia 108-1 (9.4 overs): Marsh 64 (33)
Australia won by nine wickets
Scorecard. Tables
Spinner Adam Zampa rejected the narrative Australia do not value T20 cricket as highly as other formats after his side departed the World Cup by thrashing Oman for a consolation nine-wicket win.
Mitchell Marsh’s side were already out of the tournament after defeats by Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe but lifted themselves to dismiss Oman for 104 before racing to their target in just 9.4 overs.
Since their exit was verified on Tuesday, it has been suggested, external Australia do not value the shortest format as highly as Test or 50-over cricket.
“It is totally false,” stated Zampa, a white-ball specialist who has never played a Test.
“The time the coaches and staff put into our T20 cricket is probably as much as Test cricket, potentially even more time because T20 cricket and one-day cricket, everyone is a lot tighter in the world. The work is definitely there.”
Australia’s poor World Cup follows their 4-1 victory over England in the Ashes. They have not lost an Ashes series since 2015. They have won six 50-over World Cups but only one of the 10 men’s T20 World Cups.
They lost bowlers Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood to injury before this tournament while left-armer Mitchell Starc has also retired from T20s, but their thinking often appeared muddled throughout the group stage here.
“The Australian public struggle with the fact they don’t get to see much white-ball cricket played,” stated 33-year-old Zampa.
“We play three to six games in the summer and do a lot of our work away from Australian time.
“They don’t get to see the way we play and prepare for these World Cups.
“It is disappointing it has ended like this but the work and time is as much as the other formats.”
Zampa stated he was “feeling pretty hollow” after the win over Oman.
He took four wickets but stated it was the “worst-feeling four-for I have ever got”.
Seamer Xavier Bartlett bowled Aamir Kaleem with the first ball of the match and the seamer barely celebrated – a clear sign of Australia’s disappointment at their early exit.
Though the flat atmosphere continued, Australia were clinical. Wasim Ali’s 32 was the highest score for Oman, who depart the tournament with four defeats from four.
Captain Marsh, seemingly keen to hit through any frustrations at his side’s run, then crashed seven fours and four sixes, including two huge hits over the leg side, to wrap up victory in quick time.
Only 12 runs were needed when left-arm spinner Shakeel Ahmed dismissed Travis Head for 32. Marsh finished unbeaten on 64 from 33.
Australia’s victory concludes the group stage of the World Cup – this was one of few mismatches between the lower and higher-ranked sides.
The Super 8s begin on Saturday with a meeting between New Zealand and Pakistan in Colombo. England play co-hosts Sri Lanka in Pallekele on Sunday.
Image source, Getty ImagesAustralia finish third in Group B, behind Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe


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